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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
41 w

The Doctor Makes New Friends and Annoys Himself In the Trailer for Doctor Who’s Christmas Special
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The Doctor Makes New Friends and Annoys Himself In the Trailer for Doctor Who’s Christmas Special

News Doctor Who The Doctor Makes New Friends and Annoys Himself In the Trailer for Doctor Who’s Christmas Special Is it possible to see a train in a Christmas story and not think of The Polar Express? By Molly Templeton | Published on December 5, 2024 Screenshot: Disney Plus Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Disney Plus It’s Christmas in Doctor Who land again—holiday fun times for all, including dinosaurs. This year’s Christmas special comes from longtime Who writer Steven Moffat, who once again has a Who character bantering with themself. (Who can forget Amy Pond flirting with herself? Not I.) Somehow, the Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) ends up talking to a future version of himself, who is most frustratingly vague about what he needs to do next. “You have to be mysterious all the time! That’s why everyone leaves you! That is why you were always alone!” the Doctor yells at the Doctor, presumably referencing the end of the previous season (and a lot of other bits of his history as well). “Joy to the World” stars Bridgerton’s Nicola Coughlan as Joy, who really, really likes it when the Doctor compliments her name. According to the very brief synopsis, “When Joy checks into a London hotel in 2024, she opens a secret doorway to the Time Hotel — discovering danger, dinosaurs, and the Doctor. But a deadly plan is unfolding across the Earth, just in time for Christmas.” The episode also features Our Flag Means Death‘s Frenchie, Joel Fry, as well as Steph de Whalley, Jonathan Aris, Peter Benedict, Julia Watson, and Niamh Marie Smith. It’s directed by Alex Sanjiv Pillai (Riverdale, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina) and, of course, Russell T. Davies is the showrunner. The Christmas spirit arrives December 25th on Disney+.[end-mark] The post The Doctor Makes New Friends and Annoys Himself In the Trailer for <em>Doctor Who</em>’s Christmas Special appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
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41 w

The Beautiful Humanity of Ghosts: Shigeru Mizuki’s Legacy 
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The Beautiful Humanity of Ghosts: Shigeru Mizuki’s Legacy 

Column Anime Spotlight The Beautiful Humanity of Ghosts: Shigeru Mizuki’s Legacy  Exploring the enduring creations of one of Japan’s most beloved manga artists… By Leah Thomas | Published on December 5, 2024 Photo: Leah Thomas Comment 0 Share New Share Photo: Leah Thomas The train that passes behind my apartment building twice an hour is always occupied by ghosts and monsters. It is occupied, too, by commuters, students, shoppers, and travelers bound for the tiny local airport—an airport similarly full of ghosts and monsters. The train is also frequently occupied by starry-eyed tourists, who take it to the end of the Yumigahama peninsula and disembark at the small seaside city of Sakaiminato, thrilled by the prospect of encountering—you guessed it—a hundred more ghosts and monsters. Sakaiminato was the hometown of one of the most beloved mangaka in Japanese history, Shigeru Mizuki, whose stories first ushered the supernatural creatures of Japanese folklore into pop culture in the 1960s. Since the 1990s, Sakaiminato’s main shopping street has been transformed into a gallery of yōkai character statues. Given my deep-rooted adoration for all things yōkai, I have long been aware of Shigeru Mizuki. Still, it was not until I moved to Japan that I fully appreciated his cultural impact, which rivals that of Osamu Tezuka. In 2022, I booked tickets to a 100th-anniversary exhibition showcasing his work (Mizuki was born in 1922). An upper floor of a Ginza skyscraper was transformed into a yōkai menagerie, filled with Mizuki’s original illustrations and items from his home reference library. I reveled at not only Mizuki’s stylized, endearing, but often eerie illustrations of bath-tub licking spirits and bean-washing ghosts, but also the precious range of materials that had inspired himto create. Among these cultural treasures was ukiyo-e artist Toriyama Sekien’s Gazu Hyakki Yagyō, or Night Parade of 100 Demons, which, at around 300 years old, is one of the earliest compilations of yōkai stories. While Sekien, an imaginative poet, made up some of the stories, many others originated from accounts of people in prefectures all across Japan. In the centuries since, the lines between invention and legend have blurred. Monsters survive best when they reflect the times, a fact Mizuki always understood. Following in Sekien’s footsteps, he blended yōkai stories and his own inventiveness to create his flagship manga, GeGeGe no Kitarō. In doing so, he gave an immortal home to stories and urban legends that had once existed primarily in the form of oral storytelling, and pioneered the entire supernatural manga genre to boot. Illustration by Shigeru Mizuki Mizuki Shigeru may not be so famous in every country, but the ripples of his writing have consistently defined not only manga and anime but speculative fiction as a whole since the Shōwa era. Big talk, perhaps, but true. Creators of some of the most internationally influential manga in the past few decades, including Urasawa Naoki of Pluto and Monster, Junji Ito of Uzumaki, Tite Kubo of Bleach, and Hiromu Arakawa of Fullmetal Alchemist, have cited Mizuki as an influence. Without Mizuki bringing yōkai into the zeitgeist, who knows whether ghost stories would have become such a staple in modern speculative fiction? As profound as this impact was, Mizuki wasn’t content with redefining fiction alone. An unwilling participant drafted into the Second World War and veteran amputee, Mizuki was a staunch pacificist and vocally anti-nationalist later in life. He won two Eisners for his autobiographical non-fiction works, which refused to sugarcoat Japanese war crimes. Mizuki sought to educate Japanese youngsters in an era when the Japanese government was attempting to glorify the past rather than acknowledge the most shameful portions of the nation’s history. After he died in 2015, many writers published wonderful tributes to Mizuki (I heartily recommend this piece by Zack Davisson at The Comics Journal). I initially hesitated to write about Mizuki because a man with such a profound legacy is hard to encapsulate in a little essay in an anime column. But I have a specific angle: I live a few train stations from Mizuki’s old ’hood, out here in Tottori prefecture, and I am immersed in his legacy on a daily basis. The pride that people in the San’in Region take in their hometown hero is as well-placed as it is infectious.  So why not join me for a little stroll down a treasured local haunt, Mizuki Shigeru Road? Welcome to Kitaro Road Photo: Leah Thomas The ghosts and monsters that adorn the JR West Kitaro trains along the Sakai Line are all characters from Mizuki’s most iconic manga. These include Kitaro, the one-eyed yōkai boy who defends human beings out of a sense of obligation rather than kindness; his father, Medama Oyaji (Eyeball Daddy), an undead repository for all things yōkai, who watches over his son and keeps the audience in the loop; Nezumi-Otoko, the lewd and cowardly rat yōkai Mizuki claimed to relate most to; Neko-Musume, the cat girl who rocks a bowl-cut that few could brave. Their faces are painted on the walls and ceilings of the train and sewn into the upholstery so riders can take selfies with Kitaro peeking over their shoulders. Throughout the journey, the cast of characters announces the stations and destination, bickering amongst themselves. Along the way, every one of the sixteens stations has a yōkai nickname and mascot of sorts. At Goto station, for instance, those waiting for the train are loomed over by the image of dorotabō, a yōkai representing the vengeful ghosts of farmers whose carefully tilled fields have gone to seed after their passing. Fun! There aren’t any fields in this part of Yonago, but maybe there used to be. The most important station along the route is undoubtedly Yonago Airport. The little airport is home to numerous Kitaro tributes, including a ghostly whale suspended over the tiny food court and gorgeous stained glass windows featuring a collage of Mizuki’s artwork. And all of this before the train even reaches Mizuki’s hometown! Though Mizuki was born in Osaka, he spent his childhood in Tottori. Though Sakaiminato has never been a large city, in the 1920s it must have felt smaller still. Mizuki admits to being good at punching as well as drawing; not a bully, but a kid who refused to be bullied. Perhaps it isn’t surprising that his most famous creation, Kitaro, is also a tough cookie. Emerging from his mother’s corpse after a wasting disease destroyed her, Kitaro is born into a grave and, depending on the anime adaptation in question, immediately loses one eye by cracking it against a gravestone. The sole survivor of the Ghost Tribe of humanoid yōkai, Kitaro is a spooky little kid by nature and just as scrappy as Mizuki himself. He kicks his geta at his enemies to devastating effect and uses his yōkai-magic imbued chanchanko (kimono vest) to bind them. Kitaro is only as heroic as he is weird, a kid who is perfectly content with being an outcast, living in his little hut in Aokigahara, the Sea of Trees, a real-life forest near Kawaguchiko that is sometimes called “the suicide forest” due to its tragic history. Photo: Leah Thomas It seems likely that many of the little side streets of Sakaiminato in 1922 weren’t so different than they are now, and it isn’t hard to imagine adolescent squabbles taking place by the bay. Sakaiminato is far past its prime but remains a prominent fishing port. After the Second World War and the destruction of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, it was temporarily the primary fishing port for all of Western Japan. Today, you can hop on a ferry from Sakaiminato to China, Russia, or South Korea, although I have heard the trip is deeply miserable. Alternatively, you can climb aboard the Rainbow Jet ferry to visit the beautiful Oki islands of Shimane, where cows and horses roam seaside cliffs weirdly reminiscent of the coasts of Cornwall. But many visitors to Saikaiminato are seeking yōkai, not ferries, and the town is read for them. Visitors are encouraged to buy stamp-collecting books at the tourist information center or the little souvenir shops. Businesses all along Kitaro Road take part in a yōkai stamp rally. It isn’t easy to kneel down on the sidewalk and perfectly nail inky silhouettes of creatures like kasa-obake (umbrella ghost) and futakuchi-onna (the two-mouthed woman), but it sure is fun to try and catch ’em all. Japan has a rich history of collecting seals and stamps that goes back way farther than Pokémon cards. At shrines and temples, visitors pay just 300 yen for a goshuin stamp, hand-drawn calligraphy and a seal unique to each sacred place. Doing this for yōkai feels right, another example of how seamlessly Mizuki’s world blends the modern and traditional. Photo: Leah Thomas Perhaps as a nod to the Night Parade, in addition to yōkai-covered storefronts and a little park where visitors can bathe in a sake bowl alongside Medama Oyaji, Kitaro Road features 100 different bronze statues depicting Mizuki’s creatures. For every one of them that may be familiar to newcomers—tanuki and tengu and kappa, for instance—there’s another yōkai for fans in the know, unique to Mizuki’s canon. Take Terebii-Kun, a boy who climbs in and out of televisions (Could he have inspired Ringu?), or Kuchisake-onna, the slit-mouthed woman, who long existed as an urban legend, but was not declared a yōkai officially until Mizuki added her to one of his collections. Such was Mizuki’s power: he could elevate an idea to lore at his leisure.  At night, the bronze statues are illuminated by yellow streetlamps with bulbs modeled after Medama Oyaji, massive eyeballs keeping watch over the street. Yōkai silhouettes are projected onto the sidewalks. Mizuki Road felt especially magical when I stayed long after sunset during Minato Matsuri, an annual summer festival. Visitors donned yukata and children strapped Kitaro and Neko-Musume masks to their heads (and Pikachu too, for good measure). While fireworks lit up the darkness in the cicada-ridden heat, it did not feel impossible that a yōkai might be among the crowd, enjoying the spectacle. Summer festivals really do feel otherworldly, and I don’t care if that’s the dehydration talking. Optimistic Monsters Photo: Leah Thomas “Just looking at him makes me want to cry,” my friend told me just last week, when we paused to admire a particularly endearing statue along Mizuki Road. It depicts Kitaro crouching on a stone, unaware that on a pillar above him his father, Medama-Oyaji, is watching over him. “Why?” I ask, almost laughing. “Because he just loves his son so much,” she says, with feeling. “It makes me want to cry; he’s so good.” She’s right, though. Kitaro’s father, one of the last remaining members of the living yōkai Ghost Tribe, was wasting away due to disease, shriveling to a husk alongside his pregnant wife. But he could not bear the thought of his son growing up all alone. Rather than vanishing entirely when death claimed his body Medam Oyaji’s soul and mind transferred to his eyeball. In this way, he ensured that he could always take care of his son, even when his body had long become dust. The backstory is gut-wrenching, when you take away Mizuki’s deceptively playful art. It would be easy to dismiss Gegege no Kitarō as simple children’s entertainment. Mizuki was a creator who experienced war all too intimately, along with all the cruelty and kindness it brings out in people. After American forces bombed his field hospital in Papua New Guinea, Mizuki lost his arm but found friendship with members of a local tribe of Tolai people. When he returned home to Japan, his brother was convicted for war crimes. Perhaps it was his brother’s shameful actions, as well as the collective horrors of the Second World War and his own country’s missteps that solidified Mizuki’s pacifism. He understood that people are flawed across the board, and loss is relative, but some truths and connections are vital no matter what form they take. In stories, maybe that looks like a dead dad transforming into a spectral eyeball to keep his boy safe. In life, it meant advocating for fellow amputees and writing accurate, objective portrayals of world history—controversy be damned. Photo: Leah Thomas If there were no depth of humanity to Kitaro, would people speak so highly of the series half a century after its first iteration? Would I still be taking pictures of my elementary school students dressed as Neko-Musume each Halloween? Would Sanrio be hawking collaborations with these characters in the 21st century? (Well, scratch that last one; Sanrio collabs with everything.) Mizuki always kept his work grounded in the lives of everyday people. Famously, his first influence in childhood was his elderly nanny, NonNonBa, who told him yōkai stories he was way too young for—stories that helped spark his wonderful, lightly morbid imagination. She understood what Shigeru and his countless fans do, too: “spooky” and “fun” are good bedfellows, and the darkest stories of death and spirits help us appreciate life and daylight all the more. Shigeru Mizuki, even after his death, gives the impression of having been one hell of a decent human being precisely because he did not deny his human flaws. He wasn’t a saint, and his characters are far from saints, too—they are strange and sometimes cruel and sometimes friendly and sometimes inappropriate and sometimes greedy and sometimes annoying. But… who isn’t? Photo: Leah Thomas Arguably, the most important human character in GeGeGe no Kitarō is Kitaro’s adoptive father. Sometimes he is depicted as monstrous himself, a resentful blood bank employee who only raises Kitaro because he is afraid of the boy. In the earliest iterations of the manga, Kitaro’s adoptive father holds little to no affection for the spooky kid that has become his burden. But as the years have progressed, the lens has softened on this frightened blood bank employee. In the 2023 film Birth of Kitarō: The Mystery of GeGeGe, he is more sympathetic and even fond of Kitaro and his parents. Mizuki passed away in 2015, before this adaptation came to be. But perhaps because he so encouraged empathy during his long life, the people of Japan have warmed toward monsters across the board… And what did Mizuki name this supremely conflicted human character? Mizuki. Of course. The Road Goes On Photo: Leah Thomas One of my favorite statues along Kitaro Road does not feature yōkai, but Mizuki and his wife, Nunoe. The two are depicted as an older couple walking side by side. Their statue stands on a silver orb that reflects the river and city and people around it. Nunoe and Shigeru came together thanks to an arranged marriage, but their marriage was a strong one. Her own autobiography, Gegege no Nyōbō, was adapted into a television drama in 2010, and its popularity brought even more fans to Sakaiminato. Other favorite locations along the road are the yōkai shrine and a sake distillery that features Medama Oyaji on its bottles and signage. Every time I go to Kitaro Road, I notice something new, and small, and charming. A 2023 article from The Asahi Shinbun commemorated 30 successful years since the establishment of Kitaro Road. Transforming the heart of town into a ghost haven was a desperate attempt to revive the long-dead shopping street. While some townsfolk protested the idea of ghosts occupying their town, Tomonori Kurome, the city official responsible for the proposal, got approval from the mayor. He approached Mizuki with trepidation, however, because it was unlikely the struggling city could afford to license Kitaro. Shigeru Mizuki banished those fears in an instant. He said that he would not accept a cent from the people of Sakaiminato, and would permit them to use his characters and works however they saw fit. In the years after Mizuki Road was established, Mizuki himself visited when he could. Proudly displayed in some of the gift shops, amid the clutter of Nurikabe-shaped chopstick rests and Ittan-Momen towels, I have spotted photographs of Mizuki visiting those very shops, beaming alongside the Oba-sans and Oji-sans that ran them. Autographed Mizuki sketches hang over some of their cash registers. Pictures of him attending a parade in town are visible to window shoppers. Just as Medama Oyaji watches over his son, Mizuki still watches over his hometown, and the people of Japan as well—and this country is so much the better for it. Photo: Leah Thomas I cannot stress enough how remarkable a man Mizuki Shigeru really was, and I recommend reading his works to get the full, firsthand experience of the world he created. Many are available in English courtesy of Drawn & Quarterly. Additionally, if you’re interested in yōkai, check out my recent essay on Natsume Yuujinchō or look into Tuttle Publishing’s catalogue of yōkai content. I’ll be visiting Toei Animation Park in December to see the yōkai parade, too, so more on that later! Winter is approaching here, and there’s snow on the local volcano, but next up, I’ll probably be visiting the desert with a look at both Trigun (1998) and Trigun Stampede (2023). A piece on Metaphor: ReFantazio is also in the works… as soon as I can get deeper into the game. Oh, Atlus, you do make them long and weird!  Anyhow… what are you watching now? Thoughts on Mizuki? On other yōkai anime? Let me know in the comments![end-mark] Up Next: Trigun (Madhouse, 1998) Available via Amazon Prime and Hulu. Trigun Stampede (Studio Orange, 2023) Available via Amazon Prime and Hulu. The post The Beautiful Humanity of Ghosts: Shigeru Mizuki’s Legacy  appeared first on Reactor.
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41 w

You and I Knew Taylor Lorenz Acts Like a Soulless Psychopath - When Does She Find Out?
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You and I Knew Taylor Lorenz Acts Like a Soulless Psychopath - When Does She Find Out?

You and I Knew Taylor Lorenz Acts Like a Soulless Psychopath - When Does She Find Out?
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Largest Elliptical Galaxies Might Have Formed In Incredible Starburst Events
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Largest Elliptical Galaxies Might Have Formed In Incredible Starburst Events

Some galaxies are born spherical, others become it.
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41 w

Could The Solar System Have Captured A Rogue Planet? New Study Suggests It's Not Impossible
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Could The Solar System Have Captured A Rogue Planet? New Study Suggests It's Not Impossible

The Solar System could capture rogue planets and asteroids. Perhaps it already has.
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41 w

Comedians Mock Hegseth's Pledge Not To Drink, Attack His Mom
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Comedians Mock Hegseth's Pledge Not To Drink, Attack His Mom

In his past life, Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth did some things he is not proud of but insists that he is a different man today. Instead of celebrating Hegseth’s transformation, the late night comedians mocked his pledge not to drink on the job on their Wednesday shows and attacked his mom for defending him. On CBS’s The Late Show, host Stephen Colbert declared, “In case you didn't know, having a Secretary of Defense who cannot stay sober might be bad, because ‘a Secretary of Defense is generally working at all hours and might need to respond to a crisis at any time, day or night.’ Now, to calm fears about this exact issue, Hegseth's team has released this ad.”     The satirical ad started with Hillary Clinton’s 2008 “It’s 3 a.m.” ad, where the narrator asks, “It's 3 a.m. and your children are safe and asleep. Who do you want answering the phone?” and was followed by a fake Hegseth adding, “It's Pete, bitch, I’m drinking Baileys out of my third wife's shoes! Woo hoo! Let's bomb France!” Colbert then mocked Hegseth, “Today Hegseth foreswore on the job drinking, saying, ‘this is the biggest deployment of my life, and there won't be a drop of alcohol on my lips while I'm doing it.’ A bold pledge that can only mean one thing. He's going to butt chug.”  Over at ABC, the eponymous host of Jimmy Kimmel Live! and his audience snickered at the idea Hegseth could be a changed man, “In one incident they say Pete became so intoxicated at a work event, he had to be stopped from joining dancers on the stage of a Louisiana strip club. I don't know what kind of work event that was, but Hegseth says these are all lies and also promised that if he gets confirmed by the Senate, he will stop drinking. But if not, he's storming The Capitol Grille at happy hour.” Kimmel also recalled, “The New York Times got hold of a very damning email Pete's mother sent him about the way he treats women. So, this morning his mom, who apparently shared this with someone who shared it with the Times, went on Fox & Friends to do damage control, which is funny. Has a nominee for Secretary of Defense, has a nominee for Secretary of Defense ever put his mom on TV to help him? Did Donald Rumsfeld's mom? Leon Panetta? Did his mom do that? No?”     No, but a previous Secretary of Defense wanted to get rid of the Navy and the Marine Corps, and the current DOD chief went AWOL, so if comparing him to his predecessors is the joke, let’s examine all of Pentagon history. Meanwhile, back over at Comedy Central, The Daily Show’s host of the week, Ronny Chieng, also tried to suggest Penelope Hegseth coming to her son’s defense was disqualifying, “What kind of parent-teacher conference are we watching right now? Because the future Secretary of Defense needs his mom to come out and defend him? I thought you were against women in combat roles. And besides, I never saw Donald Rumsfeld be like, ‘Hey, I have a warning for the Taliban. Mom, you tell them.’”     Chieng added, “Now, the reason Pete's mom is part of this story is because a few years ago, during his second divorce, his mom sent him an email where she called him, her own son, a habitual cheater, liar, and abuser of women. But now she's saying, eh, don't worry about it!” After a clip of Penelope Hegseth claiming Pete has changed and “most of” the stories going around about him are “misinformation,” Chieng attacked, “What? Misinformation? You wrote the email! You're the one who told us he is a piece of shit. And by the way, seven years wasn't ancient history, okay. We still have the same Spiderman.”  If Penelope Hegseth was a credible enough source to claim Pete had problems in his life he needed to fix then she is a credible enough source to claim that he is a changed man. Here are transcripts for the December 4 shows: CBS The Late Show with Stephen Colbert 12/4/2024 11:39 PM ET STEPHEN COLBERT: In case you didn't know, having a Secretary of Defense who cannot stay sober might be bad, because "a Secretary of Defense is generally working at all hours and might need to respond to a crisis at any time, day or night." Now, to calm fears about this exact issue, Hegseth's team has released this ad. NARRATOR: It's 3 a.m. and your children are safe and asleep. Who do you want answering the phone? FAKE PETE HEGSETH: It's Pete, bitch, I’m drinking Baileys out of my third wife's shoes! Woo hoo! Let's bomb France! COLBERT: Today. There you go, sure, why not? Chugging Baileys. Today Hegseth foreswore on the job drinking, saying, “this is the biggest deployment of my life, and there won't be a drop of alcohol on my lips while I'm doing it.” A bold pledge that can only mean one thing. He's going to butt chug.  *** ABC Jimmy Kimmel Live! 12/4/2024 11:44 PM ET JIMMY KIMMEL: In one incident they say Pete became so intoxicated at a work event, he had to be stopped from joining dancers on the stage of a Louisiana strip club. I don't know what kind of work event that was, but Hegseth says these are all lies and also promised that if he gets confirmed by the Senate, he will stop drinking. But if not, he's storming The Capitol Grille at happy hour. The New York Times got hold of a very damning email Pete's mother sent him about the way he treats women. So, this morning his mom, who apparently shared this with someone who shared it with the Times, went on Fox & Friends to do damage control, which is funny. Has a nominee for Secretary of Defense, has a nominee for Secretary of Defense ever put his mom on TV to help him? Did Donald Rumsfeld's mom? Leon Panetta? Did his mom do that? No? *** Comedy Central The Daily Show 12/4/2024 11:05 PM ET RONNY CHIENG: What kind of parent-teacher conference are we watching right now? Because the future Secretary of Defense needs his mom to come out and defend him? I thought you were against women in combat roles. And besides, I never saw Donald Rumsfeld be like, "Hey, I have a warning for the Taliban. Mom, you tell them."  Now, the reason Pete's mom is part of this story is because a few years ago, during his second divorce, his mom sent him an email where she called him, her own son, a habitual cheater, liar, and abuser of women. But now she's saying, eh, don't worry about it! PENELOPE HEGSETH: Let's go back seven years, which, if we all went back seven years, we would -- we would see that maybe we are not the people we are today. [jump cut] I want people to look at Pete, [jump cut] understand him for who he is today, and to disregard the media. That was seven years ago, and most of it is misinformation. CHIENG: What? Misinformation? You wrote the email! You're the one who told us he is a piece of shit. And by the way, seven years wasn't ancient history, okay. We still have the same Spiderman.
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41 w

Trump jokes that Canada should become the 51st state, but THIS recent Canadian ruling is exactly why we DON’T want that
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Trump jokes that Canada should become the 51st state, but THIS recent Canadian ruling is exactly why we DON’T want that

According to a report from Fox News, when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently visited Mar-a-Lago and had dinner with President-elect Donald Trump, he pleaded against Trump’s tariff plan as it would “kill the Canadian economy.” Trump purportedly responded by saying that “if Canada can't survive without ripping off the U.S. to the tune of $100 billion a year, then maybe Canada should become the 51st state and Trudeau could become its governor,” said Fox News’ Peter Doocy. While Liz Wheeler finds Trump’s joke both “hilarious” and “savage,” she can’t help but cringe at the thought of Canada — the most “disgustingly woke” place in North America — being part of the United States. She reflects on a Canadian ruling from last month as part of which the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario decided that the town of Emo would be fined a total of $15,000 for refusing to proclaim June Pride Month. According to reports, Borderland Pride — “a 2SLGBTQIA+ Pride organization based in the Rainy River District of Ontario, Canada” — requested that the town of Emo declare June Pride Month and display a rainbow flag. “But the township refused, resulting in a yearslong process in which the tribunal ruled against the township. The tribunal ruled that Borderland Pride will be awarded $15,000, with $10,000 coming from the township itself and the other $5,000 coming from Emo mayor Harold McQuaker,” Liz reads. Lawyer and Borderland Pride director Douglas Judson said, “We didn't pursue this because of the money. We pursued this because we were treated in a discriminatory fashion by a municipal government, and municipalities have obligations under the Ontario Human Rights Code not to discriminate in the provision of a service.” Liz can’t understand how forcing a town to hang a flag qualifies as a “service.” On top of the fines the town and its mayor must pay, “the Tribunal also ordered McQuaker and the chief administrative officer at the municipality to complete a Human Rights 101 training course offered by the Ontario Human Rights Commission within 30 days.” “One of the messages it sends to other townships and municipalities is that Pride needs to be in the smallest and most remote communities just as it is in larger cities,” Judson stated. And that right there — the idea that LGBTQ+ ideology must be forced down everyone’s throats regardless of where they choose to live — is exactly why Liz can’t stomach the idea of the United States absorbing Canada. “The left never wanted inclusion; they never wanted tolerance; they never wanted to just live their lives and be left alone. They want to force you to worship at their satanic altar,” says Liz. “Canada is one step ahead of even the worst wokeism here in the United States, but we are headed in that direction, so tariff the hell out of them, Mr. President. We don't want them part of the United States.” To hear more of Liz’s commentary, watch the episode above. Want more from Liz Wheeler?To enjoy more of Liz’s based commentary, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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Democrats' losing strategy could push a political realignment
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Democrats' losing strategy could push a political realignment

President-elect Donald Trump officially flipped Lake County, California, one month after the November 5 election. Trump's electoral win in Lake County is the latest indication of the landslide victory he enjoyed in the 2024 cycle. Trump became the first Republican presidential candidate to win the popular vote in two decades, even sweeping all seven swing states. The last candidate to win all battlegrounds was former President Ronald Reagan in 1984. 'It could actually be the beginnings of a Reagan-style political realignment if the Democrats don't make adjustments and do so in a hurry.'Trump also flipped over 50 counties this cycle while Vice President Kamala Harris failed to flip any in her favor. Of those counties that flipped in Trump's favor, roughly half of them had not voted for a Republican presidential candidate this century. Trump also managed to shift every single state toward Republicans. Roughly 300 counties shifted more Democratic, without any actually flipping blue, while over 2,600 shifted more Republican."The data suggests that this was more than simply a decisive victory for Donald Trump," Len Foxwell, a Democratic strategist based in Maryland, told Blaze News. "It could actually be the beginnings of a Reagan-style political realignment if the Democrats don't make adjustments and do so in a hurry." One of Trump's most notable flips was South Texas' Starr County, a predominantly Hispanic border county. This ended one of the longest Democratic voting streaks in history, with the county voting for a Democrat in every presidential election since 1896. Trump also made inroads with Latinos in Florida, enjoying a double-digit swing in Miami-Dade County compared to his results in 2020. Democratic support slipped across every demographic the party has historically held onto. Even with a black female candidate and a white working-class running mate, voters turned to Trump. "We are losing, in front of our very eyes, some of the core elements of the Democratic coalition that we have held onto, to varying degrees, since the age of Roosevelt," Foxwell told Blaze News. "We have become a party of inner suburban wine clubs and book clubs. A relatively small, culturally homogeneous group of inner suburban, highly educated, relatively affluent liberals and progressives.""That, to be sure, is a part of a strong Democratic coalition, but it cannot be the only part," Foxwell continued. "It cannot and it must not be the centerpiece around which we base our national political strategy, and I'm afraid that's what we're at risk of becoming."Foxwell points out that the downfall of the Democratic Party is largely because it demands a highly stringent form of political and social orthodoxy from its voters that has become incompatible with many moderates. Although Democrats have championed diversity of identity, the party has remained intellectually homogeneous, which is exclusionary by nature. "Democrats used to be the party of disruption, debate, and change, and now we have become a more intellectually homogeneous party in which we are not necessarily supposed to look alike, but we are certainly expected to think alike," Foxwell said. "When that happens, you become intellectually stagnant, and I honestly believe that this is one of the major reasons why the Democratic Party is losing its natural advantages." Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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Ex Blizzard boss slams Marvel Rivals for copying Overwatch with Black Widow
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Ex Blizzard boss slams Marvel Rivals for copying Overwatch with Black Widow

There are a lot of parallels to draw between Blizzard's Overwatch and Netease's upcoming hero shooter, Marvel Rivals. You play as a cast of dynamic heroes and villains and battle it out across varied, cartoony locales, all while snatching up the latest skins and ticking off daily challenges. Former Blizzard boss Mike Ybarra has criticized Marvel Rivals in a new post on X, suggesting the game is a "copy" of Overwatch. Specifically, he takes aim at the newly announced Black Widow, who he compares to Talon's blue-skinned beauty, Widowmaker. Cue that Spider-Man meme. Continue reading Ex Blizzard boss slams Marvel Rivals for copying Overwatch with Black Widow MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Marvel Rivals release date, Marvel Rivals characters, Marvel Rivals System Requirements
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MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi review: An excellent AMD Ryzen motherboard
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MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi review: An excellent AMD Ryzen motherboard

With a price of $500 / £430, you’d be right to expect the MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi to look great, offer an abundance of high-end features, and generally leave you with little reason to lust after an upgrade until it no longer offers support for the latest processors. It’s the company’s most expensive MPG Carbon WiFi motherboard yet, and it certainly offers plenty of headline features, including Wi-Fi 7, USB 4, PCIe 5.0 SSD and GPU support, and a handsome appearance. There’s a lot going on here in terms of what’s been crammed onto the PCB and, of course, there are the added benefits of the MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi using AMD’s best gaming motherboard chipset, X870E, rather than just the plain old X870 chipset. This gives advantages in terms of the number of high-speed USB ports and PCIe lanes available, meaning you’re less likely to need to watch out for SSDs stealing PCIe lanes from your graphics card, for example. As well as kitting out this board with cutting-edge features, MSI has also given its EFI a makeover with a new HD interface and redesigned layout, and it certainly hasn’t cut back on other features either. You get plenty of overclocking and testing tools, and even thermal probe inputs that can feed into your fan speeds, which is useful for cooling specific areas of your PC, as well as with custom water cooling. Continue reading MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi review: An excellent AMD Ryzen motherboard MORE FROM PCGAMESN: MSI Z370 Gaming Pro Carbon AC review, MSI GTX 1080 Ti Gaming X Trio review, Best gaming motherboard
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