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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
2 yrs

Was a Trump Juror Leaking Trial Information Online?
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Was a Trump Juror Leaking Trial Information Online?

Was a Trump Juror Leaking Trial Information Online?
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
2 yrs

Reid, Hill Smear America As Racist For Caitlin Clark Popularity
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Reid, Hill Smear America As Racist For Caitlin Clark Popularity

When MSNBC’s Joy Reid plays the race card, it is usually over typical progressive grievances, but on Friday, the eponymous host of The ReidOut came up with a new one: men’s favorite women’s basketball players. For her and The Atlantic’s Jemele Hill, nobody is jealous of Clark’s popularity because she is white and straight, but it is why America likes her. The genesis for the segment was a week-old controversy over a cheap shot foul from Chennedy Carter on Caitlin Clark. Reid was not pleased with the discourse that followed, “It's a misogynistic and race-based tale as old as time. Men picking sides for no reason … Jemele, okay, which is it, it is hateration or a legitimate beef by black players, black women players?”   Chicago player appears to call Caitlin Clark a “b*tch” and then drops her away from the ball. This wasn’t a called a technical foul. pic.twitter.com/uC3zwmg4St — David Hookstead (@dhookstead) June 1, 2024   One of the men Reid was denouncing was Charles Barkley, who is black. Speaking of narrative busters, after the game, Carter went on an immature Twitter-liking spree where she liked posts applauding what she did. As it was, Hill began, “the hateration part has been completely blown out of proportion. And just because you bring up inequity, that doesn't mean you're saying you're jealous of the person who is receiving maybe a lot of the attention.”     She further claimed, “I don't like about how many of the men with these platforms are ‘shaping’ the conversation is they're reducing it to pettiness, to jealousy, they're playing on stereotypes and tropes that are said about women in general, but especially black women. And this is a black women-led league, and to me, that has really devalued the conversation we need to be having.” Reid agreed, “You know, somebody very smart said to me recently the challenge with women's basketball is most of the stars are black, but -- I mean most of the great players are black, but most of the stars are white. Whether it's who's getting awarded by the ESPN, who is getting noticed by the magazines and like you said, if there were charter flights, Brittney Griner would not have ended up in a gulag, right?” Griner was in Russia to make more money, how charter flights would suddenly raise WNBA revenues to remove the need for that was not something Reid was willing to explore. Moving on from Clark’s fellow players reaction to her fans, Reid wondered, “How much of this do you think, though, is the marketing potential of a Caitlin Clark? Because quite frankly, this is a league that is largely, as you said, largely black women. It's largely also LGBTQ. She's a white heterosexual woman and so if you're trying to get white dads to go spend their money and buy season tickets, she seems like a marketing opportunity.” Hill didn’t see what the big deal is, “I don't know why people find that to be controversial to think about that. We know that marketing is about ability, talent, all those things. And nobody is saying that Caitlin Clark doesn't have those things. She's incredibly talented. She's broken records, she's playing a playing style that people love that is very representative of what we see today particularly on the men's side. But yes, it helps that she's white, straight, and from Iowa in a league that has faced marketing challenges throughout the history over the last three decades that it's been in existence.” In conclusion, Hill recalled that in the NBA, “You had a predominantly black league that had white fans or more importantly, white people who wanted to invest in that league, so they had to quote ‘clean it up’ by making the players look a certain way so they could market and appeal to everyone so when you say that Caitlin Clark’s whiteness and the fact that she’s straight plays a role underline ‘a role’ in her popularity, that’s not a diss to Caitlin Clark, it’s just simply America.” Meanwhile, in baseball, the most popular player is Japanese, in men's basketball and football, the most popular players are black. There was a long time when the main reason people watched golf on TV was a black man, the most popular Olympic gymnast in America is a black woman, but none of that will stop Reid and Hill from smearing their fellow Americans as racists for having a particular favorite women’s basketball player. Here is a transcript for the June 7 show: MSNBC  The ReidOut 6/7/2024 7:35 PM ET JOY REID: It's a misogynistic and race-based tale as old as time. Men picking sides for no reason. I'm joined now by Jemele Hill, contributing writer at The Atlantic and host of the Jemele Hill is Unbothered podcast and my friend. Jemele, okay, which is it, is it hateration or a legitimate beef by black players, black women players? JEMELE HILL: Well, I don't think it's -- the hateration part has been completely blown out of proportion. And just because you bring up inequity, that doesn't mean you're saying you're jealous of the person who is receiving maybe a lot of the attention, a lot of the fanfare, endorsement deals, but through Caitlin Clark, we are able to get a lens and a window into how this majority black woman-led league has been treated over time.  I mean, case in point, the charter flight issue which has been in the media. You know, this was an issue that the players have been raising for years, and there have been incremental steps along the way. You know, first it was for the playoffs. Now, then it was for the playoffs and back-to-back games. And there was this sense that the next collective bargaining agreement, that charter flights all the time would be in there.  Well, all it took was a video of Caitlin Clark being harassed in an airport by somebody in the media, and then all of a sudden they are charter flights now for everybody and it begs the question that you could have been doing this all along, and what you find is this systemic pattern in women's sports in particular that often women are treated that way because people can get away with it and there is no system of accountability. Just as a quick example, a couple years ago, a lot of people caught wind of the fact there was disparate treatment between the men's and women's college basketball players when everyone was in the bubble. You saw the women, Sedona Prince, TikTok, and pointed this out as did others in women's college basketball, they gave, basically, women a couple yoga mats, some dumbbells that looked like they got them at a garage sale. Meanwhile, men have all this equipment, very pretty looking stuff. And it wasn't that they couldn't afford it. It's just that because they knew they could get away with it, and no one shine a light on it and so what you're finding now is through Caitlin Clark, we're able to see how they have been treating these women up until this point and that's created a lot of conversation and frankly what I don't like about how many of the men with these platforms are "shaping" the conversation is they're reducing it to pettiness, to jealousy, they're playing on stereotypes and tropes that are said about women in general, but especially black women. And this is a black women-led league, and to me, that has really devalued the conversation we need to be having. REID: You know, somebody very smart said to me recently the challenge with women's basketball is most of the stars are black, but -- I mean most of the great players are black, but most of the stars are white. Whether it's who's getting awarded by the ESPN, who is getting noticed by the magazines and like you said, if there were charter flights, Brittney Griner would not have ended up in a gulag, right? These ladies are flying commercial and they're not treated like the men are. How much of this do you think, though, is the marketing potential of a Caitlin Clark? Because quite frankly, this is a league that is largely, as you said, largely black women. It's largely also LGBTQ. She's a white heterosexual woman and so if you're trying to get white dads to go spend their money and buy season tickets, she seems like a marketing opportunity. How much of it is that? HILL: I don't know why people find that to be controversial to think about that. We know that marketing is about ability, talent, all those things. And nobody is saying that Caitlin Clark doesn't have those things. She's incredibly talented. She's broken records, she's playing a playing style that people love that is very representative of what we see today particularly on the men's side. But yes, it helps that she's white, straight, and from Iowa in a league that has faced marketing challenges throughout the history over the last three decades that it's been in existence. It's faced marketing challenges because of the things you mention. Because seventy percent of the players are black women. Because a third of them identify as LGBTQ+. Yes, it has faced challenges and by the way, the NBA went through the same thing. You know, before Magic and Bird arrived and took the NBA finals off tape delay, the NBA was in a very vulnerable spot. It was a black-led league, there were drug problems, there were a lot of issues and then you fast forward to the 90s and 2000s where there was the merge with hip-hop. That's how you got the dress code because you had the same issue. You had a predominantly black league that had white fans, or more importantly white people who wanted to invest in that league, so they had to quote “clean it up” by making the players look a certain way so they could market and appeal to everyone so when you say that Caitlin Clark’s whiteness and the fact that she’s straight plays a role underline “a role” in her popularity, that’s not a diss to Caitlin Clark, it’s just simply America.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
2 yrs

Apollo 8 astronaut, who snapped iconic 'Earthrise' photo, dies in fiery plane crash caught on video
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Apollo 8 astronaut, who snapped iconic 'Earthrise' photo, dies in fiery plane crash caught on video

Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders died in a fiery plane crash over Puget Sound in Washington on Friday. The tragic incident was caught on video. Anders was 90.At the time of the airplane crash, Anders was piloting his vintage Beechcraft T-34 Mentor – a single-engine, propeller-driven aircraft primarily used for flight training during the 1950s by the United States Air Force and U.S. Navy. Video taken by Phillip Person shows Anders' plane suddenly falling from the sky and crashing into the Puget Sound, just 80 feet from the shore of Jones Island."I could not believe what I was seeing in front of my eyes," Person said. "It went into a barrel roll, sort of a loop, it was inverted.""It tried to pull up before it hit the water, but it was too low when it started the loop, and it didn't clear the water," he said of the plane crash. "Looked like it clipped a wing at first, went down very hard, burst into flames, broke apart, and instantly went under water." The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement, "A Beechcraft T-34 Mentor crashed into the water near Roche Harbor, Washington, around 11:40 a.m. local time Friday, June 7. Only the pilot was on board."The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board have launched an investigation into the deadly plane crash. The plane will be recovered from the water and will be examined by the NTSB at an offsite facility, where investigators will access tracking data, air traffic control communications recordings, and the pilot's flight experience.You can watch video of the deadly crash here.Anders' son, retired Air Force Lt. Col. Greg Anders, confirmed his father's sudden death and told the Associated Press, "The family is devastated. He was a great pilot and we will miss him terribly."NASA Administrator Sen. Bill Nelson said of the famed astronaut, "In 1968, during Apollo 8, Bill Anders offered to humanity among the deepest of gifts an astronaut can give. He traveled to the threshold of the Moon and helped all of us see something else: ourselves. He embodied the lessons and the purpose of exploration. We will miss him."Anders was part of the Apollo 8 team – the first manned mission to orbit the Moon. Anders was the lunar modular pilot, Frank Borman was the commander, and James Lovell was the command modular pilot. Anders snapped the iconic "Earthrise" photo, which captured the moment our planet rose over the lunar horizon on Dec. 24. 1968. CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images During the mission's Christmas Eve broadcast, Anders and the crew read from the book of Genesis.We are now approaching lunar sunrise. And for all the people back on Earth, the crew of Apollo 8 has a message that we would like to send to you. 'In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God said, Let there be light: and there was light. And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness.'Lovell is the last surviving member of the original Apollo 8 crew.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here! Apollo 8's Christmas Eve 1968 Message www.youtube.com
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

Helldivers 2 rival sets Steam 1.0 launch with new single-player mode
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Helldivers 2 rival sets Steam 1.0 launch with new single-player mode

There aren't many games that scratch the Helldivers 2 itch right now, apart from that selfsame co-op shooter of course. The chaotic, gruesome, and fascist parody aspects of Arrowhead's smash hit didn't just come out of nowhere though. The Robert A. Heinlein novel, and later 1997 film, are a clear inspiration for the galactic war against bugs - and now the PvE shooter that preceded Helldivers 2, Starship Troopers Extermination, is finally coming to Steam 1.0. Continue reading Helldivers 2 rival sets Steam 1.0 launch with new single-player mode MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Starship Troopers Extermination crossplay, The best FPS games 2023, The best co-op games 2023
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
2 yrs

Pompous PBS Whines About 'Creepy' Hunter Biden Trial, Plays Whataboutism Game With Trump Trial
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Pompous PBS Whines About 'Creepy' Hunter Biden Trial, Plays Whataboutism Game With Trump Trial

Pompous PBS Whines About 'Creepy' Hunter Biden Trial, Plays Whataboutism Game With Trump Trial
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
2 yrs

Jill Biden's Flights Back and Forth to France to Attend Hunter's Trial Raise a Lot of Questions
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Jill Biden's Flights Back and Forth to France to Attend Hunter's Trial Raise a Lot of Questions

Jill Biden's Flights Back and Forth to France to Attend Hunter's Trial Raise a Lot of Questions
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
2 yrs

Apollo 8 Astronaut William Anders Dies, at 90, After Plane He Was Piloting Crashes in WA
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Apollo 8 Astronaut William Anders Dies, at 90, After Plane He Was Piloting Crashes in WA

Apollo 8 Astronaut William Anders Dies, at 90, After Plane He Was Piloting Crashes in WA
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
2 yrs

NY Queues Push to Ban 'Addictive' Social Media for Kids
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NY Queues Push to Ban 'Addictive' Social Media for Kids

New York state lawmakers have passed legislation that aims to curb "addictive" social media for kids, but with the caveat that parents sign up for a digital identity - potentially signing away their privacy and freedom of speech online, according to critics.
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Conservative Satire
Conservative Satire
2 yrs

Liam Neeson Criticized For Killing 31 Innocent Human Traffickers Just To Get Back One Hostage
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Liam Neeson Criticized For Killing 31 Innocent Human Traffickers Just To Get Back One Hostage

WORLD — Authorities across the globe have forcefully condemned Liam Neeson for killing dozens of kindly human traffickers just to save one lousy hostage.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Carbon Capture Breakthrough: Cambridge’s New Material for Direct Air CO2 Absorption
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scitechdaily.com

Carbon Capture Breakthrough: Cambridge’s New Material for Direct Air CO2 Absorption

Cambridge researchers have developed a low-energy carbon capture technology using charged activated charcoal, capable of absorbing CO2 directly from the air more effectively than conventional...
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