July 2022 – Page 19 – Michmutters
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US

California and Montana wildfires explode in size, forcing evacuation orders | Wildfires

Wildfires in California and Montana exploded in size amid windy, hot conditions, forcing evacuation orders as they quickly encroached on neighborhoods.

In California’s Klamath national forest, the fast-moving McKinney fire, which started Friday, went from charring just over 1 sq mile (1 sq km) to scorching as much as 62 sq miles (160 sqkm) by Saturday in a largely rural area near the Oregon state line, according to fire officials.

The fire burned down at least a dozen residences and wildlife was seen fleeing the area to avoid the flames. At least 2,000 people were told to evacuate.

Meanwhile in Montana, the Elmo wildfire nearly tripled in size to more than 11 sq miles within a few miles of the town of Elmo. And roughly 200 miles to the south, Idaho residents remained under evacuation orders as the Moose fire in the Salmon-Challis national forest charred more than 67.5 sq miles in timbered land near the town of Salmon. It was 17% contained.

A significant build-up of vegetation was fueling the McKinney fire, said Tom Stokesberry, a spokesman with the US Forest Service for the region.

“It’s a very dangerous fire, the geography there is steep and rugged, and this particular area hasn’t burned in a while,” he said.

“It’s continuing to grow with erratic winds and thunderstorms in the area and we’re in triple digit temperatures,” said Caroline Quintanilla, a spokeswoman at Klamath National Forest.

The California governor, Gavin Newsom, declared a state of emergency Saturday as the fire intensified. The proclamation allows Newsom more flexibility to make emergency response and recovery effort decisions and access federal aid. It also allows “firefighting resources from other states to assist California crews in battling the fires”, according to a statement from the governor’s office.

With red flag warnings into effect for the region and lightning predicted over the next few days, resources from all over California were being brought in to help fight the region’s fires, said Stokesberry, the US Forest Service spokesman.

McKinney’s explosive growth forced crews to shift from trying to control the perimeter of the blaze to trying to protect homes and critical infrastructure like water tanks and power lines, and assist in evacuations in California’s northernmost county of Siskiyou.

Deputies and law enforcement were knocking on doors in the county seat of Yreka and the town of Fort Jones to urge residents to get out and safely evacuate their livestock onto trailers. Automated calls were being sent to land phone lines as well because there were areas without cell phone service.

Over 100 homes were ordered evacuated and authorities were warning people to be on high alert. Smoke from the fire caused the closure of portions of Highway 96.

The Pacific Coast Trail Association urged hikers to get to the nearest town while the US Forest Service closed a 110-mile section of the trail from the Etna Summit to the Mt Ashland Campground in southern Oregon.

Oregon state representative Dacia Grayber, who is a firefighter, was camping with her husband, who is also in the fire service, near the California state line when gale-force winds awoke them just after midnight.

The sky was glowing with strikes of lightening in the clouds, while ash was blowing at them, though they were in Oregon, about 10 miles (about 16 km) away. Intense heat from the fire had sent up a massive pyrocumulonimbus cloud, which can produce its own weather system including winds and thunderstorms, Grayber said.

“These were some of the worst winds I’ve ever been in and we’re used to big fires,” she said. “I thought it was going to rip the roof top tent off of our truck. We got the hell out of there.”

On their way out, they came across hikers on the Pacific Coast Trail fleeing to safety.

“The terrifying part for us was the wind velocity,” she said. “It went from a fairly cool breezy night to hot, dry hurricane-force winds.”

In western Montana, the wind-driven Elmo fire forced evacuations of homes and livestock as it raced across grass and timber, according to The National Interagency Fire Center, based in Idaho. The agency estimated it would take nearly a month to contain the blaze.

Smoke shut down a portion of Highway 28 between Hot Springs and Elmo because of the thick smoke, according to the Montana Department of Transportation.

Crews from several different agencies were fighting the fire on Saturday, including the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Fire Division. Six helicopters were making drops on the fire, aided by 22 engines on the ground.

In Idaho, more than 930 wildland firefighters and support staff were battling the Moose fire Saturday and protecting homes, energy infrastructure and the Highway 93 corridor, a major north-south route.

A red flag warning indicated that the weather could make things worse with the forecast calling for “dry thunderstorms,” with lightning, wind and no rain.

In Hawaii, fire crews and helicopters have been fighting flames Saturday evening on Maui near Paia Bay. The Maui county emergency management agency said roads have been closed and have advised residents and travelers to avoid the area. It is unclear how many acres have burned. A red flag warning is in effect Sunday.

Meanwhile, crews made significant progress in battling another major blaze in California that forced evacuations of thousands of people near Yosemite national park earlier this month. The Oak fire was 52% contained by Saturday, according to a Cal Fire incident update. But amid scorching temperatures the danger wasn’t entirely over, with structures and homes at risk until the blaze has been completely extinguished.

The fires come as scorching temperatures bake the Pacific north-west, the west remains patched in record drought, and severe storms sent flash floods surging across several states. In Kentucky, flash floods have claimed the lives of at least 25 people in what experts have called a 1-in-1,000 year rain event.

Categories
Business

RBA rate rises tipped to slow bank mortgage growth

“While we are now experiencing a return to more normal interest rates than what has been observed over the past few years; increased rates will be impacting many household budgets,” Hyman said.

The signs new lending is off its highs come as financial markets expect the Reserve Bank of Australia to raise the cash rate from 1.35 per cent to 1.85 per cent this Tuesday, in an attempt to force down inflation.

For the big-four banks, rising interest rates tend to widen profit margins, but analysts also expect higher bad debts, alongside slower growth in the $2 trillion mortgage market.

Macquarie analyst Victor German is forecasting housing credit growth to fall sharply to 2.2 per cent a year by the middle of 2023, from annual growth of almost 8 per cent in June, citing New Zealand’s experience, where lending dropped in response to higher rates.

“If we are heading into an environment where credit growth is going to be slow for a long period of time, it does have a substantial impact on the earnings outlook and the valuation of banks,” said German, who has more bearish estimates on credit growth than many other analysts.

Morningstar analyst Nathan Zaia has forecast home loan growth to slow to 3 per cent to 4 per cent in 2023, because of falls in house prices and customers’ borrowing capacity.

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Zaia said net interest margins – the difference between funding costs and what the banks charge for loans – were more “material” for the major banks than credit growth.

Macquarie Group chief executive Shemara Wikramanayake acknowledged the likely slowdown in loan growth before the bank’s annual meeting on Thursday, saying: “In our banking and financial services business we’re seeing interest rates go up, possibly volume growth come off a bit in the market , although we continue to have good volume growth.”

Anthony Waldron, chief executive of REA Group-owned Mortgage Choice, said he thought the refinancing market would remain strong because many borrowers would face higher rates as rock-bottom fixed-rate loans expire. “People have been on a rate that, in some cases started, with a 1, and all of a sudden, they are going to be in the 3s,” Waldron said.

Categories
Technology

Mash, Neco-Arc Will Be Free DLC in Melty Blood Type Lumina

Project Lumina has announced that Neco-Arc and Mash will join the roster of playable characters as DLC in Melty Blood: Type Lumina. They will be available for free in the summer. Project Lumina will reveal the concrete date that players can get Neco-Arc and Mash in the near future. [Thanks, Famitsu!]

These characters were first teased in June 2022. As a reminder, the first two DLC characters (Neco-Arc and Mash) will appear in Summer 2022, and two more will appear in Winter 2022. All four DLC characters will be free.

Neco-Arc is a recurring joke character from Tsukihime. Her identity of ella as an official meme will actually play into her fighting style of ella. She has a lot of moves that can cause random effects, which means players who main her will need to rely on luck and fast thinking.

Mash is the deuteragonist and heroine of Fate/Grand Order, and she is a close-range fighter with her shield. According to the article, she is a beginner-friendly character. Mash can also use her shield from her to guard herself as she rushes towards the enemy.

Aside from the new DLC characters, there will be an update to the story mode. Aside from new scenarios that will let players experience a ‘boss rush,’ Project Lumina powered up the story sequences. There will be 2D pixel art characters moving on the screen to act out what is happening in the story.

Melty Blood: Type Lumina is available on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Windows PC. It is unknown exactly when the Mash and Neco-Arc DLC, as well as the story mode update, will appear in Melty Blood: Type Lumina.

Categories
Sports

Liverpool vs. Manchester City – Football Match Report – July 30, 2022

Summer signing Darwin Nunez scored as Liverpool beat Premier League champions Manchester City 3-1 to claim the FA Community Shield at the King Power Stadium on Saturday.

The Uruguayan player, acquired from Benfica for an initial fee of €75 million, made himself an instant fan favorite after capping a lively appearance off the bench with a stoppage time goal to secure the first trophy of the season.

Despite being without Nunez in the first half, Liverpool were quick to strike, with Trent Alexander-Arnold opening the scoring in the 21st minute. His first-time strike took a slight deflection off the head of Nathan Ake and nestled in off the post.

– Ogden: Nunez upstages Haaland, Alvarez in Liverpool’s Community Shield win
– Pep backs Haaland after disappointing City debut
– ESPN+ viewers’ guide: LaLiga, Bundesliga, MLS, FA Cup, more
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City’s Erling Haaland started his second game since signing for Pep Guardiola’s team and spurned two chances to draw level shortly before half-time.

Jurgen Klopp introduced new man Nunez from the bench an hour in, and Liverpool continued to look dangerous going forward, with City desperate for an equaliser.

And while all eyes were on Haaland, it was another summer signing — Julian Alvarez — who drew the game level in the 70th minute.

The Argentina forward squeezed a shot past Adrian after a goalmouth scramble that saw Phil Foden win the ball from the Spanish goalkeeper. Alvarez’s goal was initially ruled out as his original run in behind was deemed offside, but a lengthy VAR check ended with Craig Pawson overturning the decision.

But the goal didn’t keep City on level terms for long. Nunez drew a handball from Ruben Dias in the penalty area that eventually was awarded through VAR as a penalty. Mohamed Salah dispatched the spot kick with ease.

Victory was ensured for Klopp’s side in added time — and Nunez got his goal. He had to home past Ederson to give Liverpool a two-goal cushion and ensure a perfect start to his tenure at Anfield.

“Our season started today, and it was important for us to get off on the right foot,” said Alexander-Arnold, who was full of praise for 23-year-old Nunez’s impact.

“He won the penalty, scored a goal and looked very lively. He’s been brought in to score goals, and he’s proved he can do that today,” he said.

“He’s a top player, a young player who is willing to learn. He’s bonded well with the lads. He came on with a point to prove.”

Information from Reuters was used in this report.

Categories
Australia

The landslide and the incredible rescue, 25 years on

Thousands of tonnes of earth and debris slid down the hillside, slamming into a four-storey ski club lodge, which then hit the Bimbadeen Staff Lodge.

Eighteen people were killed in the darkness and freezing cold.

The front page of the Sydney Morning Herald the day after the landslide.
The front page of the Sydney Morning Herald the day after the landslide. (Nine)

Several hours down the road, a 21-year-old radio journalist was fast asleep, after a boozy farewell drinks with co-workers in Canberra.

“I was fast asleep when I got a phone call suggesting I get to Thredbo as soon as possible,” Ben Fordham told nine.com.au.

“I didn’t have any information about why I needed to get there but I was told that there were heaps of emergency services vehicles making their way to Thredbo.”

Having drunk too much to drive, Fordham started a “mad ring around” for someone who could drive. Eventually he and three others packed into a car and made the early morning trip.

Ben Fordham was a 21-year-old reporter based in Canberra when the Thredbo landslide happened.
Ben Fordham was a 21-year-old reporter based in Canberra when the Thredbo landslide happened. (Ben Fordham)

A police roadblock was keeping all media out of Thredbo.

But Fordham managed to get in before all other journalists, by telling a police officer he was heading for higher ground for better mobile phone reception.

From there he sprinted into the darkness, to be picked up by a local waiting for him.

“When the sun came up the following morning I was the only journalist who was there who was able to describe what we were seeing,” Fordham said.

“It was surreal because it didn’t look real. It looked like the kind of thing you would see in a movie.

“It just looked like a giant stomped on the side of a mountain. And you could tell that there were chalets and other buildings and vehicles that had all been damaged and dislodged.”

Ben Fordham was just 21 when he was sent to cover the Thredbo landslide.
Ben Fordham was just 21 when he was sent to cover the Thredbo landslide. (Ben Fordham)

Emergency services were frantically trying to determine how they could start the search for possible survivors without setting off another landslide.

“I think the thing I struggled with the most was the concept that there were people underneath all that rubble,” Fordham said.

“It looked to me like there was no way in the world anyone could survive.”

Rescue workers checking debris after the Thredbo landslide.
Rescue workers checking debris after the Thredbo landslide. (Dean Seawell)

It was a deeply upsetting experience for a 21-year-old journalist, along with the community and family or friends of the victims.

“It was absolutely terrifying to think that people were fast asleep in the middle of the night, laying next to their loved ones.

“And then God knows what happened next. They must have heard a noise. The ground must have started moving. And the next thing you know their whole lives just slipped away.”

The media were kept at a distance as the excavation took place, but Fordham recalled what he saw through the lens of a camera.

“I remember seeing a body being moved, and it was clear to me that the body was frozen stiff,” he said.

“So there was no way in the world in my mind anyone was going to come out of that alive.”

Later that day, a more senior journalist from 2UE had arrived, and Fordham thought it was time for him to leave.

“I was probably suffering from a bit of trauma, to be honest,” he said.

“God knows what the friends and families involved were going through.”

In a phone call that night, Fordham’s father urged him to stay in Thredbo.

“I said that they’re pulling out frozen bodies. There’s no one alive under there. And I feel like I should go,” Fordham said.

The next morning Fordham woke up early and turned on the local radio station.

A thumbs up from rescuers offered to sign someone was alive in the rubble.
A thumbs up from rescuers offered to sign someone was alive in the rubble. (Dallas Kilponen)

A local politician had called in to report noises had been heard underneath the wreckage.

Fordham called Sydney and conveyed the news to the nation.

“My boss called me and said ‘You guys better be right about this’,” he said.

“There’s nothing worse than false hope.

“I remember having this awful, empty feeling about the possibility that the noise under there might have been created by something else.”

Rescuers extracting Stuart Diver from the rubble of the Thredbo landslide.
Rescuers extracting Stuart Diver from the rubble of the Thredbo landslide. (Nick Moore)

When Fordham arrived at the command post, he was told what had happened at 5.37am that morning.

Diver had been uninjured by the landslide, trapped between three concrete slabs.

Stuart Diver and was pulled from the rubble three days after the landslide.
Stuart Diver and was pulled from the rubble three days after the landslide. (Supplied: SCAT Paramedics)

His wife Sally Diver, who had been sleeping beside him, had been trapped under their bedhead in a depression. As the depression filled with water overnight, she drowned.

Stuart Diver was right beside his wife, but his desperate efforts to save her were unsuccessful.

He spent the next two-and-a-half days under the rubble in his underwear, with freezing water gushing past.

Sixty-five hours after the landslide, Diver was saved, suffering only frostbite.

“We need to remember so many people lost their lives and so many families were heartbroken that day,” Fordham said.

“But I think they would all understand the joy that we all felt when we realized that Stuart was going to get out of there.”

Fordham would go on to win a Walkley Award and a Raward that year for his coverage of the Thredbo landslide – the youngest reporter to do so.

But the impact of covering such devastation stuck with him.

“Months later, I was sitting in the pub in Sydney with some mates and then all of them went off to go and hit the dance floor,” he said.

“I was sitting there on my own and I just started crying.

July 30

Hundreds of sharks target shipwrecked sailors

“I think that’s the first time when I allowed myself to comprehend what I’d watched and what I’d experienced because at the time you’re right in the middle of it, you don’t really have that opportunity to sit back and contemplate the whole thing.

“And I was just an observer. So God only knows what it would have been like for the families and friends of those who were involved, let alone for Stuart.”

It was later determined that leaking water mains softening the ground had caused the landslide.

Categories
US

Drone strikes Russian forces in Crimea

Categories
Business

RLB forecasts emerging construction cost inflation will ease in 2023

The rate at which construction costs are soaring – contributing to a spate of high-profile building company collapses – will ease next year, according to new forecasts from global consultancy firm RLB.

Construction cost inflation in Melbourne is forecast to halve, dropping from 8 per cent this year to 4 per cent in 2023, and in Sydney it is predicted to slow from 6.9 per cent to 3.9 per cent.

An even bigger decline is forecast for the Gold Coast with cost growth dropping from 11.5 per cent to 5.5 per cent. Similarly, in Brisbane it should drop from 10.5 per cent this year to 5.1 per cent in 2023, according to forecasts published this week in RLB’s second quarter 2022 International Report.

RLB research and development director Domenic Schiafone said the expectation that costing will ease through next year was due to curtailing demand, likely to be caused by inflationary pressures.

“This easing of demand should allow manufacturing and logistics to get back to ‘normality’ or pre-Covid levels,” he said.

“The easing of demand should also see a softening of material prices with the high level of ‘demand-led price premiums’ reducing.”

Association of Professional Builders co-founder Russ Stephens, whose clients are residential home builders, agreed to escalate costs could halve next year, but off a much higher base.

He said the cost to build a residential home had increased a lot more than non-residential or commercial builds due to the larger percentage of timber used, and that temporary price hikes created by supply and demand were not reflected in the reports we were seeing.

Australia’s typical house build cost has soared more than $94,000 in 15 months, according to figures revealed in analysis by the Housing Industry Association and News Corp Australia earlier this month.

The national inflation rate hit 6.1 per cent in the year to June with new dwellings and automotive fuel the most significant contributors, new figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics this week showed. New dwellings were up 20.3 per cent.

Warning to Australians wanting to build

While construction cost inflation is expected to ease sometime next year, in the meantime the pain will continue.

Mr Stephens said because costs were increasing so quickly, consumers needed to be aware prices quoted for builds would not last long.

“If they’ve had a price quoted that is older than 30 days they should expect to have that price renegotiated,” he said.

He also said consumers would see more builders including rise and fall clauses, also known as cost escalation clauses, in contracts.

“It gives the ability for a builder to pass an increase in cost of materials on to the consumer,” Mr Stephens explained, adding it was common in other countries but Australia didn’t typically use them.

“What I would say to consumers is that’s not necessarily a negative thing because if the builders don’t put those clauses in they’ll have to put more contingency in to the price to protect themselves against potential increases.

“So rise and fall clauses are probably a good thing for consumers because it means they will only pay the cost of the increase rather than an inflated prediction of what increases might be, especially as we’re seeing evidence now that the increases will start to slow down next year.”

Factors contributing to the construction industry crisis

The construction industry is facing challenges so great that high-profile building companies are dropping like flies.

Mr Schiafone said fragmented supply chain issues were not resolved and labor shortages across the nation have continued as a result of the pandemic.

The consultancy’s report noted lead times for some products from overseas were currently

16 to 20 weeks, when traditionally they were half that at eight to 10 weeks.

Additionally, the need for construction labor and materials after recent flood damage will enhance existing shortages across the country, he said.

Mr Schiafone said higher fuel prices, increasing power costs and timber shortages were all symptoms of the war in Ukraine and were likely to linger for some time yet.

RLB global chairman Andrew Reynolds said significant cost escalation, global delivery uncertainty, aberrant weather events causing significant construction delays, and labor shortages were common challenges in the industry across the world.

Failed building companies

The latest company to collapse was prominent Melbourne apartment developer Caydon earlier this week, blaming “one difficult market situation after another”.

The next day, on Wednesday, ASX-listed developer Cedar Woods shelved a major inner-city Brisbane townhouse and apartment project due to rising costs and delays.

It came less than a week after Perth developer Sirona Urban killed off a $165 million luxury tower, where more than 50 per cent of apartments had been bought off the plan, blaming skyrocketing construction costs and labor shortages.

It was the second major apartment project to fall over in Australia last week.

A Melbourne developer, Central Equity, abandoned plans to build a $500 million apartment tower on the Gold Coast, blaming the crisis in the building industry and surging construction costs for making the project unprofitable.

Earlier this year, two major Australian construction companies, Gold Coast-based Condev and industry giant Probuild, went into liquidation.

The grim list has continued to grow from there as a number of other high-profile companies also collapsed, including Inside Out Construction, Dyldam Developments, Home Innovation Builders, ABG Group, New Sensation Homes, Next, Pindan, ABD Group and Pivotal Homes.

Others joined the list too including Solido Builders, Waterford Homes, Affordable Modular Homes and Statement Builders.

Then two Victorian building companies were further casualties of the crisis, having gone into liquidation at the end of June, with one homeowner having forked out $300,000 for a now half-built house.

Hotondo Homes Horsham, which was a franchisee of a national construction firm, collapsed a fortnight ago affecting 11 homeowners with $1.2 million in outstanding debt.

It is the second Hotondo Homes franchisee to go under this year, with its Hobart branch collapsing in January owing $1.3 million to creditors, according to a report from liquidator Revive Financial.

Meanwhile, a Sydney family face never being able to build their dream home after their builder Jada Group collapsed in March owing $2.4 million and the cost of their home’s construction jumped to $1.9 million, a whopping $800,000 more than the original quote.

Snowdon Developments was ordered into liquidation by the Supreme Court with 52 staff members, 550 homes and more than 250 creditors owed just under $18 million, although it was partially bought out less than 24 hours after going bust.

Dozens of homeowners and hundreds of tradies were left reeling after a Victorian building firm called Langford Jones Homes went into liquidation on July 4 owing $14.2 million to 300 creditors.

News.com.au also raised questions about NSW builder Willoughby Homes, which is under investigation by the Government after builds stalled and debts blew out to 90 days.

There are between 10,000 to 12,000 residential building companies in Australia undertaking new homes or large renovation projects, a figure estimated by the Association of Professional Builders.

– with Sarah Sharples

Read related topics:Cost Of Living

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Categories
Technology

Tiny Protonic Programmable Resistors Deliver Analog Synapse Processing Power for Efficient AI

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab believe that putting deep learning into the analog realm will be the key to both increasing the performance of artificial intelligence (AI) systems and dramatically improving its energy efficiency — and have come up with the hardware required to do exactly that.

“The working mechanism of the device is electrochemical insertion of the smallest ion, the proton, into an insulating oxide to modulate its electronic conductivity,” explains senior author Bilge Yildiz, professor at MIT, of the processor the team has developed. “Because we are working with very thin devices, we could accelerate the motion of this ion by using a strong electric field, and push these ionic devices to the nanosecond operation regime.”

The processor is based on earlier work to develop an analog synapse, but with a significant speed boost: the new version of the device, which is made up of arrays of protonic programmable resistors, operates a million times faster than previous versions — and are 1,000 times smaller than and operate 10,000 times faster than biological synapses like those found in the human brain.

Getting such technology out of the lab is always a challenge, however, but here the team claims to have made a breakthrough: the new device uses materials compatible with standard silicon fabrication techniques, allowing it to be produced in existing fabs and scale down to nanometer process nodes—meaning, in theory, it can be integrated into commercial processors to accelerate deep-learning workloads.

“We have been able to put these pieces together and demonstrate that these devices are intrinsically very fast and operate with reasonable voltages,” says senior author Jesús A. del Alamo, MIT professor. “This work has really put these devices at a point where they now look really promising for future applications.”

“Once you have an analog processor,” claims lead author Murat Onen, “you will no longer be training networks everyone else is working on. You will be training networks with unprecedented complexities that no one else can afford to, and therefore vastly outperform them.” In other words, this is not a faster car, this is a spacecraft.”

The team’s work has been published in the journal Science under closed-access terms.

Main article image courtesy of Ella Maru Studio and Murat Onen.

Categories
Entertainment

A pair make their romance official while we say goodbye to one of the most loved couples

After delving into their partners’ lives during the Life Swap Challenge, the contestants are feeling closer than ever as they head into the final week of Beauty and the Geek.

Our romantic couples come face-to-face with a relationship expert… well, host Sophie Monk, before we bid farewell to a much-loved pair.

Catch up on the latest episodes of Beauty and the Geek on 9Now.

But before we get to that the Beauties and Geeks have an exciting challenge ahead.

The six remaining couples must produce TikTok content for the world’s fastest growing social media platform in a crazy video challenge.

Sophie needs a bit of help with this challenge and brings in one of Australia’s most prominent TikTok stars, Millie Ford. Millie has amassed more than 1.4 million followers and is most recognized for her catchphrase, “Boys at the back.”

Sophie Monk and Millie Ford on Beauty and the Geek 2022.
Sophie and Millie are confused by some of the TikTok concepts. (Nine)

The Beauties are excited when they catch a glimpse of the TikTok star with Sophie before Millie tells the contestants to have fun with the challenge while being authentic, original and creative. Sounds easy, right?

The team with the best TikTok video win themselves a date, while the bottom two teams face elimination.

With only 10 minutes to come up with a concept and film their video, Millie and Sophie are left scratching their heads with some of the concepts.

Aaron and Karly recreate a scene from The NotebookAnthony and Tegan take a skit from Harry Potter… and we’re not sure what some of the other contestants’ concepts are.

But there is one TikTok that “kind of made sense” and that is Emily and Jason’s.

After surviving the last two eliminations, Emily and Jason finally head out on their long-awaited date. Instead of a Geek organizing things, Emily takes the reins and organizes a fun ice-skating outing for the pair.

After seeing how much of a kind soul Jason is, it opens the Beauty’s eyes to how she should be treated.

Emily then makes an emotional admission about how being bullied during her childhood and previously being in bad relationships led to her struggling with her self-esteem.

Beauty and the geek 2022: emily and jason enjoy an ice-skating date
Emily opened up about her insecurities while speaking to Jason. (Nine)

“Even though I have this big confidence on the outside, the outside doesn’t always match the inside,” she reveals.

“When I look in the mirror, I see a lot of flaws, and I feel like it’s because my past relationships have really made me feel like I need to look a certain way to be loved.”

The pair feel like they’ve grown closer to each other from this experience, with Jason realizing just how much they have in common.

New nine.com.au homepage
(Nine)

It would usually be time for a Mixer, but Sophie pulls aside our two romantic couples to help them gain an insight into what their relationship will look like outside the experiment.

It’s feeling a lot like a Married At First Sight Commitment Ceremony with Sophie’s set up. The host-turned-relationship-expert calls her first couple to the couch – Mike and Heidi.

The pair admit they see their relationship continuing on the outside world and gush about how close they’ve become.

Michael and Tara are the next couple to join the session.

Dr. Monk plays a game of ‘Slow’ or ‘Steady’ – much like a MAFS ‘Stay’ or ‘Leave’ situation – where if they write ‘Steady’, it means they want to make their relationship official, and ‘Slow’ is to keep things the way they are.

Michael reveals he was not expecting to find such a connection with someone, and admits he wants to take the next step in their relationship by showing his envelope.

“I met a girl that compliments me in all the best ways, I was not expecting this,” he says.

Michael and Tara make things official on Beauty and the Geek 2022
Michael and Tara made things official during Episode 9. (Nine)

After a nail-biting wait, Tara turns around her envelope and it’s a sigh of relief for Michael as it says ‘Steady’.

Admitting they can clearly see a future together, Tara reveals Michael has made her believe in love again.

“I’ve met a guy who actually made me believe in love again, so that’s pretty special,” Tara says.

Now it’s time for the Mixer, and to find out which two pairs will fight it out to stay in the competition.

Sophie reveals Chris and Bri and Mike and Heidi are the bottom two who will face her elimination quiz.

The first couple to reach five points is saved from being sent home.

In Pictures

sophie monk beauty and the geek 2022

All of Sophie Monk’s best looks

Latest frock pays tribute to her wedding day.

ViewGallery

Both couples are neck-in-neck during the intense three-round quiz, and it looks like anyone’s game right up until the end.

But it’s Bri and Chris who manage to steal the final point, which means Mike and Heidi’s journey comes to an end.

There’s not a dry eye in the room as the contestants farewell the Beauty and Geek, who intend to continue their romantic relationship on the outside.

Beauty and the Geek continues Monday to Wednesday at 7.30pm on Channel 9 and 9Now. Catch up on the latest episodes of Beauty and the Geek on 9Now.

Categories
Sports

Formula 1news | Russell draws first F1 pole as Verstappen flounders

George Russell stole the show Saturday at the Hungarian Grand Prix by earning his first career pole and first of the season for Mercedes — on the same day F1 champion and current points leader Max Verstappen qualified a season-worst 10th.

Russell screamed in celebration after a fast final qualifying lap helped him beat Ferrari drivers Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc.

“Whooooo, come on! And it is! Hahahaha. You beauty! You beauty!” yelled Russell before jumping into the arms of his engineers.

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The Mercedes pace was surprising since Russell claimed Mercedes’ second practice was “disastrous” on Friday, when Russell was about a full second slower than Leclerc’s leading time.

“For us as a team it’s massive. We were all here until 11pm last night scratching our heads, and we all felt pretty lost,” Russell said.

“To come back and grab pole position is an amazing feeling. We absolutely nailed today, 100 per cent.”

Verstappen unleashed expletives as his qualifying bid was undone.

He struggled with grip then complained of having “no power … nothing works” on his second attempt.

“I still don’t know what it is. I need to talk to the team, but I hope everything is fixable,” Verstappen said.

“I know this track is very hard to pass at, so we have to be patient. This year has shown that a lot of things can happen.”

The Hungaroring track, nestled amid rolling hills just outside of Budapest, dried out somewhat for afternoon qualifying following a huge downpour during the third practice.

Leclerc — who has seven poles this season — crashed while leading the French GP last Sunday to hand Verstappen a win that gave the Dutchman a 63-point lead over Leclerc in the standings.

But now Leclerc has an ideal chance to close the gap on Sunday on one of F1’s hardest tracks for passing.

Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez had a disappointing session and starts from 11th place.

“It’s been a bad day,” Perez said. “It’s certainly going to be difficult to overtake tomorrow.”

Lando Norris of McLaren qualified fourth followed by Esteban Ocon — last year’s winner — Alpine teammate Fernando Alonso and Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton, who is F1’s record holder with 103 poles.

Russell, who replaced Valtteri Bottas at Mercedes this year, landed his seat in part by overperforming for struggling backmarker Williams last year with an incredible performance in the wet to qualify second for the Belgian GP.

“Dare I say better than the Spa one?” Russell said. “This is what racing’s all about. This is why I want to become world champion.”

After a first pole, the British driver is eyeing a first win.

“Hopefully we can drive off into the sunset tomorrow. I’m already thinking of what I can do to win,” he said. “Saturday doesn’t mean a huge amount, Sunday is when the points and prizes are won.”

Russell has what it takes to reach the top, Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff believes.

“This is one of many milestones to come. George is a champion in the making,” Wolff said. “We would never have put him in a Mercedes if he didn’t think he could become a world champion.”

Hamilton had some bad luck as his drag reduction system stuck.

“My DRS stopped working, which was frustrating after all the struggle we had to finally have the chance to fight for front row,” he said. “We didn’t know how strong our pace was and where it came from, so it’s a very positive day for us. Huge congratulations to George, it’s an amazing feeling to get your first pole.”

Sainz called his form “nothing special” and conceded Russell “deserves that pole,” while Leclerc said he “struggled massively in Q3” because “the tires were definitely not in the right window.”

At least he has Verstappen where he wants him, seven cars back.

“Max might take a few more laps to come to the front,” Leclerc said.

Drivers had earlier tackled a difficult rain-drenched third practice.

Aston Martin driver Sebastian Vettel lost the rear tires and went backward into the crash barriers, bringing out a red flag with about 10 minutes to go. The session restarted with four minutes left.

After the intense heat of Friday, rain began thundering down around midday and the Hungaroring was drenched by the 1pm start.

The Ferraris were the first to go out and Leclerc slid as he missed a chicane.

As rain got even heavier and visibility worsened, Vettel — who is retiring at the end of the season — missed a turn and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly just avoided a crash barrier then later did a 360 spin.

Russell said he was “struggling a lot,” Ricciardo spoke of having “absolutely no grip” and Haas driver Mick Schumacher complained his rear tires felt like they were slipping on ice.

Williams driver Nicholas Latifi surprised everyone by posting the fastest time on his final lap.

“I was wondering if that clapping was for me,” joked Latifi, who is last in the standings and yet to score a point.

That joy was short-lived as the Canadian driver was among the five eliminated from Q1, along with Vettel and Gasly.

“I’m gutted,” said Gasly, who had one of his lap times deleted for going off track limits, also at Turn 5.

Latifi starts last on Sunday.

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