Categories
Sports

Buckley’s top five contenders and outright flag favorite

In the wake of Round 21, Nathan Buckley believes there are five genuine contenders for the AFL premiership.

The ladder shows Geelong on top ahead of Collingwood in second with Melbourne third, Sydney fourth and Brisbane fifth.

It is from that quintet that Buckley sees the 2022 flag winner.

“I would suggest Geelong are right up there, Sydney are a premiership chance, Collingwood you have to say they’re a premiership chance given their form,” he said on SEN Breakfast.

“And that’s before we get to the reigning premiers in Melbourne and potentially a Brisbane side that is coming through as well.”

Buckley has the Cats as outright favourites, marginally ahead of the Swans, with the Magpies, Demons and Lions on the next level.

“I would suggest that right now Geelong are the premiership favourites,” he added.

“I’m not looking at the market, I think Geelong are the premiership favourites.

“I would put Sydney next and then I reckon you’ve got Collingwood, Melbourne and Brisbane all on the same level.”

The former Pies player and coach says he is intrigued by this Sunday’s crunch clash between Sydney and Collingwood at the SCG which will determine a top four position for either side.

“That will be for a guaranteed top four berth, that’s going to be an amazing game,” he added.

“One thing I would say about that, finals is about standing up in the moments when they matter most and it is isolated contests that actually make the difference.

“If Collingwood have been able to do that consistently throughout the home and away (season), they’re schooling themselves up to be able to do it at the end.”

As it stands, Geelong sits atop the rankings as flag favourite, ahead of Melbourne, Sydney, Collingwood, Brisbane, Fremantle, Richmond and Carlton.





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Categories
Australia

Mount Isa man in custody over alleged murder of 13yo girl

Mount Isa man Trevor Caulton has been arrested and charged with murder after he allegedly drove a vehicle into a crowd of people, hitting and killing a 13-year-old girl.

Emergency services were called to the corner of Delacour Drive and Dent Street in the Mount Isa suburb of Pioneer after midnight on August 6 and treated the girl for critical head injuries.

Police confirmed she succumbed to her injuries and died at the scene.

Mr Caulton’s lawyer appeared on his behalf via phone at the Mount Isa Magistrate’s Court on Monday.

A full brief of evidence was being prepared and the case would appear for mention at Mount Isa Magistrate’s Court on September 26.

The victim was identified and her family had been contacted, police said.

Dent and Trainor
Paramedics treated the victims at the site of the incident near Dent Street in Pioneer.(ABC North West Queensland: Emily Dobson)

Fears of retribution prompt police warning

Police have called for calm in the community after the tragedy.

Police man talking in front of microphones at press conference.
Mount Isa Police Acting Superintendent Smith asked the community to assist investigators.(ABC Far North: Brendan Mounter)

“I do have concerns about unrest in the community — this is a distressing case and this poor girl’s life has been taken,” said Mount Isa Police Acting Superintendent Jason Smith.

“We acknowledge the grief in the community and we implore everyone to remain calm around this incident and to assist police with the investigation.

“Sometimes in our community there can be an urge from some to seek retribution. Please know the law has been executed, the alleged offender is in jail and police have done as much as they can.”

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Categories
US

The Sinema-Manchin split that shaped Dems’ deal

Ultimately, Sinema took a scalpel to the corporate minimum tax and scuttled any changes to carried interest, which Manchin called particularly “painful.” Triangulating between them through all of it: Schumer, whose job was harmonizing the views of the very public Manchin with an often-silent Sinema.

“We argue with each other on issues, but we try to respect each other,” Schumer said of Manchin on Sunday as he chomped on a celebratory meal of leftover pasta cooked by his wife. “Sinema, if she gives you her word about her, you got it. But she she’s not a schmoozer like Manchin.”

Almost exactly one year after Manchin and Sinema teamed with Republicans to pass a historic infrastructure bill, the two moderates on Sunday cast decisive votes for Democrats’ second piece of the puzzle. It was far smaller than the party’s original $3.5 trillion vision, but larger than the slim health care legislation that lawmakers were considering just two weeks ago. It’s probably the last big party-line bill Democrats will be able to deliver for years, with the House expected to flip to Republicans in the November elections.

The package delivered more than $300 billion in climate and energy investments, reformed prescription drug prices and created a new minimum tax on large corporations. Sunday’s passage of the legislation marked a triumphant moment for a party that for years has talked a big game on lowering drug prices and fighting climate change.

The yearlong drama demonstrated the difficulties Schumer faces every day in running a 50-50 Senate, corralling a caucus that includes 47 other senators with their own ideas plus Sinema and Manchin, two centrist senators with divergent priorities.

Twice in full view on the Senate floor, Manchin animatedly conversed with Sinema about his deal, including pieces of the tax legislation that Sinema felt would stymie economic growth in Arizona. Manchin observed of his relationship with Sinema and the tax dispute: “We have more in common than we do n’t. I just have a difference on this.”

“They both are pains in the neck, but pains in the neck who I respect,” said Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Col.) admiringly. “I don’t feel they’ve ever misled me, or said something that was untrue.”

Manchin killed the $1.7 trillion Build Back Better bill back in December after failed negotiations with President Joe Biden. Two months later, Schumer and Manchin broke bread, and Manchin delivered his negotiating position: He wanted to wait until April before trying again. And when they did, he only wanted to talk to Schumer.

After Russia invaded Ukraine and Europe’s energy supplies were squeezed while US gas prices rising, Manchin then saw an opportunity to make big climate change investments while simultaneously boosting fossil fuel production this spring.

“That is the catapult that basically launched me,” Manchin said in an interview. “Iran is the greatest proliferator supportive of terrorism in the world, right? And we’re going to give them money? Over my dead body.”

By late June, he and Schumer were looking at a package that brought in more than $1 trillion in revenue and spent significantly more than the package that passed Sunday. Sinema’s team was generally clued into that package and she told leaders in mid-July she still didn’t support the carried interest provision.

But Manchin began having second thoughts after the July 4 recess, as inflation indicators continued to flash red. Then came July 14.

“I just said, ‘Chuck, I can’t do that’ … That’s when he got mad,” Manchin said. “Half-hour later, they put the dogs on me.”

Manchin says he never took it personally, yet there are two schools of thought in the Democratic caucus about whether that pressure campaign worked. Some argue that the attacks on Manchin from his own colleagues drove him back to the table. Others say a cohort of Democratic senators who quietly reassured Manchin amid the blowback proved far more effective.

After that blow up, Democrats coalesced around prescription drug reform and a short extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, relegating energy, climate change and taxes to the dustbin. Manchin quietly summarized his talks with Schumer just four days later. When they announced their deal on July 27, the Democratic Caucus was triumphant.

There was one problem: Sinema was now in the dark.

In fact, Sinema was informed about the deal by No. 2 Republican John Thune on the Senate floor. She had huge influence on the Build Back Better bill, stripping out tax rate increases to assemble a tax package more palatable to her business-friendly state. And she and Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) laid the groundwork last year for what would become a key part of Democrats’ prescription drug proposal.

But Sinema never agreed to the carried interest provision. And she had other objections.

As Manchin and Sinema held their own conversations, they were helped along by Hickenlooper and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.). While Warner tried to come to a compromise on carried interest with Sinema, Hickenlooper suggested a stock buyback excise tax to compensate for Sinema’s requested changes on the corporate minimum tax.

“There’s kind of been a trust-building relationship going on,” Warner said. “It became clear that some of the changes that Sen. Sinema wanted were creating some holes.”

On Aug. 4, Warner joined Manchin on his house boat to talk about the deal Sinema would soon announce on taxes. After getting soaked in a rainstorm, Warner left with a new outfit — wearing a pair of Manchin’s shorts and a T-shirt — and a hope that Manchin, Sinema and Schumer would see eye-to-eye. (On Saturday Manchin returned Warner’s suit, fully pressed.)

But Sinema wasn’t quite done, even after scuttling language that limited business’s ability to write off some investments. When Democrats unveiled the final legislation Saturday, it imposed the 15 percent minimum tax on some businesses owned by private equity. That had been included in previous versions of the legislation but omitted from the initial draft of the deal with Manchin.

Synema opposed it, an alarming development.

“I thought we wouldn’t pass the bill,” Schumer said. “It was hard to figure out how to make it work.”

Manchin said once he agreed with Schumer the two were “hooked to the hip” at preventing changes to the bill that could jeopardize its passage, which Schumer said was a “linchpin” of the agreement. Sinema had no such deal, and when the legislation came to the floor for amendment votes she’d privately teamed with Thune to reverse the tax change.

That required Manchin and the rest of the Democrats to make yet another compromise. Schumer went around the Senate floor telling his members that while they may not like it, they had to eat the change to pass the bill.

Schumer’s members were unhappy, according to one Senate Democrat, but exhausted and resigned to doing what it took to finish the bill. Warner stepped in with a way to fill that revenue hole, too. About 15 minutes later, the bill passed after 22 hours on the Senate floor.

For Schumer, it was the capstone of a 50-50 Senate in which he passed new laws on gun safety, infrastructure, veteran health benefits and microchip manufacturing. For Sinema, the moment demonstrated that she’s simply not in lockstep with Manchin — or the rest of her caucus.

And for Manchin, the converted legislation his reputation from the guy that stopped Biden’s agenda cold in his tracks to the coal-state senator that not only cut a deal on climate, but helped sell it any way he could.

“I’ve never seen a more balanced piece of legislation coming together,” Manchin said. “We never knew this day would ever come.”

Categories
Technology

Rollback Netcode Coming To Dragon Ball Z and Samurai Showdown

Dragon Ball Z

picture: bandai namco

EVO, the year’s biggest fighting games event, went down over the weekend, and in terms of news perhaps the biggest announcement was that not one but two games will be getting Rollback Netcode improvements over the next 12 months. Don’t know what that means, or why it’s important? I got you!

So in online multiplayer games, a large part of allowing everyone to play together is the way the game registers everyone’s actions at the same time. when a person in Canada is playing someone in Germany they’ll both be pressing buttons in their own homes, and the game needs to pick up those inputs, apply them to the game and have them play out in a way that makes the whole thing look as seamless as though they they were playing with (or against) each other in the same room.

Different games (and different genres) handle this differently, depending on how important speed and accuracy is to the player’s experience, but one type of input recognition that’s especially important to anyone playing a fighting game—where every frame and millisecond can mean the difference between victory and defeat—is called Rollback Netcode.

Rollback Netcode doesn’t rely on waiting for everyone’s input before registering actions; instead it lets both players press their buttons and see the action play out instantly without lag or delay, as though they were playing offline, and in the downtime between that and the opponent’s action arriving the game basically guesses what was going to happen next. If it guessed right the game continues with nobody noticing, and if it was wrong, it checks down to play out the action that the other player actually made, which sometimes involves a little “teleporting”.

The very helpful video below, by Coby Mystics, explains how Rollback Netcode works, and how in fighting games it’s speed and accuracy make it so superior to the more traditional Input Delay:

Code Mystics Explains Netcode: Input Delay vs. roll-back

OKAY! So now that we’re all up to speed on Rollback Netcode, you can understand why such a seemingly minor announcement is actually a huge deal for fighting game fans, and why these two announcements made at EVO went down so well with fans.

First up, producer Tomoko Hiroki took to the stage to announce that the upcoming versions of dragon ball fighter z on PS5 and Xbox Series X|S will be getting Rollback Netcode, as will the PC version, though on the latter players will get the option whether to use Rollback Netcode (which will carry a slightly steeper system requirement) or stick with Input Delay.

It doesn’t look like the upgrade will be coming to the PS4, Xbox One or Switch versions of the game, though the last-gen PlayStation and Xbox versions will have upgrade paths made available for anyone who upgrades to newer systems.

As for when this is actually coming, it doesn’t sound like it will be soon, with the announcement saying “It will take some time until the system is implemented, but we sincerely hope you will enjoy it as soon as possible. More information will be released at a later date. Please wait for further details.”

The 2019 reboot of samurai showdown got the same announcement, with SNK teaming up with Code Mystics—creators of the vid above—to implement the upgrade. It’ll be coming to the PC, PS4, Xbox One and Xbox Series X|S versions of the game (again leaving the Switch behind), and is “planned” for Spring 2023.

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Categories
Entertainment

The Block smashes My Kitchen Rules and The Masked Singer in ratings battle

Three of Aussie TV’s favorite offerings premiered on Sunday night, competing in the same timeslot in the all-important ratings battle.

So how did Channel 7’s long-awaited return of My Kitchen Ruleswith megastar new judge Nigella Lawson, measure up against The Masked Singer on Channel 10, and The Block on Channel 9?

Overnight ratings released via TV Tonight see The Block‘s 18th season taking out the night, with an impressive 867,000 metro viewers.

The Masked Singer came in second with a respectable metro audience of 598,000, closely followed by My Kitchen Ruleswhich launched to 503,000 viewers.

The result is a year-on-year lift for The Blockwhich debuted to 747,000 metro viewers back in 2021. The other two shows are remaining mor stable from previous seasons: The Masked Singer last year opened to 642,000 metro viewers, while the last time MKR aired back in 2020, it opened to 498,000 viewers.

The home renovation show’s “biggest season ever” filmed in Gisborne, Victoria, introduced viewers to the five teams battling it out for a win on auction day — including “quitters” Elle Ferguson and Joel Patfull, who fled the set and threw in the towel after two days of filming.

Their first day on set was met with skepticism from one fellow contestant — outspoken mum Sarah-Jane, who was quick to question their inclusion.

“She’s already famous, she’s got 600,000 followers on Instagram, she’s got sh*tloads of money, why are they here?” she smoked to producers.

As for the first episode of Channel 10 quirky musical guessing game The Masked Singernone other that Ryan Moloney — Aka Toadfish — was unveiled as the knight, fresh off a 27-year stint on neighbors.

Singing Ed Sheeran’s Bad Habitsthe actor’s pipes elicited squeals of delight from judges Abbie Chatfield, Mel B, Dave “Hughesy” Hughes and Chrissie Swan when it came time for the big reveal.

Over on Channel 7, My Kitchen Rules‘Hotly anticipated return after a two-year hiatus was widely praised by viewers on social media thanks to Nigella Lawson.

The British home cooking queen, who was earlier announced as Pete Evans’ replacement for the 2022 season, appeared alongside French chef Manu Feildel on Sunday night, and fans have already declared she will “save the series”.

The show’s relaunch comes after MKR suffered declining ratings in 2019 and 2020.

In an effort to reinvigorate the franchise, the network parted ways with original Judge Evans following a slew of controversies, and promised the series would be bouncing back to its core values ​​of “real food and real people” in 2022.

It’s understood Lawson will only feature in half of the season, with former MasterChef judge Matt Preston joining Feildel for the back half.

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Categories
Sports

AFLW: West Coast show off new-look forward line in pre-season victory over Hawthorn, kicking highest score

West Coast have given the AFLW a taste of their new-look forward line, comfortably kicking their highest-ever score in a pre-season clash with Hawthorn.

Pitted against the expansion side in what marked the Hawks’ first taste of match practice, the Eagles showcased a much-improved midfield-forward connection on their way to an 11.4 (70) to 6.5 (41) win.

Time will tell whether the 29-point victory stacks up against seasoned AFLW opponents, but the reigning wooden spooners’ improved fitness allowed the Eagles to put more speed on the ball.

Their forward line capitalized. Aimee Schmidt kicked two goals in the first two minutes of the game, Hayley Bullas hit the scoreboard, Kate Barlett looks ready to make the most of her second chance at the club, and 2020 draft pick Shanae Davison looks ready to cement her spot after a lively outing.

The club’s first draft selection Ella Roberts was strong in the air and used the ball cleanly going inside 50, while 2021 club champion Bella Lewis looks to have recaptured her best form after a subdued season.

West Coast's first draft pick Ella Roberts in action.
Camera IconWest Coast’s first draft pick Ella Roberts in action. Credit: Daniel Carson/AFL Pictures

Pre-season signings Ella Smith and Sasha Goranova started in defense for West Coast, with the Eagles again undersized down back as Hawk Tamara Luke did the most damage with four goals.

But the Eagles midfield competed well even in the absence of Dana Hooker (illness) as West Coast also managed the minutes of their stars ahead of Saturday’s pre-season clash with Fremantle.

“There’s some really positive signs,” midfielder Aisling McCarthy said.

“We had a lot of new girls out there who brought a lot of energy and it’s always good to see some new girls pull on the blue and gold.

“We worked on a few things from last season. Our fitness and our run out there….we’ve worked on a lot on our standards and professionalism.

Beth Schilling was strong in defense for the Eagles.
Camera IconBeth Schilling was strong in defense for the Eagles. Credit: Daniel Carson/AFL Pictures

“Our composition at times probably needs a bit of a lift but I think our fight and work around the ball was good.”

Despite losing 14 players from their list at the end of last season, McCarthy said the Eagles’ off-field bond had helped them fast-track on-field cohesion.

“We’re still getting to know each other out on the field. But that’s what these two weeks are for,” she said.

“I think we have good standards and we all respect each other and I think no matter whether you’re 17 or 33, you can stand up and make your voice heard.

“We’ll get feedback from the coaches and things that we have to work on and bring that into the next week against Fremantle.”

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Categories
Australia

Pet grooming Perth: Couture Canine co-founder Charmaine Cayeux opens up on growing demand from fur parents

Spending thousands of dollars on pet grooming may seem like something only the Kardashians would do, but families across Perth are spending big bucks to get their beloved pooch looking its best.

The global pet care industry is worth a staggering $374 billion. Australia has one of the highest pet ownership rates in the world, so it is no surprise that dog grooming businesses are booming in the west.

Charmaine Cayeux, co-founder of Couture Canine grooming, has pioneered the opulent nature of looking after one’s furry friend in West Perth and has amassed a large clientele of owners willing to fork out tens of thousands of dollars every year to maintain their pet’s immaculate appearance .

Ms Cayeux’s luxury services, which include “doggy facials”, jacuzzi sessions, nail painting and stylized haircuts, can range between $150 and $500.

Yorkshire Terriers like Kenzo, along with Cavoodles, make up “90 per cent” of the furry customers at Couture Canine in West Perth.
Camera IconYorkshire Terriers like Kenzo, along with Cavoodles, make up “90 per cent” of the furry customers at Couture Canine in West Perth. Credit: ross swanborough/The West Australian

Due to extremely high demand, the company has a waitlist with more than 50 dogs from all over the State, who will wait at least a year to secure a coveted spot.

“We are developing this culture of dog grooming in Perth where it’s perfectly acceptable to take your dog for a blow dry twice a week,” she said.

“We have clients who spend over $400 a week and have done it for 15 years.”

Ms Cayeux revealed that 90 per cent of Couture Canine’s customers are Cavoodles and Yorkshire Terriers owned by professionals who work in Perth’s CBD — and who drop off their furry best friends in the morning to be groomed and attend “doggy daycare”.

Loyal customer Amanda Krzywoszyja, who regularly pampers her miniature poodle Henry Danger, believes that social media has been a big influence in the rise of luxury pet grooming.

“Every second pet seems to have Instagram, so it’s that social presence (online),” Ms Krzywoszyja said.

“Also, my partner will take Henry for a walk and he’ll be like ‘Oh my God. I’ve got so many comments on how good he looks’ and it’s that smiling moment of taking pride in how you care about them and (how) they’re living their best life.

“At the end of the day, they’re our best friends and are not around for a long time so why not give them the best opportunity that they can to be spoiled.”

Kim Kardashian has made no secret of her fur-baby pampering.
Camera IconKim Kardashian has made no secret of her fur-baby pampering. Credit: kim kardashian/Instagram

It seems luxury brands are also looking to profit from the booming industry, charging an obscene amount of money for everyday pet care items like brushes and collars.

Last month Italian fashion house Gucci released a pet collection with eye-watering prices as high as $12,000 for a dog bed, $630 for a poop bag holder and $570 for a designer leash.

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Categories
US

Muslim Community Expresses Fear After Killings of Men in Albuquerque

Muhammad Imtiaz Hussain is afraid to step outside his home in Albuquerque to water his plants. Or retrieve books from his car of him. Or even venture out onto his balcony from him.

“My kids won’t let me go outside of my apartment,” said Mr. Hussain, 41, whose younger brother Muhammad Afzaal Hussain, 27, was fatally shot a week ago Monday just a few blocks away. He was one of four Muslim men who were killed recently in the city — three in the past two weeks — and authorities believe the deaths are connected and meant to target the Muslim community.

The latest victim, a Muslim man in his mid-20s from South Asia whose name has not been released by the police, was killed on Friday just before midnight. Another man, Aftab Hussein, 41, was fatally shot on July 26. Authorities say that the killings of all three might be connected to the November 2021 killing of Mohammad Ahmadi, 62, outside a business he and his brother de el ran.

Credit…

As the Albuquerque Police, the FBI and the State Police appealed to the public for help in finding the killer or killers — on Sunday authorities described a vehicle of interest, a dark-colored, four-door Volkswagen sedan — the attacks have left Muslims in a state of terror.

One member who attended the Islamic Center of New Mexico, the same mosque as all four of the victims, said that he may never return, citing a fear of becoming “bait.”

Other members have temporarily left the state to stay with family members in other parts of the country to wait out the investigation. One man, who immigrated from Iraq, said that he felt safer back when he first came to the country in the 1980s. Another member, Salem Ansari, said that some who attend the mosque and work night shifts have quit their jobs.

“This situation is getting so much worse,” Mr. Ansari said.

Ahmad Assed, president of the mosque, said that he grew up in Albuquerque attending the Islamic Center but never felt isolated as a Muslim in the city. But now, he said, the community is going through a “sort of managed panic.”

The elder Mr. Hussain said that he had lived safely in his neighborhood for eight years since moving to the United States with his wife and children. His brother Muhammad arrived in 2017, and both men would go to the library at midnight or buy coffees late into the evening while attending the University of New Mexico as international students.

“Now, I look outside the window and think, ‘Oh, this is the place where my brother was killed. Should we move?’” he said.

Mr. Hussain said that he had initially hoped to send his brother’s body back to be buried with family in Pakistan, but the numerous gunshot wounds had made his brother unrecognizable, and Mr. Hussain did not want his family to see him. The killer “wanted to finish him — the whole nine yards,” he said.

In general, anti-Muslim hate crimes in the United States have been trending downward. Brian Levin, a professor of criminal justice at California State University at San Bernardino and the director of the school’s Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, said that the number of hate crimes reported against Muslims was lower in 2020 than in any year since 9 /11, though I have added that those numbers may be skewed because of pandemic restrictions.

But he said that hate crimes remain a concern: They rose more than 20 percent in 2021 and increased another 4.7 percent in the first half of 2022, the center reported. Also, “underlying anti-Muslim attitudes” are pervasive and resurface during times of national hardship, according to Professor Levin’s studies.

The authorities said that they are refraining from using the term “hate” in labeling the crimes until a motive could be established.

Just last year, the Islamic Center faced an attempted arson from a woman who the police say set three fires on the mosque playground and one fire at the mosque’s main entry. No one was injured, and the woman was arrested and charged with Arson. The case is pending.

The Islamic Center has instructed its nearly 2,500 members to stay home as much as they can, use the “buddy system” when going out and refrain from “engaging with or agitating” anyone, Mr. Assed said.

He added that he still felt supported by other communities but that this time he also was feeling a sense of “hopelessness and despair.”

“I do watch my back and get in the car. I’m watching all my surroundings,” he said. “You don’t know whether they’re following you from the mosque, if they’re actually watching people going in and out of the mosque and following them elsewhere. The pattern is unknown.”

Some community members have expressed frustration about the lack of details from the police investigation, but Mr. Assed said he was in contact with authorities and understood why they have kept any developments under wraps. Authorities have neither elaborated on why they believe the killings are linked nor indicated whether there were any witnesses.

Mr. Hussain said that he wanted the federal and state governments to pour as many resources as possible into catching the killer.

But until someone is caught, nothing is likely to lessen his fear — or his grief.

“My 5-year-old keeps asking, ‘Hey, where is my uncle?’” he said. “She’ll see me crying and say, ‘Are you a crybaby? Why are you crying?’ But we can’t tell her. Not yet.”

Categories
Entertainment

Meghan McCain ‘sobbed and lactated’ after Joy Behar The View clash

Just one year after she left The View, Meghan McCain revealed the Joy Behar comment that ultimately pushed her to quit the show after four seasons of being the “sole conservative” voice.

During The Commentary Magazine Podcastthe former host explained that following the difficult birth of her daughter in 2020, Behar did not make her feel welcome when she came back from maternity leave, The Decider reports.

“I finally went back to the show and the day I went back to the show, Joy Behar said on air, ‘Nobody missed you, we didn’t miss you, you shouldn’t have come back,’” McCain said.

In the clip of the incident, which went viral at the time, McCain can be seen reacting in shock at Behar’s comment.

“That’s so nasty. That’s, like, so nasty. That’s so rude,” McCain told her colleague.

She said she began hysterically crying and lactating on air before she went to her office, vomited, and called her brother who told her, “F**k these people, it’s not worth it.”

In the end, McCain said decided to leave.

“I didn’t feel supported when I had my baby and I didn’t feel supported when I came back.”

Earlier in the podcast, she explained that she only took the job because her father, the late Senator John McCain, “basically forced” her when he was sick because he thought it would be a “great, iconic job.”

Despite saying the first few seasons were fine, McCain described the talk show as an “egregious, toxic work environment,” adding that just one month after suffering a “graphic” miscarriage, one of her co-hosts joked that the only thing McCain would ever breastfeed is a “cactus,” referring to Behar’s comment.

“I have a young daughter. If she in 15 years came to me and said, ‘The View wants to come and have me host there,’ I would lie in front of a train track before I let her go to that show,” McCain said.

It was announced this week that Alyssa Farah Griffin and Ana Navarro would be taking over her former seat on the panel.

This story originally appeared on Decider and is republished here with permission

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Categories
Sports

Golden girl! Aussies make history at Comm Games

Australia have again come up clutch on the biggest stage, claiming the first ever Commonwealth Games T20 gold medal with a thrilling nine-run win over India in a match that will go down as an instant classic.

Indian captain Harmanpreet Kaur had threatened to become the source of nightmares for Australia once again, smashing a 43-ball 65 to give her side every chance of reaching their target of 162 and securing a maiden title at a major women’s tournament.

But Australia held their nerve with the ball and in the field at death, as India lost 8-34 to be bowled out for 152 in the final over.

India had needed 11 runs off the final over with two wickets in hand, but veteran spinner Jess Jonassen delivered a dot, before a desperate attempt to run two – and keep concussion replacement Yastika Bhatia on strike – produced a run out.

Jonassen then got Bhatia lbw next ball, sealing the historic match for Australia, who now hold a trifecta of major titles, with Games gold adding to the ODI and T20 World Cups they currently possess.

The drama at Edgbaston had started before a ball was bowled; allrounder Tahlia McGrath tested positive for COVID-19 shortly before the match and her participation in it had to be cleared before she could be named in the XI.

Once underway, Beth Mooney led with the bat, striking a 41-ball 61 that anchored the Australian innings.

Some superb death bowling and a near-perfect fielding display from India kept the powerful Australia batting line-up in check, restricting them to 8-161.

India’s run-chase started slowly as Australia picked up two big early wickets to pile pressure on India. While Smriti Mandhana (6) had been the hero of India’s semi-final win 24 hours earlier, her impact with the bat in the final was limited as she was bowled by Darcie Brown in the second over of the chase.

Shafali Verma loomed large and was given a life when Megan Schutt uncharacteristically dropped a chance with the opener on 10, but she added just one more before holing out to McGrath at long on, prompting a socially distanced celebration from the Australians.

Ever the player for the big occasion, India skipper Kaur stepped up again for her side, joining No.3 Jemimah Rodrigues in a 96-run stand that kept the run rate in check.

Kaur brought up fifty from just 34 balls, flaying the Australian attack for two sixes and seven fours in a performance that triggered memories of her efforts in the 2017 World Cup semi-final.

Rodrigues found the boundary three times in her own run-a-ball 33 before she was bowled by Schutt with India needing 44 from 33 balls.

The dangerous Pooja Vastrakar (1) was then brilliantly caught by Mooney on the boundary, and Ashleigh Gardner was on a hat-trick a ball later as a diving Alyssa Healy hung onto a catch to finally end Kaur’s onslaught on 65.

Having lost 3-3 and still 41 runs adrift of victory, Deepti Sharma and Sneh Rana took 13 off an Alana King over to remain in touch.

Rana was run out on eight in the 18th, then a thick edge off Sharma’s bat found the boundary to make it 19 off 14.

A Grace Harris direct hit had Radha Yadav run out, before Schutt trapped Sharma (13) on the pads to leave India 8-149, needing 13 off 9.

Bhatia – who generally bats in India’s top-order when selected – came out to bat at No.9, having been brought into the match as a concussion replacement for ‘keeper Taniya Bhatia, who earlier copped a blow behind the stumps.

She could not do enough to get India over the line, as they fell agonizingly short of the elusive title that also evaded them in the 2017 and 2020 World Cup deciders.

Jess Jonassen celebrates a crucial wicket in the final over of Australia's thrilling win // Getty
Jess Jonassen celebrates a crucial wicket in the final over of Australia’s thrilling win // Getty

Earlier, Healy’s indifferent tournament then continued when she was out lbw to Renuka Singh Thakur for seven; the umpire had signaled not out, but India’s decision to review was sound.

Meg Lanning joined Mooney to put on Australia’s best powerplay of the tournament, smacking a six down the ground in a clear signal of intent.

But her 26-ball innings came to a sudden end on 36 when she was run out at the non-strikers end, thanks to a clever deflection from bowler Radha Yadav.

Formerly lamented as a facet of India’s game that was routinely found wanting in key moments, their sharpness in the field accounted for three more of Australia’s best batters.

McGrath, who was separated from her teammates and wore a mask while waiting to bat, arrived in the middle at No.4 but her stay lasted just four balls before Yadav again produced the magic India required, with a stunning diving catch at backward point.

Tahlia McGrath watches from afar during Australia's batting innings // Getty
Tahlia McGrath watches from afar during Australia’s batting innings // Getty

Ashleigh Gardner hammered a quickfire 25 off 15 before she was stumped advancing down the pitch to Sneh Rana, while the dangerous Grace Harris was unable to make an impact, out for two, Meghna Singh making no mistake with the skied chance.

Mooney reached a half-century from 36 balls, and added another 11 before she was brilliantly caught by Deepti Sharma, one-handed while running backwards.

After her dismissal in the 18th over, Australia could only add another 19 from the last 16 balls of the innings, held back by India’s spinners, before another piece of fielding brilliance accounted for Jonassen in the final over, as she was caught short by a Mandhana direct hit.

Australia walk away with the gold medal, India silver and New Zealand bronze, after they accounted for England earlier on Sunday in the third-place playoff.

Australian XI:Alyssa Healy (wk), Beth Mooney, Meg Lanning (c), Tahlia McGrath, Rachael Haynes, Ashleigh Gardner, Grace Harris, Jessica Jonassen, Alana King, Megan Schutt, Darcie Brown

Indian XI:Smriti Mandhana, Shafali Verma, Jemimah Rodrigues, Harmanpreet Kaur (c), Taniya Bhatia (wk), Deepti Sharma, Pooja Vastrakar, Radha Yadav, Sneh Rana, Meghna Singh, Renuka Singh

2022 Commonwealth Games

Australia’s squad: Meg Lanning (c), Rachael Haynes (vc), Darcie Brown, Nicola Carey, Ashleigh Gardner, Grace Harris, Alyssa Healy, Jess Jonassen, Alana King, Tahlia McGrath, Beth Mooney, Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Annabel Sutherland, Amanda- Jade Wellington

See all the Commonwealth Games cricket squads here

Group A: Australia, India, Pakistan, Barbados

Group B: England, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka

July 29: Australia beat India by three wickets

July 31: Australia beat Barbados by nine wickets

August 3: Australia beat Pakistan by 44 runs

Semi-finals: August 6

India beat England by four runs

Australia beat New Zealand by five wickets

Bronze medal match: New Zealand beat England by eight wickets

gold medal match: Australia beat India by nine runs

All matches played at Edgbaston Stadium.