Categories
Entertainment

Jordy Kerwick’s paintings selling for hundreds of thousands of dollars

Kerwick’s paintings are colorful and vibrant: they often depict exotic animals like tigers and cobras with two heads. The Tiger was Kerwick at his most Kerwick, an acrylic painting of a two-headed tiger.

Kerwick's painting Le Tigre sold for just over $400,000 in March.

Kerwick’s painting Le Tigre sold for just over $400,000 in March.

And it’s not the only work that has collectors forking out serious cash. Also in March, British auction house Phillips sold Kerwick’s cool cats (2019) for $112,300, smashing its estimate of $10,000. In their New York stable it was a similar story, with Untitled 7 (2021) going for $201,600.

Right now, the Australian is one of the most talked about rising contemporary artists in the world. In five years as a full-time artist, Kerwick has exhibited in Paris, London, New York, Berlin, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Los Angeles.

Spain’s national museum of 20th and 21st century art in Madrid, the Reina Sofia, home to the greats of Spanish art including Picasso’s renowned Guernica, recently acquired one of Kerwick’s paintings.

“It’s a career highlight,” he says.

An eclectic group of people have bought Kerwick’s work. Celebrities like Sofia Richie (Lionel Richie’s daughter) and the Olsen twins, billionaire hedge fund manager and owner of the New York Mets Steve Cohen, and Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa (who famously bought a Basquiat painting for $110 million) also have a Kerwick.

Kerwick, who is represented by well-known gallerist Vito Schnabel (son of American artist and filmmaker Julian Schnabel) in New York, and Toby Clarke’s Vigo Gallery in London, says he is proceeding with caution.

“The secondary market is scary,” he says.

While Kerwick’s work can now fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars, to date he’s only pocketed a fraction of that, as most of the markup comes after the initial sale.

“I think I might have made a couple of thousand bucks, not much. But at the time I was thinking it’s still a lot of money for someone to buy a painting,” he says.

“I think a lot of people buy work more as an asset. It’s not good for me long term because if there is an oversupply in the secondary market, the demand in the primary market goes down, and then I’m just left making work that nobody wants.”

Kerwick's solo exhibition The Three Month Dream at Piermarq Gallery in Sydney in 2020.

Kerwick’s solo exhibition The Three Month Dream at Piermarq Gallery in Sydney in 2020.

“We have to be careful who we sell to, which was never the intention, I wanted to make art that people would like.”

Justin Callanan, director and co-founder of Sydney gallery Piermarq, worked with Kerwick at the beginning of his career and has worked on three exhibitions with him, the most recent in 2021.

“We were thrilled for him and taken back,” he says. “Historically the global art market hasn’t looked at Australia for contemporary art, once an artist moves into that commercial category they can catapult quickly.”

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Callanan first approached Kerwick on Instagram in 2017, a platform that he says allows young artists like Kerwick to share their work with a wider audience and connect with artists and galleries across the world.

“Jordy not only interacted using those mediums, he built networks with other artists, similar to how a school of artists approached collaboration back in the day.”

He hopes that Kerwick’s success means the global art world will “start to look at Australia a little bit more now.”

Kerwick has kept the house he bought with his wife in Williamstown, and there’s at least one career goal still on his list.

“Being a Melburnian I’d love to do something at the NGV, it would be a dream.”

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Categories
Sports

Checkers returns to face the Dees

key-forward Brody Mihocek will return for the Pies this Friday night to replace the injured taylor adams.

Mihocek has been a consistent performer in 2022 and will be a fantastic inclusion for the Pies. He has kicked 34 goals this season, an equal career high with three games to go before finals.

Collingwood are looking to make it 11 wins in a row on Friday night, but will face strong competition against an in-form Melbourne side.

senior coach Craig McRae noted in his press conference on Thursday that, “This is our biggest test for a number of weeks, we are playing the best team in the competition, I feel.”

This isn’t the first time Collingwood have faced the Demons in 2022, the Pies were 26-point victors in Round 13. Notably, Mihocek kicked four goals and had 16 disposals in what was one of his best performances for the season.

Under the Friday night lights, this game shapes up to be a cracker.

IN: Brody Mihocek
OUT: Taylor Adams (groin), Trent Bianco (omitted)

AFL ROUND 21
Collingwood v Melbourne
friday 5 august
CGM
7.50pm (AEST)

COLLINGWOOD v MELBOURNE
B. Nathan Murphy Darcy Moore Jeremy Howe
HB Scott Pendlebury Brayden Maynard isaac quaynor
C Josh Daicos Jack Crisp John Noble
HF Jamie Elliott Darcy Cameron Steele Sidebottom
F beau mcreery Brody Mihocek Jordan De Goey
R Mason Cox Nick Daicos Patrick Lipinsky
INT Josh Carmichael Ash Johnson Will Hoskin-Elliott
Jack Ginnivan
EMERG Trent Bianco Oliver Henry Callum Brown
Will Kelly
Categories
Australia

NSW Health issues alert for meningococcal disease after Splendor in the Grass attendee dies, another positive test

People who attended Splendor in the Grass last month have been advised by NSW Health to stay alert for symptoms of meningococcal disease after the death of a Sydney man who attended the festival and another case.

All ticket holders of the event at the North Byron Parklands from July 21 to 24 received an email on Friday.

“NSW Health has been notified of two cases of meningococcal disease in people who attended the 2022 Splendor in the Grass festival,” the email said.

Authorities warn while the disease is uncommon, it can be severe and people need to act immediately if they see any symptoms, as they can appear suddenly and become serious very quickly.

Authorities were notified on Thursday after the man in his 40s was identified to have had the infection following his death.

Symptoms are nonspecific but include a sudden onset of fever, neck stiffness, or a red-purple spotted rash.

There have been 15 cases recorded so far this year in New South Wales with the disease tending to increase in late winter and early spring.

Dr Jeremy McAnulty from NSW Health said people who were at the festival should watch for symptoms, which include a rash and nausea.

“We think the risk is low, but we don’t know for sure, so we’re just asking people to keep in mind the symptoms so in the unlikely event you get them to seek medical attention,” Mr McAnulty said.

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Categories
US

DC braces for second night of storms after deadly lightning strike

Comment

After an evening of frequent and violent storms that unleashed flooding rain, damaging winds and deadly lightning, the Washington region faces another bout of turbulent weather Friday.

Thunderstorms, some producing torrential rain and dangerous lightning, are likely, especially after 4 pm or so.

The National Weather Service has issued a flood watch from 3 to 8 pm Friday.

“Any thunderstorms will be capable of producing very heavy rainfall, with localized totals of two to four inches possible,” the Weather Service wrote. “Much of the rain may fall within a one to three hour period, making rapid rises in creeks and streams possible, as well as flash flooding in urban areas.”

A few storms also could contain damaging tastes, although the wind threat is somewhat lower than it was Thursday.

Wisconsin couple dead after lightning strike Thursday near White House

Looking back on Thursday’s storms

Thursday’s storms were more numerous and longer-lived than expected. We had called for hit-or-miss storms ending around sunset; instead, widespread storms developed during the evening and lasted until after midnight.

The Weather Service received about 140 reports of severe weather over the greater region; downed trees and gusts over 39 mph generated most of those reports. However, there were a handful of reports of flash flooding in the District and Baltimore. Rainfall totals were mostly between 0.5 and 1.5 inches, but there were some areas that posted between 1.5 and 3.5 inches, mostly east of Interstate 95.

The wind damage was concentrated in small pockets and was associated with downward bursts of wind high in the sky that slammed into the ground and fanned out; these are known as microbursts. One particularly intense microburst caused tree damage around Alexandria and Landmark in Virginia. This same storm unleashed at like 58 mph at Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Va. Trees also were toppled inside the District, and around Winchester, Gaithersburg, Columbia and Baltimore.

Why it was stormier than forecast

Looking at the weather maps, the overall environment seemed benign: There were no nearby fronts, and the jet stream was displaced far to the north over Canada. With the jet stream so far north and a massive “ridge” of high pressure dominating the Mid-Atlantic, wind shear was weak and not thought to have contributed to the storm severity. There was a weak high-altitude disturbance evident that might have helped kick off storms over the region, independent of the activity that was mainly confined to the mountains.

However, given the exceptionally high surface temperatures and humidity — highs reached the mid- to upper 90s — the atmosphere became very unstable. The unstable air fueled intense but short-lived storm updrafts that quickly paved the way for torrential downpours, concentrated cloud-to-ground lightning and the microbursts.

What happens when lightning strikes — and how to stay safe

Additionally, the cool downdrafts of these cells spreading along the surface quickly congealed and helped lift the air over a broader region, causing loosely organized clusters of storms to evolve as the hours ticked on. In a sense, the storms “bootstrapped” themselves into expanded coverage and a higher degree of organization. The prediction models did a poor job handling this consolidation. The greatest degree of consolidation was near and east of I-95, where the axis of greatest instability lay. Additionally, cooler winds off Chesapeake Bay increased temperature contrasts, intensifying nearby storms.

The storms were picturesque

While hazardous, the storms produced some stunning scenes across the skies. A number of readers captured views of lightning strikes and rainbows simultaneously and, in the storm’s wake, beautiful mammatus clouds. These clouds feature pouch-like appendages that sometimes hang beneath the anvil of intense thunderstorms.

Below are some examples…

Categories
Technology

GameStop Sold NFT Games Without ‘Consent,’ Dev Claims

GameStop has once again come with their NFT shenanigans that an unregulated market built on planet-destroying technology is, and this may shock you, not a terribly great idea. In a thorough report from Ars Technica, the GameStop NFT marketplace is yet again the topic of controversy as an NFT minter on the platform has been caught selling NFT-ified versions of HTML 5 games of which he himself did not make and had no permission, whatsoever, to sell them. Oh, and here’s the fun part, these games will probably live forever on the blockchain now!

GameStop has had a number of struggles in recent years as it has tried to stay competitive and relevant. Its recent experiment has been to try and make waves in the NFT space, launching a marketplace for digital assets while still being awful. The marketplace has not been without controversy, including a recent NFT that featured art similar to an image of a person falling to their death during the attacks on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. The latest round of nonsense to come out of the store, however, involves a man named Nathan Ello and his NiFTy Arcade NFTs, which aim to provide some interactive fun to an NFT…but he didn’t seem to stop and ask if he had permission to use games that were developed by other people for this project, much less if he had the right to even make money off of them.

speaking to KotakuNathan Ello declined to comment on this story.

Kotaku you have reached out to GameStop for comment.

NFTs have been the subject of theft and questionable ownership for some time. If it’s not an NFT previously owned by a celebrity being stolen, hence throwing intellectual property into a giant gray area, then it’s someone minting NFTs with art that isn’t theirs. The alleged security of NFTs has also been blown apart by phishing schemes and clever hackers. The secure and traceable future of commerce via the blockchain has been very unsecure and it’s been super hard to pin down bad actors. And this latest controversy concerning GameStop and the NiFTy Arcade is just yet another example of that messiness. Meanwhile, the industry insists on selling, using, and praising NFTs despite overwhelming negative reaction and humiliating failures.

Ace Ars Technica first reported today, Ello’s “NiFTy Arcade” NFTs were meant to be “fully playable from an owner’s crypto wallet” or on the GameStop marketplace itself. This at least seems to make a bit more sense than a simple JPEG. Instead of just purchasing a “link” to an image that you apparently “own” some part of, at least you get to play a fun little HTML 5 game while you burn the planet down.

That fun, however, comes with the added bonus that the NiFTy Arcade featured games entirely developed by other people who never gave any permission for their work to be used in this way or profited off of. In fact, many of these games, such as Worm Nom Nom can be found on Itchi.io with a very clear Creative Commons license that doesn’t allow for commercial uses.

The backlash was fierce, with several developers stating that they felt ripped off by NiFTy Arcade. Krystian Majewski, developer of Breakout Herosaid in a statement to Ars Technicathat his work was “sold for profit without my consent.”

Ello has stated on Twitter that in some cases, inconsistencies with licensing language for other titles surely meant that he did no wrong in just taking them.

Ace Ars Technica detailed in their report, Ello has had his minting privileges suspended on GameStop’s marketplace and the NFTs in question have been taken down from the platform.

On top of that, through the wonderful magic of NFTs and the mighty blockchain, these minted games might just live on forever, where they can be bought and sold on other crypto marketplaces. GameStop’s NFTs use an “Interplanetary File System,” (IPFS) which would sound cool if that tech wasn’t enabling others to continue to buy and sell NFTs with no apparatus to check and verify the content or any legal issues surrounding them. It’s not entirely clear how GameStop verifies or spot checks the NFTs that arrive on its marketplace, though their terms of service state that the buyer is responsible for verifying the authenticity of the NFT, not GameStop:

You are solely responsible for conducting research on an NFT, as well as understanding seller’s terms and conditions of the potential purchase or sale of the NFT, prior to purchase or sale. Such research includes, but is not limited to, verifying the authenticity and veracity of seller’s claims and description of the NFT, such as ownership, uniqueness, intellectual property, licenses, scarcity, rarity, value, and functionality. None of the GameStop Entities (defined below) endorses any NFT or makes any claims regarding the authenticity, ownership, uniqueness, intellectual property, licenses, scarcity, rarity, value, functionality and/or other attributes or rights thereto.

But even if there is a thorough vetting process on GameStop’s end, through the blockchain, IPFS file hashes can be accessed on any active node across multiple servers. It’s a Pandora’s Box of art theft.

That may be the nature of the NFT beast, but GameStop isn’t totally off the hook here. Ace Ars Technica found out, you can still very much access the unlicensed NiFTy Arcade games on GameStop’s servers. All you need is the correct link to and you can continue to access these NFTs anyway. Joseph White, creator of the PICO-8 game engine that powers the pixel games that Ello appropriated for his NiFTy Arcade games, has spoken out against GameStop, telling Ars Technica that the video game retailer doesn’t offer any sort of clear way to takedown an NFT that infringes on the copyrights of others. He’s filed DMCA requests, but they seem to have met a dead end.

Kotaku you have reached out to Joseph White for comment.

Guess ya gotta be a bit more wealthy for a DMCA takedown request to have any sort of effect; what a fair system! Maybe if I mint some Metallica songs, Lars Ulrich will step in to put a stop to all this nonsense.

Categories
Entertainment

Naomi Judd’s ‘graphic’ death records to remain sealed, per family’s wishes

Naomi Judd’s death records will be kept private – per her family’s request – due to the “graphic” nature in which she died, a judge has ruled.

The late country singer’s husband, Larry Strickland, and her two daughters, Wynonna and Ashley Judd, filed a request in Williamson County, Tennessee, on Monday to keep any investigation records into her suicide private as it may cause “emotional distress, pain and mental anguish” if released, court documents obtained by NBC said.

Naomi – who battled depression and mental illness for years – died in April aged 76.

Her family argued in the court documents that records could depict the death of the singer in a “graphic manner”, new york post reports.

“Moreover, the release of these records would continue to cause the entire family pain for years to come,” the filing also stated.

According to NBC, the request was temporarily granted, but a hearing regarding the matter was scheduled for September 12.

Strickland and the Judd sisters filed the request on the same day news broke that Naomi had left her daughters’ names out of her will and made her husband executor of her estate.

Wynonna, 58, and Ashley, 54, did not address the apparent slight but a source told RadarOnline.com earlier this week that Wynonna is “upset” that she was excluded because she formed half of the duo The Judds with her mother.

The singer reportedly believes she was “a major force behind her mother’s success”.

A legal expert told Page Six exclusively on Tuesday that while it is “common” for a person to name the spouse as the executor of their will, “leaving out her daughters seems pointed, like a purposeful act on Naomi’s part”.

Lawyer Holly Davis added, however, that if “there is an issue or tension between the husband and the daughters, we will find out if there will be a will contest via probate lawyers in the coming days”.

This story originally appeared on New York Post and was reproduced with permission

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Categories
Sports

AFL news 2022: Lance Franklin breaks silence on future, Swans to Lions rumors

Sydney Swans forward Lance Franklin is still “undecided” about his future in the sport, officially putting contract talks on hold and hinting at a possible retirement.

According to a report by Nine reporter Michael Atkinson, the 35-year-old is considering turning his back on the Swans for a deal with the Brisbane Lions.

The Nine report was immediately countered by Swans chief executive Tom Harley, who confessed the veteran forward’s move to Brisbane was “news to him”.

Watch every blockbuster AFL match this weekend Live & Ad-Break Free In-Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Sports broadcaster Andy Maher later claimed Franklin would stay with the Sydney-based club, potentially on a one-year contract extension.

“I can’t say where it came from, but Franklin’s not going to Brisbane,” he told SEN on Friday.

“He’s not going, he’s going to stay at Sydney and they’re in the throws of working out the contract, so it does sound like he’s going to play another year at the Swans if this information is true and where it’s coming from is pretty strong.”

On Saturday morning, Franklin’s manager Adam Finch released a statement confirming contract talks had been put on hold so the 1000-goal hero could focus on Sydney’s run towards the finals.

“At this stage conversations have been paused around my contract so I can put all my focus on playing footy,” Franklin said.

“No further comment will be made until the season is done and I have decided about my future.

“I am still undecided and need time after the season to make a family decision about whether I continue to play next year.”

Franklin has been in excellent form this season, kicking 41 goals in 17 games for Swans. However, the ongoing contract drama has become a significant distraction for John Longmire’s side as they approach September.

Speaking to Fox Footy, former Hawthorn forward Ben Dixon argued that Franklin has more chance of “playing on the moon than Victoria” next year.

“I reckon there’s some real merit in (rumors of the Brisbane move),” he said.

“My gut feels is yes (he’ll leave Sydney).

“He’s more chance of playing on the moon than in Victoria.

“Going for one more tilt, going to a different club, it’s not going to tarnish anything about your reputation in the game.

“He’s only going to go north.

“He’s a Perth boy, but you can rule out those two clubs (Fremantle and West Coast). You can rule out the Giants. It’s a process of elimination – the Gold Coast or it’s Brisbane.

“Brisbane’s right in the wheelhouse to win it. If it’s not this year, they still have got a little tilt next year.

“I know his motivation in signing a long-term deal with Sydney was sustainable success.

“I think his drive and his motivation – he wants to win a flag.

“He could be the hottest property in Queensland.

“If you look at it and you say, ‘Who’s closer to the flag (Gold Coast or Brisbane)?’ Well, there’s no doubt Brisbane are.”

Lions coach Chris Fagan believes that if Franklin is considering a move to Queensland it would be more likely to be for retirement rather than continuing his football career.

“I would have thought if they are moving to Queensland, that’s perhaps an indication that Bud’s going to retire from AFL football,” he said on Friday.

“If it came to pass down the track that they do move here, and. someone reaches out from his camp and suggests that he still wants to play, then we would be remiss as a footy club not to go and have a conversation with him.

“As far I’m concerned he’s a Sydney Swans player, and if any of that was going to happen, it would happen when the season’s all over.

“My latest communication with him was a text message I sent to him when he kicked his 1000th (AFL) goal which was four months ago.

“I don’t know what will play out in the future but the way I see it right now is if he is moving to Queensland to live, I would suggest that he’s going to retire.”

Franklin joined the Swans from the Hawthorn Hawks in 2014 on a nine-year, $10 million deal.

While he has been injury prone in recent years, the scenes of fans flooding onto the SCG when the eight-time All-Australian kicked his 1000th career goal showed he is still one of the sport’s biggest drawcards.

The Swans will face North Melbourne at Marvel Stadium on Sunday afternoon, with the first bounce scheduled for 1.10pm AEST.

Read related topics:BrisbaneSydney

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Categories
Australia

Adelaide couple turns property into Joanna Life Skills Centre, refuge for vulnerable people

Carol Coleman had been dreaming for years when she stumbled on the rundown church campsite that is now the Joanna Life Skills Centre.

Her husband Rob was passing through the small farming area in South Australia’s Coonawarra region for work when he spotted it.

Once Carol saw it, their Adelaide life as they knew it changed forever.

“I was hysterical. All I could see was people in a safe place, warm in bed and with food in their mouths. And that was just so important to me,” Ms Coleman said.

“It wasn’t a choice. It was like this has been shown to us. We have to do it. We just have to do it.”

When they bought the site in 2017, its 12 buildings, with 42 bedrooms, had been vacant for two years and were in need of desperate repair.

It didn’t matter.

“When you’re working in mental health and you see the terrible situations that people are in, you look at a place like this and think ‘this place can make a big difference’,” Ms Coleman said.

Trees and grass surround a white building.
There are 12 buildings on the property including a recreation room, commercial kitchen, and seven housing blocks.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

“So we packed up and we’re here.”

Over the years, they’ve chipped away at renovations, getting the place up to a good living standard for the people with disabilities and mental health needs that come to stay.

The NDIS registered service looks after 15 people at any one time. Most visit for two weeks to “catch their breath”, while others have stayed 12 months.

While there, visitors help clean and look after the animals. They have the opportunity to learn life skills like cooking and changing a tire.

“The whole idea is that they can look after themselves at the end of it all,” Mr Coleman said.

“While they’re vulnerable, they can be here. And when they’re a little more settled, they can go elsewhere and enjoy their life.”

Two chairs with rugs on them sit by a window, a table with cosmetics and nail polish between them.
Carol has created a pamper room for visitors to relax in.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

Vision for the site

Carol Coleman isn’t afraid of vulnerable people. Before studying as a nurse, her mother’s trade de ella, she worked as a cleaner at Glenside Psychiatric Hospital in Adelaide.

“Back in the 80s, people were looked after really well,” Ms Coleman said.

“It was once people started to be moved out into the community that people really started to struggle.”

While some residents who went into homes received lifetime support, Ms Coleman said others didn’t.

A few guitars and drums sit on a carpeted floor next to a piano.
There’s lots to keep people busy at the center.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

“I remember one particular lady was placed in a house across the road from me. She only used the lounge room and the toilet because she was too scared to go into the other rooms,” Ms Coleman said.

“She was a paranoid schizophrenic.

“She ended up walking out in front of cars because she was so distressed.”

Ms Coleman doesn’t know where she ended up.

“It’s people like that you just want to wrap your arms around and go, ‘you can be safe here. You don’t have to be frightened anymore’,” Ms Coleman said.

“There are thousands of people in situations that it’s just cruel to them.

“It’s not something to look down on, it’s something to open people’s eyes and go, ‘How can we help?'”

A worn basketball court surrounded by lawn and gum trees.
The basketball court at Joanna Life Skills Centre.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

While the center may be Carol’s vision, Rob is just as involved.

His experience managing waste transfer systems for 45 years has been put to good use.

“I find managing people in local government is pretty much the same in managing people here,” Mr Coleman said.

“Everyone has problems. It’s about transferring those skills of dealing with people over to dealing with people on a day-by-day basis.”

Learning life skills

Molly is using the center to catch her breath after a tough divorce.

During her month there, she has enjoyed coloring in, playing puzzles, going to the recreation room, and feeding Rosie the lamb.

“I like it here. It’s much calmer,” Molly said.

“Being in Mount Gambier was so stressful, I was so stressed all the time. I just couldn’t cope. But being here, I love it.”

A woman in jeans and a hoodie sits on some grass patting a lamb.
Getting to know lamb Rosie has been one of the highlights of Molly’s stay.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

Lately, she’s been busy preparing for her first prom later this month. The Colemans are taking her from her.

“They encourage me not to give up on things. If I say I don’t want to, they say, ‘come on. You can do it’,” Molly said.

“They’re really sweet and kind and caring for me.”

Required to help look after the grounds, Molly has taken to her new responsibilities well.

“It’s all part of normal life. If they’re going to leave here and go and find their own place to live, they’ve got to be able to look after what they’ve got,” Mr Coleman said.

A woman wearing jeans and a hooded jumper holds a rake smiling.
Molly making herself useful.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

Five years in the making

The work on site continues. In five years, they’ve managed to renovate most of the accommodation — adapting 42 small bedrooms to fewer but larger rooms with more living spaces and wet areas.

“It’s taken us a long time. Two people can only work so fast. And then you have to have the funds to buy materials,” Ms Coleman said.

“It’s been a hard slog but it’s absolutely worth it.”

A man walks into a small weatherboard building on an overcast day.
Rob has turned an old school building on the site into a functioning gym. He just needs to clad the outside.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

They were able to fund the project early on by accommodating local meatworkers.

“We were contacted by Regional Development when we arrived,” Ms Coleman said.

“That was like a gift from heaven because they basically gave us the opportunity to establish the place. We housed probably 140 workers over two years.”

A horse stands eats at some grass.
Various animals call the center home.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

future hopes

The Colemans plan to keep adding facilities to the site — like a woodworking shed and community garden.

“The property’s huge. We have to use it,” Ms Coleman said.

Whilst clients can already access occupational therapist, dietitian and physiotherapist support at the center, the couple hopes for more services.

“In the future, it needs to be a one-stop-shop so that people have got all the support around them that they need,” Ms Coleman said.

“These people are humans, they’ve got a whole lot of needs. And it takes an army to fill those needs.”

A pool table and billiards table sit in a large hall with a TV and other games.
Those staying are encouraged to enjoy the recreation room.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

Having extra staff around is also crucial for lightening the couple’s load.

They have had just one day off in five years but it’s a price they’re willing to pay.

“This is our retirement,” Ms. Coleman said.

Mr Coleman said people tended to stay in contact after they left the centre.

“Carol often gets a couple of phone calls a day from past ones that have been here. And they just check in, say hello,” he said.

“Sometimes they might not be feeling that great. And a chat for five minutes is enough to keep them on track.”

A man and woman stand on a dirt road surrounded by trees, laughing.
Rob and Carol Coleman are committed to being here for the long haul.(ABC South East S.A.: Bec Whetham)

After the implications of renovations and COVID-19, the Colemans say they’re ready to take on more visitors.

“We’ve been under the radar for some time,” Ms Coleman said.

“For a place this big with so many opportunities, people need to know that we’re here.”

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Categories
US

How the battle over the Democrats’ climate, tax and health bill will play out

Senate Democrats are girding themselves for a battle royal with Republicans over a 700-plus-page bill that will reform the tax code, tackle climate change, lower drug costs and reduce the deficit in hopes of delivering what would become President Biden’s centerpiece legislative achievement.

While the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan that Democrats enacted last year was a bigger bill in terms of dollars spent, the Inflation Reduction Act will deliver on what Democrats have promised for years.

It would require profitable corporations to pay more in taxes, reduce carbon emissions and slow climate change, lower the price of many prescription drugs and preserve the affordability of Affordable Care Act health plans.

The legislation will move under special budget reconciliation rules that will allow Democrats to avoid a GOP filibuster and pass it with a simple majority. But to stay in compliance with the reconciliation rules, the legislation must be strictly focused on spending, revenues or the federal debt limit.

Significant policy changes that have only a tangential impact on spending or revenues are violations of the Senate’s Byrd Rule — named after former Sen. Robert Byrd (DW.Va.).

Saturday’s schedule

Senators say there are a lot of unanswered questions heading into the debate, but they have a general idea of ​​how it will play out over the weekend.

The Senate will agree at noon on Saturday and hold a vote at 12:30 pm on a motion to discharge a nominee to serve as assistant administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency out of committee. This will serve as an attendance vote to make sure all 50 members of the Democratic caucus are present.

Eighty-two-year-old Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), who has missed weeks of votes at the Capitol after falling and breaking his hip in June, is expected to be back on the floor for votes.

At some point later in the day, the Senate will vote on the motion to proceed to the Inflation Reduction Act, which is expected to break down strictly along party lines.

Leaders on Friday said they expected all 50 Senate Democrats and all 50 Senate Republicans to be present for the opening vote, which means Vice President Harris will be on hand to break a 50-50 tie. Harris also voted to break the tie on the motion to proceed to the American Rescue Plan in March of last year.

That would then trigger up to 20 hours of debate on the bill, which could stretch late into the evening or past midnight Saturday. The 20 hours of debate would be evenly divided between the parties.

At some point, Schumer will have to finish negotiating some of the provisions of the bill that were still unresolved Friday afternoon, such as money requested by Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) to improve her state’s drought resilience.

GOP strategy

Republican senators said earlier in the week that they intended to use their full allotment of 10 hours to speak on the bill, which would likely mean stretching debate time into Sunday.

But Senate Republican Whip John Thune (SD) said Friday that his Republican colleagues are now eager to speed up the debate so they can move more quickly to offer amendments to the legislation.

“There will probably be an interest in getting amendments fairly quickly,” he said, predicting that amendment votes could begin as soon as Saturday afternoon.

Still, Thune didn’t rule out the possibility that Senate Republicans may try to drag out consideration of the massive bill by forcing the clerks to read its text out loud on the floor for several hours, or by using other procedural delays.

“Yet to be determined. I don’t think we know for sure the answer to that because any member can do that,” he said.

Senators are allowed up to 20 hours of debate time, but they can yield some of that back.

Then senators would begin voting on an open-ended series of amendments, a process known as a vote-a-rama.

‘Like Hell’

Sen. Lindsey Graham (RS.C.), the ranking member of the Budget Committee, vowed on Friday to make the process as painful as possible for Democrats.

“What will vote-a-rama be like? It’ll be like hell,” Graham declared. “They deserve this.”

He said centrist senators such as Sens. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) and Sinema are “empowering legislation that will make the average person’s life more difficult at a time they can’t afford higher gas taxes.

Senate Republicans estimate requiring votes on between 40 and 50 amendments.

Their goal will be to inflict as much political damage as possible on vulnerable Democrats running for re-election in November such as Sens. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D- Nev.) and Maggie Hassan (DN.H.).

Senate Republicans say they will force Democrats to take tough votes on border security, energy prices, crime prevention, inflation.

“Expect to see amendments on all of those things,” said Senate Republican Conference Chairman John Barrasso (R-Wyo.).

Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) says he plans to offer an amendment related to the Title 42 health order that bars migrants from staying in the country to await the processing of asylum claims.

Lankford introduced a bill with Sinema, Manchin, Kelly, Hassan, Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and several Republicans in April to delay the end of the Title 42 order until the Biden administration produced a comprehensive plan to secure the border.

A federal judge blocked the Biden administration from lifting Title 42 in May.

Republicans hope they can pressure vulnerable Democrats to vote with all 50 members of the GOP conference to adopt an amendment to the bill that will make the rest of the legislation unpalatable to the rest of Senate Democrats. But they acknowledge it’s a long-shot strategy.

They predict that Democratic leaders will offer side-by-side amendments to give vulnerable Democratic senators such as Kelly and Warnock political cover not to vote for any of the Republican ones.

At the end of the vote-a-rama, Schumer will offer a substitute amendment that will make any final changes he wants to add to the Inflation Reduction Act and strip out any amendments that may have become attached during the vote-a-rama that would imperil the final Senate passage or endanger the bill’s prospects in the House.

Manchin-Sinema pressure

Republicans are trying to pressure Manchin and Sinema to oppose the final wraparound amendment so that some amendments have a chance of being included in the final bill.

“The question for both Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema is if any of these amendments succeed at the end, will you or will you not vote for the wraparound amendment,” Thune said, adding, “I think we kind of expect the Democrats to fall in” with their leaders’ wishes.

The vote-a-rama will be capped by a final vote on the legislation, which if successful would send it onto the House and then Biden’s desk.

Schumer admitted Friday that he still doesn’t know exactly what to expect in terms of when senators will take up the motion to proceed and when the amendment votes will begin or end. But he feels confident he has final votes to pass the bill in the next few days.

“We’re feeling pretty good,” he said. “I’m pleased we have reached an agreement on the Inflation Reduction Act that I believe will receive the support of the entire Senate Democratic conference.”

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Technology

The Best And Worst Parts About Every Borderlands Game

We at Kotaku have long been in the habit of ranking all the games worst-to-best in a major series, whether it’s Pokemon or Halo or Assassin’s Creed. At a glance, it’s possible to read those posts as reductive. Most every game has at least one redeeming quality. On the other hand, every “perfect” game probably has something to hate about it. Hence the start of a new series here at Kotaku, wherein we cover the singular best and worst aspects of every mainline game in a popular franchise. First-up: BorderlandsGearbox’s cartoonishly violent series of loot-shooters.

Borderland (2009)

Image: GearboxImage: Gearbox

Best: The core concept. when Borderlands came onto the scene more than a decade ago, it was genuinely revolutionary. Combining first-person shooting with the rarity-tiered loot grind of Devil provided an intoxicating combo. Distinct classes with unique abilities and robust skill trees gave the game some bona fide RPGs, like you were always working toward something. Borderlands also knew exactly what it was and didn’t try to be anything else, giving you a confidently basic premise — go, uhh, find lost ancient treasure or something — to justify the grind.

Worst: Heroes lacked personality. Gearbox sketched out four playable characters for Borderlands: the brawler Brick, the generic soldier Roland, the hunter Mordecai (joined by a little bird friend), and the magically enhanced Lilith. But like many first-person games at the time, they served as generic ciphers for the player, not really having well-defined personalities of their own. For a game that was otherwise sharply written, it was a shame not to see that biting wit apply to the folks you played as. (Gearbox quickly remedied this with subsequent entries, though.)

Borderland 2 (2012)

Image: GearboxImage: Gearbox

Best: Um, everything? I’ve said it before, and I stand by it: Borderland 2 is easily one of the best sequels in all of gaming. It maintained everything that made the first game such a standout hit, except cranked up to “87 bazillion.” It brought back the original four heroes from the first game, this time as NPCs with fleshed-out stories. The villain, Handsome Jack, was an all-timer, threatening and amusing in equal measure. Also, the game’s environments actually featured more than one colour.

Worst: OK, fiiinethe Caustic Caverns kinda sucked. I still have nightmares. Not worth venturing there at all, not even for the Minecraft skin.

Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel (2014)

Screenshot: GearboxScreenshot: Gearbox

Best: It was on the fucking moon! Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel, a spinoff primarily developed by 2K Australia, bridged the narrative gap between the first two games, sending players off-planet and coloring in the origin story of Handsome Jack. Yeah yeah yeah, that’s cool and all. The real draw, again, was that you were on the moon! The sheer amount of cool features this introduced — low gravity, jetpacks, butt-slams — was worth many of the game’s shortcomings.

Worst: Oxygen meters. On the flip side, being on the moon meant not having any air. An oxygen meter slowly depleted whenever you were in an exterior area, which was often. To fill it back up, you had to head to oxygen bubbles strewn around maps, meaning you had to keep at least one eye on a constantly exhausting resource. C’mon. It’s Borderlands. The last thing you want to do is spend time worrying about something.

Borderland 3 (2019)

Image: GearboxImage: Gearbox

Best: Interplanetary travel. For years, Borderlands games offered limited biome diversity, with the whole game confined to one planet (Pandora for the first two, the moon for the spin-off). But Borderlands 3 let you go to five different planets. So what if one of them, the ethereal, vine-covered Athenas, was literally just one stage. The densely packed metropolis of Promethea was a NUMTOT’s dream. (Hear, hear for walkable cities.) The jungles of Eden-6 were rich and moody and ominous. Even Pandora got a glow-up, with tons of new subregions to explore, in addition to the barren wastes that defined it in prior entries.

Worst: The emphasis on driving. And it is, Borderlands 3 teed up a ton of interesting levels. The catch? Most of them were massive, forcing you to hop into a car if you wanted to get around with even the barst hint of expediency. Borderlands 3‘s driving was slippery and imprecise, though — forgivable for the earlier games, but not for this one, wherein vehicular control felt like it hadn’t improved at all in a decade. (Gearbox did not include driving segments in Borderlands 3‘s successor, Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands.)

Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands

Screenshot: GearboxScreenshot: Gearbox

Best: The fantasy theme. Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands is part spin-off, part follow-up to the fantasy-themed Borderland 2 expansion, Assault on Dragon Keeparguably the fan favorite in the series. Wonderlands takes that campaign’s fantasy trappings and runs with it for a whole game. Pistols become crossbows. Bandits become reanimated pirate corpses. A castle turns into a giant beanstalk with shattered ramparts and malevolent mushroom people. it’s like Borderlands went to the renaissance faire — an idea that, on paper, shouldn’t work but, in practice, totally does.

Worst: Paper-thin expansions. Historically, the Borderlands games have rolled out four significant campaign expansions, typically spread out over a year after release. Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands also has four post-release expansions. They’re not really full campaigns, though; really, each one is a themed, endlessly replayable single dungeon that you grind repeatedly for better loot. There’s a story — something about a magical mirror operated by a witch — but it pales in comparison to the depth you get in, say, any of the terrific Borderlands 3 campaigns. Three have come out so far. The final one, “Shattering Spectreglass,” is due out soon, Gearbox says, and will also introduce a seventh class to the game: the poison-focused Blightcaller. Who knows: Maybe it’ll wholly redeem the DLC.