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Entertainment

Bindi Irwin and husband Chandler Powell reveal the cute nickname they give Terri

Bindi Irwin and husband Chandler Powell reveal the cute nickname they have given matriarch Terri: ‘We spent a long time searching for grandma names’

Bindi Irwin and husband Chandler Powell have given Irwin matriarch Terri a very cute nickname.

The pair called the late wife of Crocodile Hunter Steve, ‘Bunny’.

Former wakeboarder Chandler made the revelation as he recovered from having his tonsil out in hospital this week.

Bindi Irwin and husband Chandler Powell have given Irwin matriarch Terri a very cute nickname.  The pair called the late wife of Crocodile Hunter Steve, 'Bunny'

Bindi Irwin and husband Chandler Powell have given Irwin matriarch Terri a very cute nickname. The pair called the late wife of Crocodile Hunter Steve, ‘Bunny’

He posted a selfie of himself and Bindi sitting in the hospital bed and wrote in the caption: ‘Just wanted to write a note to my amazing wife. I had to get my tonsils out and she has been taking the best care of me.

I’m so lucky to be loved by you, [Bindi]. Also, thank you Bunny (my awesome mum-in-law) for taking care of Grace while we’ve been in the hospital and I’ve been recovering.’

The beloved Aussie duo hinted at the nickname early last year during an interview with The Bump.

They revealed ‘Bunny’ was inspired by a childhood neighbor of Terri’s, 58, back in Oregon who went by the same cute name.

Former wakeboarder Chandler made the revelation as he recovered from having his tonsil out in hospital this week

Former wakeboarder Chandler made the revelation as he recovered from having his tonsil out in hospital this week

‘We spent a long time searching for grandma names that also had an animal link,’ Bindi told the pregnancy website.

Meanwhile, Bindi’s brother Robert Irwin, who turned 18 in December, has dubbed himself the ‘fun uncle’ or ‘funcle’.

It comes during a few weeks for the Irwin family.

He said: 'I'm so lucky to be loved by you, [Bindi].  Also, thank you Bunny (my awesome mum-in-law) for taking care of Grace while we've been in the hospital and I've been recovering.'

He said: ‘I’m so lucky to be loved by you, [Bindi]. Also, thank you Bunny (my awesome mum-in-law) for taking care of Grace while we’ve been in the hospital and I’ve been recovering.’

Last week, Bindi revealed the family’s 38-year-old echidna had died.

‘Saying goodbye to our beautiful family member of 38 years,’ Bindi wrote alongside a gallery of pictures of the pet.

‘The sweetest, kindest, most wonderful echidna you ever did meet.’

She added alongside a love heart emoji: ‘Rest In Peace, angel.’

Bindi and Chandler tied the knot in 2020 with their daughter Grace Warrior Irwin Powell being born the following year.

It comes during a few weeks for the Irwin family.  Last week, Bindi revealed the family's 38-year-old echidna (right) had died.  (Pictured: Terri and Bindi with Robert Irwin, right)

It comes during a few weeks for the Irwin family. Last week, Bindi revealed the family’s 38-year-old echidna (right) had died. (Pictured: Terri and Bindi with Robert Irwin, right)

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Sports

James O’Connor among several forced Wallabies changes for Argentina Test | Australia rugby union team

There was a time when it seemed like Australia could whistle up a fresh world class playmaker at will but those days are long gone and Wallabies flyhalf stocks are looking threadbare with little more than a year to go until the World Cup.

James O’Connor will be the third starter in five Tests this season against Argentina on Saturday (Sunday AEST), coming in for Quade Cooper after his fellow 30-something was injured again in last week’s win over the Pumas in their Rugby Championship opener.

The 32-year-old O’Connor has much to prove after returning from one of a string of injuries to put in a poor display against England in July as a second-half replacement for Australia’s designated flyhalf of the future, Noah Lolesio.

“We talked about him needing to sharpen up and he’s been doing that,” coach Dave Rennie said. “It’s really around acceleration and sharpening up his skill set from him. Attitude wise he’s been brilliant, he couldn’t have been more supportive. It’s great that he gets the opportunity on Saturday.

“Our thinking is he’s going to go through the World Cup but only time will tell. I think he’s keen to get out there and show he’s got plenty of footy left in him.”

The versatile Reece Hodge will back up from the bench with no place even among the replacements for 22-year-old Lolesio, who started all three Tests against England last month.

“He’s disappointed,” said Rennie. “We’ve communicated areas where we want him to be better. But he’s a good kid, I reckon he’s going to be an excellent international 10 and he’s working hard on growing his game from him.

It is a far cry from nine years ago when Rennie’s fellow New Zealander Robbie Deans had five credible candidates to play flyhalf against the British and Irish Lions and plumped for O’Connor.

O’Connor was banished from Australian rugby at the end of the 2013 season for off-field indiscretions just as Bernard Foley, who had not been in contention for the Lions series, emerged to make the position his own for five years.

Foley fell out of favor before the 2019 World Cup campaign and Michael Cheika chopped and changed his starting flyhalf before the humiliating quarter-final exit at the hands of England.

Rennie accepted that flyhalf was the position of most concern with the World Cup on the horizon, not to mention the more immediate challenges of Tests against world champions South Africa and New Zealand when the Wallabies head home.

“Ten is the skinniest [position],” he said. “We’ve got some good young kids coming through but not ready for this level yet. It’s certainly an area of ​​focus, we need to develop our young 10s.”

Reports this week suggested that 32-year-old Foley, who now plays in Japan, would be recalled to the squad for the first time in three years.

“We haven’t made a decision around that,” said Rennie. “We’ll get home and we’ll pick a new squad for South Africa.”

wallabies: Tom Wright, Jordan Petaia, Len Ikitau, Lalakai Foketi, Marika Koroibete, James O’Connor, Nic White, Rob Valetini, Fraser McReight, Jed Holloway, Darcy Swain, Rory Arnold, Taniela Tupou, Folau Fainga’a, James Slipper ( captain). Reserve: Lachlan Lonergan, Matt Gibbon, Pone Fa’amausili, Nick Frost, Pete Samu, Tate McDermott, Irae Simone, Reece Hodge.

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Australia

Mother and step father to stand trial for alleged murder of toddler Kaydence Mills, whose body was found near Chinchilla Weir

A woman accused of murdering her daughter allegedly threw the little girl’s belongings out and told people the toddler was living with an aunt in the two years before authorities discovered she was missing, a court has heard.

WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are warned that the following article contains an image of the deceased.

The remains of Kaydence Hazel Mills were found near the Chinchilla Weir in March 2020.

She would have been approximately two-and-a-half to three years of age when police alleged she was murdered by her mother, Sinitta Tammy Dawita, and Dawita’s partner, Tane Saul Desatge, some time between March and October 2017.

An investigation into her whereabouts was only launched in late 2019.

On Friday, the pair appeared in Dalby Magistrates Court via video link and were committed to stand trial on charges of murder, torture and interfering with a corpse.

During the hearing, Magistrate Kerrie O’Callaghan outlined details of the prosecution’s evidence of the alleged physical and psychological abuse inflicted on Kaydence before her death.

WARNING: The following evidence contains graphic detail of alleged abuse

The court heard a witness statement claimed the little girl was “abused every day,” “had to sleep on the toilet floor as she had nowhere else to sleep,” and “lived like an animal” at the family home in Chinchilla.

A little girl staring at the camera.
The remains of toddler Kaydence Hazel Mills were found near the Chinchilla Weir.(Supplied)

“[The witness said] Tane would flog her with a bamboo cane if she didn’t go to the toilet … and she had to be covered up when [the family] would go out because of the bruises,” Ms O’Callaghan said.

The court also heard the witness said the last time she saw the little girl she was lying on the couch covered in bruises – but she was gone the next day

“[The witness said Ms Dawita and Mr Desatge] said she had gone… [Ms Dawita] told her not to say anything and threw all of Kaydence’s belongings out.”

Police tape marking off a section of land near a water weir
Police marked off an area at Chinchilla Weir as a crime scene in 2019.(ABC News: Nathan Morris)

The court heard police launched an investigation into Kaydence’s whereabouts in September 2019.

“There’s evidence [Ms Dawita] told people during the period 2017 to early 2020 that she was concerned about Kaydence’s [biological] dad coming so she had her taken away to an aunt,” Ms O’Callaghan said.

“She told others she was with a family friend, that Kaydence lived in Brisbane, that she was with friends.”

A support worker also said that in October 2019 Ms Dawita did not acknowledge Kaydence’s existence and, when asked, said she lived with an aunt in Brisbane, the hearing was told.

Abdominal or head injury possible causes of death

The court heard that medical evidence indicates the cause of death “cannot be accurately determined,” but one expert suggested death could have been caused by abdominal trauma or a head injury.

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Categories
US

The IRS is set to get billions for audit enforcement. Here’s what it means for taxpayers

The Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act calls for delivering nearly $80 billion to the IRS over 10 years. After months of negotiations over the sweeping spending package, the Senate passed the bill earlier this month, sending the legislation to the House for a vote before it reaches President Joe Biden’s desk.
IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, along with his predecessor, have asked Congress for additional funding. The agency’s budget has shrunk by more than 15% over the last decade. As a result, staffing levels and audit rates have been declining for years.
What's in the Manchin-Schumer deal on climate, health care and taxes
But some Republicans are attacking the proposed increase in IRS funding, arguing that it would leave more middle-class Americans and small businesses with the headache of facing a tax audit.

Democrats, and Rettig — who was appointed by former President Donald Trump — have said repeatedly that the intent is not to target the middle class but instead focus on making sure wealthy tax cheats comply with the law. It’s ultimately up to the IRS how the money is used.

“The IRS has for too long been unable to pursue meaningful, impactful examinations of large corporate and high-net-worth taxpayers to ensure they are paying their fair share,” Rettig wrote in a letter sent to lawmakers last week.

“The goal should not only be to increase audits, but improve the productivity of audits. You want the IRS to select the businesses and people for audits who really have not been compliant,” said Janet Holtzblatt, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Here’s what it could mean to taxpayers if the IRS gets an increase in funding:

How much funding will the IRS receive?

The Inflation Reduction Act would provide nearly $80 billion to the IRS over 10 years, in addition to the money the agency normally receives from Congress on an annual basis. The IRS received nearly $12.6 billion for fiscal year 2022.

The new funding would result in a more than 50% increase in IRS funding adjusted for inflation, Holtzblatt said.

The $80 billion would be spread across four different areas of the IRS over the next decade.

More than half, about $45.6 billion, would go toward strengthening enforcement activities — including collecting taxes owed, providing legal support, conducting criminal investigations and providing digital asset monitoring, according to the bill text.

More than $25 billion would be allocated to support IRS operations, including expenses like rent payments, printing, postage and telecommunications.

Nearly $4.8 billion would be used for modernizing the agency’s customer service technology, like developing a callback service.

Roughly $3 billion would be allocated for taxpayer assistance, filing and account services.

How many new auditors could be hired?

The Republican National Committee and several Republican lawmakers have criticized the new IRS funding, claiming that it will provide the agency with an “army of 87,000 new IRS agents.”
But that number is misleading. The Treasury Department did estimate in 2021 that a nearly $80 billion investment in the IRS could allow the agency to hire 86,852 full-time employees over the course of a decade. But that figure accounts for all workers, not solely enforcement agents.
Still, hiring more than 86,000 workers over 10 years could be a huge increase for the IRS, which currently has nearly 80,000 employees. But the number of IRS staff has declined over the past decade, currently standing at 1970s levels, and the agency is expected to keep losing people.
Earlier this year, Rettig told lawmakers that the IRS would need to hire 52,000 people over the next six years just to maintain current staffing levels to replace those who retire or otherwise leave.

The Inflation Reduction Act does not instruct the IRS to hire a certain number of enforcement agents, and the agency would need to decide on staffing plans.

“The resources to modernize the IRS will be used for sorely needed improvements to taxpayer services — from answering the phones to improving 1960s-era IT systems — and to crack down on wealthy and corporate tax evaders who cost the American people hundreds of billions of dollars each year,” Natasha Sarin, Treasury Department counselor for tax policy and implementation, said in a statement sent to CNN.

“The majority of new employees will replace the standard level of staff departures over the next few years,” she added.

How much more would the IRS be able to collect in federal taxes?

With an increase in funding for enforcement activities, the IRS will be able to conduct more audits and, as a result, collect more federal tax revenue.

The Congressional Budget Office expects increased collection to amount to roughly $203 billion over 10 years, raising net federal revenue by more than $124 billion during that time period when accounting for the nearly $80 billion that would be spent.

Tougher enforcement is intended to close what’s known as the “tax gap,” or the difference between the amount of tax revenue the government is collecting and what taxpayers actually owe. There are some bad actors who try to evade paying what they owe to Uncle Sam, but some inadvertent errors made by taxpayers drive the tax gap, too.

An older IRS estimate, based on tax years 2011, 2012 and 2013, found that nearly 84% of federal taxes are paid voluntarily and on time, leaving about $381 billion ultimately uncollected. Rettig has told lawmakers in the past that he believes the tax gap could be as much as $1 trillion a year now.
Audit rates of individual income tax returns decreased for all income levels between tax years 2010 to 2019 as staff levels and funding also declined, according to the Government Accountability Office. On average, individual tax returns were audited over three times more often during tax year 2010 than in tax year 2019.

Who may be more likely to face an IRS audit?

Selection for an audit doesn’t always suggest there’s a problem, according to the IRS. Sometimes returns are selected at random.

The Biden administration has repeatedly said that it wants the IRS to focus increased enforcement activity on high-wealth taxpayers and large corporations and not target households that earn less than $400,000 a year.

In his letter to lawmakers last week, Rettig wrote “that audit rates will not rise relative to recent years for households making under $400,000.”

He also said that better technology and customer service would make it less likely that compliant taxpayers would be audited.

Yellen directs IRS not to use new funding to increase chances of audits of Americans making less than $400,000

This week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen publicly reiterated Rettig’s statement, noting that the new enforcement resources will instead “focus on high-end noncompliance.”

Lawmakers also included language in the bill that aims to clarify who is the focus of a ramp-up in audits.

The bill says that the new investment in the IRS is not “intended to increase taxes on any taxpayer or small business with a taxable income below $400,000.”

Still, there is some uncertainty about how exactly the IRS will decide how to ramp up audits.

“Clearly this is going to be something that Congress and other interested parties are going to try and monitor — but good luck,” Holtzblatt said.

“I think it’s going to be a difficult commitment to observe whether it’s being followed,” she added.

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Categories
Business

Wall Street wobbles as inflation rally dissolves

The Australian sharemarket is 0.5 per cent lower at 7040.2 before noon after an afternoon swoon saw Wall Street finish its session lower.

Energy is the only sector in the black with the property, tech, health and consumer discretionary sectors all down more than one per cent.

Wall Street's early rally dissolved by the afternoon.

Wall Street’s early rally dissolved by the afternoon.Credit:Bloomberg

Shares in insurance giant IAG are 1 per cent higher after it reported its results while ResMed shares are 2 per cent lower after releasing its results in the US overnight.

The S&P 500 closed 0.1 per cent lower after having been up 1.1 per cent in the early going. The Nasdaq fell 0.6 per cent, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.1 per cent gain.

The indexes got a big boost early on following a report showing inflation at the wholesale level slowed more than economists expected last month. The report, which came a day after a cooler-than-expected reading on inflation at the consumer level, bolstered hopes among investors that inflation may be close to a peak and that the Federal Reserve will be less aggressive about raising interest rates than feared.

Even so, the morning rally didn’t hold. The selling coincided with a sharp upward move in bond yields and rising energy prices, which have been a central component of higher inflation.

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“People stepped back and the inflation outlook isn’t that much different than what it was before,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at All Star Charts. “There’s still a lot of work for the Fed to do. Maybe a little bit too much short-term euphoria kind of got in the market.”

Some Fed officials also made comments after Wednesday’s inflation report suggesting their battle against rising prices is far from over.

Categories
Technology

Tips And Tricks For A Thriving Flock In Cult Of The Lamb

Hello, you filthy little lambs. Are you looking for tips on how to satisfy the mangey little runts that have fled ritual sacrifice to live under your adorable and potentially vicious rule in Cult of the Lamb? Well, you’ve come to the right place.

Cult of the Lamb is out now, available to all those who wish to lead. If you haven’t had the chance to check it out yet, maybe give my review a little looksie. If you’re looking to go in completely blind (don’t worry, my review isn’t very spoiler-heavy), I’d recommend giving the demo a red hot go, and if you like it, buy the full game. If you’ve found that my tastes align with yours, this is a game you’ll enjoy.

As a big freakin’ fan of the game and someone that I personally believe has done a pretty good job managing a 20-creature cult, I believe that I have some helpful tips that might be of use to those wanting a cult that isn’t just a bit shit. Just my opinion!

So here you go, little lamb. Here’s some sage advice from a Ratau-like being on what to aim for when building your cult. Mind you, there is no wrong way to play the game. You can be whatever kind of cult leader you like. However, these are the things that I found that made it a most pleasant experience.

Kotaku AU Spoiler Warning

Must-have structures

You will have to build many structures through your time in Cult of the Lamb. They can all be unlocked through the Shrine’s upgrades via your flock worshiping at the shrine and accruing Devotion. These are a few tips for buildings in Cult of the Lamb that I found were very helpful.

Health Station

cult of the lamb tips
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

Whether you like it or not, there’s a good chance your followers are going to get sick. It may be from the horrible garbage you feed them, or the terrible state the Cult has been left in. Hey, it might even be at the hands of a baddie. While you can simply send them to bed to red, this just won’t do if you’ve got a schedule to adhere to. The health station allows you to cure sick followers using flowers that you find in the Darkwood, which can also be grown on the farm. Very helpful!

Lumberyards and Mines

cult of the lamb tips
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

When you begin your cult, there’s going to be a whole lot of trees and rocks to get through to start yourself off. Unfortunately, these take a while to come back so unless you’re regularly choosing the wood or stone options in dungeons, building a good few lumberyards and mines will help you keep the goods flowing. Upgrading these will also help to get even more wood and stone.

Outhouse and Janitor’s Station

cult of the lamb tips
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

The reality of life is that you shit, and sometimes you spew. Sad, but true. Your followers do it too, because it’s only natural, baby. While it is unfortunately legal for a bear to shit in the woods, it can be a bit of a pain running around the place and cleaning it all up. The outhouse is a solid addition to the cult, and helps keep the place tidy as well as focuses all the dookie into one area. Just remember to clean it out often or it’ll get full and stinky!

The Janitor’s Station is also a great addition to avoid uncleanliness and eventual sickness in your flock, as it gives them the tools to clean up after themselves so you don’t have to. A good cult is a tidy one!

Refineries

Tips And Tricks For A Thriving Flock In Cult Of The Lamb
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

The further along you go in Cult of the Lamb, the more stuff you’re going to need. Eventually, the better structures won’t use wood and stone, but instead planks and bricks. And then, even more eventually, you’ll need a few gold bricks here and there. Having multiple refineries going means that you can go ahead and keep the planks, bricks, and gold bricks flowing. Upgrading these bad boys also means you’ll have more space to make more resources. Good stuff!

Compost Bin

Tips And Tricks For A Thriving Flock In Cult Of The Lamb
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

This one’s entirely optional, but if you find that your flock is simply not shitting enough, a Compost Bin is a great structure to get your hands on. In your travels, you are going to get a LOT of grass. So much grass. While you can feed your followers grass (it will make them sick), the compost bin allows you to turn the grass into fertiliser, which will then result in a plentiful harvest for your farm crops. Fertilized crops result in more food and seeds, so make sure to fertilize!

Take advantage of rituals

Tips And Tricks For A Thriving Flock In Cult Of The Lamb
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

One of the most important tips for success in Cult of the Lamb: Rituals are vital, and help a lot when keeping your cult happy and obsessed with you. More rituals can be obtained through performing sermons and upping your faith level, and are divvied up into 5 different categories relating to how they affect your flock. These are my top 3 rituals, and here’s why:

  • Ascend Follower Ritual – Early on, The One Who Waits will give you the Sacrifice Follower Ritual. This allows you to kick a follower to the curb to make yourself stronger. While you can do this, sometimes it will make your flock dislike you and sometimes even make followers dissent. I’ve found that another ritual, the Ascend Follower Ritual, is a lighter version of the Sacrifice Follower Ritual, and instead sends your follower to the heavens. Sure, you don’t get any Follower Meat from it and the power bonus is a little smaller, but there’s no negative Faith and it’s a lot nicer.
  • Funeral – Followers die. They might get sick and die, they might grow old and die, or you might murder them. That’s life! While you can simply harvest them for meat or throw them in an unmarked grave, the Funeral Ritual allows for your and your flock to mourn for a deceased follower, and adds flowers to their grave. As well as this, any follower that has had a funeral will enable their grave to be mourned by cult members, which results in extra devotion.
  • Feasting Ritual – Sometimes you don’t have food, and your followers are starving. While there is the option for a ritual where your flock will fast for a few days and be fine, I quite like the feasting ritual as it only requires bones collected from dungeons to do, and results in a grand feast where everybody’s bellies are filled and faith is raised a significant amount.

Ritual Buffs

Tips And Tricks For A Thriving Flock In Cult Of The Lamb
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

While upgrading your cult through the main shrine, you can unlock all sorts of structures. However, the only two upgrades that aren’t related to structures also happen to be the most useful upgrades you can get. I highly suggest getting Cheaper Rituals and Ritual Cool Downs as soon as possible, as the former slashes the resource price of rituals in half and the latter shortens the cooldown time of rituals, meaning you can do them more often. As mentioned prior, rituals are vital to running a healthy and happy cult, so making them easier to access is a good thing to do.

Talk to your flock

Tips And Tricks For A Thriving Flock In Cult Of The Lamb
Screenshot: Devolver Digital / Kotaku Australia

What’s more important than a cult full of stuff? The followers that live in it, of course!

One of my last tips for Cult of the Lamb: talking to your followers, blessing them, inspiring them, and completing their quests will help you get through the game swimmingly. Leveling followers up results in more Devotion and stronger level companions if you choose to take them with you in your crusades, and completing their quests will result in Devotion and Faith boosts. When the time comes for them to pass on, Sacrificing or Ascending a high-level follower will result in greater rewards.

Also, they’re there to devote their lives to you! Give them a gift every so often, they’ll thank you for it.


Those are my tips for gitting gud in Cult of the Lamb and having a big, juicy, and thriving cult. Feel free to drop your personal tips in the comments below!

Cult of the Lamb is out now on PlayStation and Xbox platforms, Nintendo Switch, and Windows PC. Find out more at its official site.

Categories
Entertainment

‘I burned all my relationships in the kiln’: Lindsey Mendick’s courageous, confessional ceramics | Art

Years before I first met Lindsey Mendick, I knew more intimate details of her life than I did those of my oldest friends. I knew about her past relationships of her: open and clandestine; coercive and crushing. I knew about her sex with her exes, how she felt about her body, and theirs. I knew about her partner de ella, the artist Guy Oliver, and her de ella vampire fantasies de ella (a card of Guy-as-a-vampire making love to Mendick is stuck to my fridge). I knew she suffered from polycystic ovary syndrome, and that it made her hirsute (which she hated) and possibly infertile (about which she was ambivalent).

I knew all this because of her art, which is ruthlessly, brutally honest about topics other people swerve even on a cabernet-lubricated girls’ night in. People react strongly to her work. Since moving to Margate during the pandemic, Mendick has become close to Tracey Emin, which she figures her. There’s a shared sensibility: if you’re going to mine personal experience, why hold back? (Except, Mendick will try to persuade me later, she does hold back.)

Off With Her Head, her latest show, explores the vilification of powerful women, from Medusa to Meghan Markle. It opens with Anne Boleyn, lifesize, kneeling in prayer ahead of her execution de ella, with video of Mendick’s face superimposed as she confesses her de ella “sins”: a lipstick sample stolen; cold pasta eaten from the bin; bags for life unscanned at the checkout. There’s heavy stuff, too: binging and purging, and the obsessive thought disorder that periodically floods Mendick’s brain with horrific visions.

Navigating the exhibition at Carl Freedman’s gallery in Margate, I spot Mendick’s mermaid-blue bob as she searches for me between possessed vases, demon cats and thick pub fixtures. She greets me with a hug. We’re deposited in a cool office room by gallery director Robert Diament – ​​a friend of Mendick – who offers us choc-ices.

Off With Her Head
Off With Her Head. Photograph: copyright of Lindsey Mendick, courtesy of Carl Freedman Gallery, Margate

Did she consciously decide to open up her life to her art or is that just how she is? “I feel like the honesty is quite protective,” Mendick says, as we settle into opposite corners of a giant sofa. “If everyone feels you’re being honest about one thing then you can keep the real darkness at bay.”

Those bad thoughts she shares as she recounts her sins? They’re a sanitized version. The reality, she tells me, is far worse.

Her confessional turning point was the 2019 show The Ex Files – a love letter to the corporate environments she worked in as a younger woman. Mendick built an office with cottage-cheese-print wallpaper, decorated it with sculptures of glazed donuts and kinky leather furniture, and shared the story of her past relationships in ceramic sticky notes on the walls (“You choosing me made me feel like I existed ”; “You were surprisingly kind and effortlessly cruel”; “I don’t have to forgive you”). As she puts it: “I burned all my relationships in the kiln.” She didn’t expect them to be read, but they were. It turned out that sharing intimate details of her life from her and receiving affirmation for it was “quite addictive”.

Mendick’s corporate years started when she was struggling with her mental health: her dad found a role for her at his office. Her family de ella still looms large: her mum de ella was a children’s clothes designer for places such as Woolworths, C & A and British Home Stores. The artist designed custom fabric and wallpaper with her mum de ella for Off With Her Head, a floral pattern decorated with scolds ‘bridles.

Mendick credits her mum with introducing her to sculpture, albeit via the unusual medium of cake. Among her mother’s fondant-iced masterpieces of her, she remembers one made for a neighbor turning 18: “She made him in the bath, with a beer.” Her sister de ella also started making cakes: the love they garnered did not escape Mendick’s notice de ella. “So when my friends were turning 18, I started making them,” she tells me. “I was the worst at it out of the three of us.” She has since realized fondant icing is much trickier than clay: “The stickiness, the sugar, the way that it starts melting, and one color bleeds into another. Clay is a piece of piss compared to that.”

Off With Her Head
Off With Her Head. Photograph: copyright of Lindsey Mendick, courtesy of Carl Freedman Gallery, Margate

Some of Mendick’s sculpture plays with the conventions of traditional ceramics. There are ornate glazed vases ripped from within by claws, skeleton hands or octopus tentacles. Toby jugs shaped like her severed head from her. Figurines of smoking, red-eyed rodents. She also reimagines homely objects. In Hairy on the Inside, the show about polycystic ovary syndrome, she modeled classic kids’ toys (among them Mr Potato Head and Sylvanian Families) beset by bulging cysts and werewolf snouts. Ceramic sculpture is her primary medium, but it is presented within a fully realized world. For Hairy on the Inside, she built an ob/gyn waiting room populated by anxious werewolves. For Off With Her Head, she has made a pub, with custom beer mats and a pole-dancing platform.

Drama is comprehensive. Mendick wants you to gasp at the big reveal, like a homeowner shown their master bedroom on an interior design show. She wants to overwhelm you with detail, camp and pop culture references. Her “more, more, more” sensibility is a product of the “bawdy culture” she grew up in, she thinks. “As a child of the 90s, there was so much over the top reaction: Euro 96, Princess Diana dying, the Spice Girls, fandom. Everything was huge, everyone showed emotions. Everything was about the party: from Live & Kicking to TFI Friday.”

As we talk, I’m frequently aware that she’s teetering between wanting to please and wanting not to care. Mendick has the courage to be outspoken, outrageous, full-on, but she is tormented with self-doubt and anxiety. The overwhelming installations she constructs derive from this cycle: “I’m conscious of taking up people’s time, and I feel guilty about that,” she says. So in return, “I want you to see how much time I’ve put in, that it means the world to me, that I’m not blasé: it’s part of my soul and what I believe in.”

The relationship with Oliver has been transformative, personally and artistically. They share a dog – Telly the pug – and a not-for-profit gallery called Quench. Oliver’s film-making skills have brought video into Mendick’s work from him. For Hairy on the Inside, I filmed her mouth and chin in closeup as she drank a glass of red wine. This was at the end of lockdown: she’d been unable to access hair-removal treatment. As she described bullying, insecurity and her mixed feelings about the pressure to be body positive, she drew viewers’ attention to the red wine catching her in the hair on her top lip.

The list of confessions in Off With Her Head concludes with Mendick sharing petty annoyances with Oliver, before explaining how awkward it felt to say that with him behind the camera. At one point she says: “I hate him so much, like when he walks really slowly into a restaurant, or corrects a word when he knows the word that I actually meant.” I am astounded by the way they navigate this as a couple. The complexities of their relationship are explored in Mendick’s upcoming work Till Death Do Us Part, made for the Hayward Gallery’s autumn show Strange Clay. There, rodents fight battles across various domestic interiors: if our home is our castle, says Mendick “those castles are our domain where we create the laws”. They are also the sites of concealed battles and arguments.

Lindsey Mendick
Lindsey Mendick. Photograph: Linda Nylind/The Guardian

The warped lens of social media places Mendick in the inner circle of a tight Margate scene that centers on Tracey Emin, together with gallerist Carl Freedman (a curator important to the rise of the YBAs), Robert Diament and Russell Tovey. Also in the orbit are Mendick’s close friend Rebecca Lucy Taylor (AKA singer-songwriter Self Esteem) and the younger artists who pass through Quench gallery. This pally cluster performs like an extended family, populating one another’s podcasts and Instagram feeds. Taylor and Mendick bubbled during the pandemic, sharing tracks and artworks as the former worked towards a new album and the latter an exhibition.

Emin has been a huge influence, as an artist, and now as a friend. “Everything changed when she came into my life,” says Mendick, for whom the line between friendship and fandom is endearingly blurred. The periodic vilification Emin has endured makes the artist something of a patron saint for Off With Her Head. “Cancel culture is just the newest incarnation of tabloids and the public shaming of women: it’s always been there.” Emin features in the show in a ceramic diorama, naked among her paintings by her.

Less immediately visible in the show, but evident throughout our conversation, is how women internalize this threat of vilification, and the pressure to be quiet, compliant and pleasing. This is the battle within: the conditioning Mendick fights, even as she appears to tell all.

Categories
Sports

LIV contracts under spotlight as detail revealed

Seen here, LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman with Dustin Johnson at a tournament in 2022.

LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman is seen here with Dustin Johnson at a tournament in 2022. Pic: Getty

A lawyer for LIV Golf has made a startling admission in federal court that contradicts previous statements about contracts signed by players in the Saudi-backed series.

During a court hearing on behalf of three LIV Golf stars trying to stop the PGA Tour from banning them playing in the FedEx Cup playoffs starting this week, a lawyer for the players reportedly mentioned that money won in LIV tournaments is “recouped against the LIV contracts.”

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Australia’s Matt Jones, Talor Gooch, and Hudson Swafford challenged the PGA Tour’s decision to ban them from competing in the season-ending FedEx Cup playoffs, after all three had joined the Saudi-backed rebel series.

The three suspended golfers were seeking a temporary restraining order so they could play in the FedEx Cup playoffs but the motion was denied by US District Judge Beth Labson Freeman.

The judge said she didn’t consider the golfers faced irreparable harm because of the big money they were guaranteed by joining LIV, which a key issue in the case.

“There simply is no irreparable harm in this case,” PGA Tour attorney Elliot Peters said.

That guaranteed money is also now under the spotlight after an admission from a LIV lawyer that prizemoney on offer in tournaments is counted against some players’ signing-on fees.

Many of the top players who defected from the PGA Tour were paid large sums of money up front by LIV, with some players’ earnings from the lucrative LIV events recovered from their contracts.

It means that in the case of some players, it would not matter if they finish last in LIV Golf events because they’ve already been guaranteed considerable sums of money.

The LIV lawyer did stress that each player’s contract is different, meaning while not all earnings are recovered from contracts, some definitely are.

The stunning revelation contradicts previous assertions from LIV Golf after Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee and others first put it to the organization that players didn’t make additional money from winning events.

Brooks Koepka said “I don’t know” when asked at a LIV press conference in Portland whether a player’s winnings come out of their signing bonus.

It prompted an intervention from a LIV spokesperson at the end of the interview to deny that prizemoney counted against their contracts.

“I just wanted to address [the] question earlier when you were asking about the prize purses and if they are in addition to the contracts,” the spokesperson said.

“The prize purses are in addition to. There is no draw at LIV Golf on any finances,” she said.

“We just wanted to, on the record, it’s in addition to. And while you guys have, this is your first event, but you should know that from your contracts. You can test it. Thank you guys.”

Judging on the admission from LIV’s lawyer in court, this statement would not appear true for all players in the Saudi-backed series.

The three players who saw their PGA Tour bans upheld are among 10 players who filed an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour last week — including Phil Mickelson.

Judge upholds PGA Tour bans for LIV players

Robert Walters, an antitrust litigator representing the golfers, noted this would be their opportunity on a big playoff stage, “effectively the Super Bowl of golf” because of its “significant income opportunities.”

Freeman responded that the LIV Tour earnings potential was also great and asked whether players might have been able to wait until the conclusion of the PGA Tour season to depart for the new tour.

Walters argued there were only 48 spots and they would have filled up according to LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman, to which Freeman said she agreed with that stance but that the golfers stood to gain far more financially joining LIV than the money they might have earned on the PGA Tour.

Seen here, Matt Jones looks on during a golf tournament in 2022.

Matt Jones and two other LIV Golf stars have lost their court appeal after being banned by the PGA Tour from competing in the FedEx Cup playoffs. Pic: Getty

“This is an extraordinarily attractive financial opportunity but it’s much more than that,” Walters said, saying the harm done is that “players lose intangible benefits” such as qualifications for the major tournaments as well as other marquee invitationals.

“This is the holy grail because everybody wants to compete in and prevail in major championships, but it’s not just the majors,” Walters said. I have noted that the PGA Tour inferred these golfers would put a “taint” or “stench” on the tour’s image by playing, perhaps even wearing LIV Tour gear in PGA Tour tournaments.

“We’re disappointed that Talor Gooch, Hudson Swafford and Matt Jones won’t be allowed to play golf. No one gains by banning golfers from playing,” LIV Golf said in a statement.

The first of three FedEx Cup playoff events begins this week. Two tournaments offer $15 million prize funds, and the player who wins the FedEx Cup at East Lake in Atlanta gets $18 million — thus the urgency for Freeman to rule. This case could go to trial next year, with the possibility of an injunction hearing in late September or early October.

with agencies

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Categories
Australia

Australia weather: Southeast rain band causes flood warnings in Victoria and NSW

Parts of NSW are preparing for the worst day of a rain band that is moving through the state, leading to renewed fears of flooding at inland rivers.

A cold front, associated with a low pressure system that moved through Western Australia, brought showers to western NSW from late Thursday and extended into eastern parts of the state on Friday.

The Bureau of Meteorology said Friday was forecasted to be the wettest day of the rain event for most NSW regions, with inland rivers at an increased risk of flooding due to recent deluges in the area.

“This rainfall may cause widespread minor to moderate and possibly major flooding along inland NSW rivers, many of which experienced flooding due to the rainfall last week,” it wrote.

The bureau expects renewed flooding at multiple river catchments littered across the state on Friday, including a minor to major flooding for the Macquarie River downstream of Burrendong Dam.

The other 13 warnings were either minor or moderate in nature for parts of inland NSW, with up to 25-55mm of rain possible around the northwest and central west plains.

Widespread rain and possible storms are predicted until Saturday across the coast, with Sydney and Newcastle expected to experience a deluge on Friday, while it could last until Sunday for inland regions.

Last month was the wettest July on record for much of the NSW east coast, including Sydney, with rainfall around four to eight times higher than average.

Parts of Victoria are also being impacted by the east-coast deluge, with rain bucketing down since 9am on Thursday.

Mount Buffalo copped 51.6mm of rain in the last 24 hours, while Archerton experienced a 34.6mm soaking.

Rainfall totals have generally been 5-10mm across the state, but increased to around 15-25mm over the central ranges and 20-30mm in the northeast ranges.

Minor flood warnings are in place for parts of the Murray and Kiewa rivers.

The bureau’s climate outlook forecast is that rain will likely be above median for much of Australia over the coming fortnight but below median for parts of the tropics.

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Categories
US

The Washington Post: FBI searched Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence for classified nuclear documents

The people did not offer additional details to the Post about “what type of information the agents were seeking” or whether any such documents were recovered, according to the paper.

The revelation adds key context to the Justice Department’s extraordinary decision to search for the home of a former president.

As CNN previously reported, the criminal investigation started with concerns about missing documents raised by the National Archives, which made a criminal referral to the Justice Department upon discovering highly sensitive documents among the materials retrieved from Mar-a-Lago in January. The 15 boxes contained some materials that were part of special access programs (SAP), a classification that includes protocols to significantly limit who would have access to the information, according to a source familiar with what the Archives discovered in the boxes. That led to FBI interviews with aides to grand jury subpoenas to this week’s court-authorized search and seizure of documents.

Though Attorney General Merrick Garland has declined to share specific details about the search, he said Thursday that he “personally approved” the decision to seek a warrant for the search of Trump’s Florida home.

“The department does not take such a decision lightly. Where possible, it is standard practice to seek less intrusive means as an alternative to a search and to narrowly scope any search that is undertaken,” Garland said in a news conference.

The attorney general also said that the Justice Department had filed a request in court that the search warrant and property receipt from the search be unsealed.
Merrick Garland just called Donald Trump's bluff

Trump said in a late-night post on his Truth Social platform Thursday that he would “not oppose the release of documents,” adding, “I am going to step further by ENCOURAGING the immediate release of those documents.”

CNN reported earlier Thursday that Trump and his legal team had not yet reached a decision on how to respond to the Justice Department’s motion, according to a source familiar with their thinking.

Since the search, top congressional Republicans have rushed to Trump’s defense, casting the move as politically motivated. The former President has denied all wrongdoing, claiming the investigation is intended to derail his potential bid to return to the White House.

In a pair of posts to Truth Social following Garland’s statement, Trump continued to claim that his attorneys were “cooperating fully” and had developed “very good relationships” with federal investigators prior to Monday’s search at Mar-a-Lago.

The search warrant had been authorized by a federal court, Garland said.

“It is a federal crime to remove classified documents wrongly. And so if you are filling out that affidavit and you have to list the crime, you can list that as the crime,” said Elie Honig, a former federal and state prosecutor and a CNN senior legal analyst, following the search warrant.

This story has been updated with additional information Friday.

CNN’s Tierney Sneed, Evan Perez, Hannah Rabinowitz and Zachary Cohen contributed to this report.

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