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Technology

Pokemon Go’s Bug Out Event Adds Mega Scizor, Shiny Venipede and More

Pokemon Go’s Bug Out returns next week. The bug-themed event begins Aug. 10 and you introduce a handful of new bug Pokemon to catch, including Mega Scizor, shiny Venipede, and Grubbin. In addition, there will be new challenges and research tasks to complete, along with various in-game bonuses to earn.

Here’s everything you need to know about this year’s Bug Out.

Bug out schedule

The Bug Out event kicks off 10 am local time on Aug. 10 and ends 8 pm local time on Aug. 16.

Featured Pokemon

Several new bug Pokemon will be making their debut during this year’s Bug Out, including Mega Scizor. You’ll be able to encounter the Mega-Evolved Pokemon in Mega raids throughout the event, and each time you defeat it, you’ll earn energy to Mega Evolve your own Scizor.

On top of that, the Alolan Pokemon Grubbin will be appearing in the wild throughout the event. Once you’ve amassed 25 Grubbin candy, you can evolve it into Charjabug, which can then be evolved into Vikavolt if you feed it 100 Grubbin candy near an active Magnetic Lure Module.

Various other bug Pokemon will also be appearing more frequently during the event, including shiny Venipede, marking your first chance to catch one in the game. You can see the full list of featured Pokemon below:

wild spawns

  • Caterpie
  • weedle
  • Ledyba
  • Spinarak
  • Yanma
  • Pineco
  • Wurmple
  • Surskit
  • kricketot
  • Skorupi
  • Coming
  • Karrablast
  • Joltic
  • Dwebble
  • Shelmet
  • grubbin
  • dewpider

One star raid

three-star raids

  • Venomoth
  • Pinsir
  • Forretress
  • Shuckle

five-star raids

mega raid

bonuses

Along with the featured Pokemon, a few bonuses will be active during the Bug Out event. You’ll earn twice as much XP as usual each time you successfully catch a Pokemon with a Nice, Great or Excellent throw.

Additionally, certain bug Pokemon will spawn in much greater numbers around a gym if three or more players join an in-person raid. The Pokemon that will appear will differ depending on the day. You can see the full schedule below:

  • Aug. 10 – Wurmple
  • Aug. 11 – Caterpie
  • Aug. 12 – Spinarak
  • Aug. 13 – Coming
  • Aug. 14 – Kricketot
  • Aug. 15 – Weedle
  • Aug. 16 – Ledyba

Pokemon Go has many other events lined up for this month. The legendary Pokemon Palkia is appearing in raids until Aug. 10, while August’s Community Day is set for Aug. 13. You can see everything else going on in our August events roundup.

Categories
Entertainment

Jason Momoa poses as flight attendant and hands out water on Hawaiian Airlines flight

Aquaman star Jason Momoa has shocked passengers by posing as a flight attendant and handing out water on a recent Hawaiian Airlines flight.

Footage of the actor handing out his own brand of water bottles, Mananalu, was shared on social media.

“My aunty sent me this vid, I just thought I’d share,” a woman named Kylee, who goes by the username @livinglikekylee, shared on TikTok.

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Aquaman star Jason Mamoa has shocked passengers by posing as a flight attendant and handing out water on a Hawaiian Airlines flight.
Aquaman star Jason Mamoa has shocked passengers by posing as a flight attendant and handing out water on a Hawaiian Airlines flight. (Tik Tok)

The clip has since been viewed over 2.7 million times, with plenty of people losing it in the comments.

“I’d push my service button every 10 minutes,” one person wrote.

“I would have passed out,” another said.

While a third commented: “This would be the best day of my life.”

The Hawaiian-born actor dressed for the occasion, and had a flower tucked behind his left ear, which, according to social media users, means he’s taken.

READMORE: Bullet Train star reveals on-set injury landed him in the hospital

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 04: Jason Momoa attends the Los Angeles premiere of "ambulance" at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on April 04, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.  (Photo by David Livingston/FilmMagic)
Jason Momoa founded his company Mananalu in 2019. (Getty)

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The Hollywood star’s company Mananalu – which Momoa founded in 2019 – recently partnered with Hawaiian Airlines to bring its infinitely recyclable aluminum bottles on board in order to replace plastic water bottles.

Since April, the airline has been distributing Mananalu’s 500 millilitre aluminum bottle to Premium Cabin guests on all US East Coast and international flights. The recyclable product will also replace plastic water bottles sold on Hawaiian’s Pau Hana snack cart on the carrier’s flights between Hawaii and its 16 continental US gateway cities.

“We couldn’t be more thrilled to partner with Hawaiian Airlines. Together we’re reducing single-use plastic bottles on flights and removing plastic from our oceans. It’s perfect brand alignment,” David Cuthbert, CEO of Mananalu, said at the time of the announcement.

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plane act man caught watching rude film on flight

Passenger slammed online for ‘gross’ act on flight

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022: Muzala Samukonga collapses in men’s 400m heat results, athletics news

You don’t win gold in the qualifying rounds — and now teen star Muzala Samukonga knows it better than anyone.

The Zambian runner smoked the field in the heats of the men’s 400m at Alexander Stadium on Wednesday night (AEST), powering all the way to the finish line to shave 0.13 seconds off his personal best.

However, he collapsed on the ground after crossing the line and appeared to be in distress as officials attended to him.

The 19-year-old won Heat 5 by more than 10m from his nearest competitor and went through to the semi-finals with the fastest time of 44.89 seconds — the first time he has ever gone under the 45 second mark.

However, he might have paid a hefty price for running the personal best and he was seen clutching at his left hamstring after crossing the line. In a confronting sight, he was also seen to be punching his upper leg as he grimaced on the ground.

After attempting to get to his feet, Samukonga fell back to the ground before a wheelchair was brought out to carry him out of the stadium.

It appeared to be a case of severe cramp and Aussie athletics great Tamsyn Manou said she suspects Samukonga was suffering from “lactic acid pain”.

“He’s in liquor there. Definite all sorts,” the former Olympian told Channel 7.

“That’s just lactic acid pain pulsating through those legs.”

When asked what that feels like, Manou responded: “It’s horrendous. He’s got it that badly. He’s got it really bad. He’s going to take a while to recover from that.

“He’s going to need an ice bath for a while.”

His participation in the semi-finals on Saturday morning (AEST) has not been confirmed.

Former British middle-distance runner Tim Hutchings told the Commonwealth Games host broadcasting service Samukonga brought it on himself.

“Maybe he thought I may never get a chance to run sub-45 (seconds) again,” Hutchings said.

“I think most coaches would say, ‘it’s great to run a personal best, but actually this is just extravagant and you will pay for it’.

“That’s a 10m winning margin — and more by the time he hits the line.

“Really, really unnecessary. No one else goes under 46 seconds.

“He runs 44.89 seconds and dare I say, he’s the word naive.

“An incredible run, but I hope that’s not the last we see of him in Birmingham.”

Aussie Steve Solomon also moved through to the semi-finals as the sixth-quickest overall qualifier after finishing second in his heat with a time of 45.98 seconds.

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Categories
US

In 4 Swing States, GOP Election Deniers Could Oversee Voting

PHOENIX — With Tuesday’s primary victories in Arizona and Michigan added to those in Nevada and Pennsylvania, Republicans who have disputed the legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election and who pose a threat to subvert the next one are on a path toward winning decisive control over how elections are run in several battleground states.

Running in a year in which GOP voters are energized by fierce disapproval of President Biden, these newly minted Republican nominees for secretary of state and governor present a growing risk to the nation’s traditions of nonpartisan elections administration, acceptance of election results and orderly transfers of power .

Each has spread falsehoods about fraud and illegitimate ballots, endorsing the failed effort to override the 2020 results and keep former President Donald J. Trump in power. Their history of anti-democratic impulses has prompted Democrats, democracy experts and even some fellow Republicans to question whether these officials would oversee fair elections and certify winners they didn’t support.

There is no question that victories by these candidates in November could lead to sweeping changes to how millions of Americans vote. Several have proposed eliminating mail voting, ballot drop boxes and even the use of electronic voting machines, while empowering partisan election observers and expanding their roles.

“If any one of these election deniers wins statewide office, that’s a five-alarm fire for our elections,” said Joanna Lydgate, the chief executive of the United States United Democracy Center, a bipartisan legal watchdog organization. “It could throw our elections into chaos. It could put our democracy at risk.”

In Arizona, Republicans nominated Mark Finchem, who marched at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to protest Mr. Biden’s victory, for secretary of state, the top election official in the state. They also elevated Abraham Hamadeh, who called his opponents of him and other Republicans “weak-kneed” for supporting certification of the 2020 election, as their nominee for attorney general.

And with votes still being counted, Kari Lake, who has said she would not have certified Mr. Biden’s 10,000-vote victory in her state, held a slight lead in the GOP primary for governor.

Both Ms. Lake and Mr. Finchem have made their willingness to flout some democratic norms and their promotion of conspiracy theories central to their campaigns. Ms. Lake has said she doesn’t believe the state holds fair elections. Even before votes were cast, Mr. Finchem was preparing for a recount of his race from him “if there’s the slightest hint of impropriety.”

“Ain’t going to be no concession speech coming from this guy,” he said in June.

On Tuesday, both Ms. Lake and Mr. Finchem claimed that there was fraud in the state’s primaries.

In Michigan, Tudor Dixon, who has at times falsely argued that Mr. Trump won the state in 2020 (he lost by more than 150,000 votes), clinched the Republican nomination for governor, while Kristina Karamo, who has called the 2020 election fixed and baselessly claimed that Dominion voting machine software flipped votes to Mr. Biden, is the party’s presumptive nominee for secretary of state. Matthew DePerno, the presumptive GOP nominee for attorney general, was a central player in 2020 election challenges in Michigan and has pledged to investigate current state officials.

They join Jim Marchant, the Republican nominee for secretary of state in Nevada, who has said he would not have certified the 2020 election and wants more sheriffs at the polls, and Doug Mastriano, the Republican nominee for governor in Pennsylvania, who led the push to overturn the state’s 2020 results. If he wins, Mr. Mastriano would appoint Pennsylvania’s top elections official.

Though state legislatures write the laws governing how elections are conducted, secretaries of state have significant power over how elections are run, often determining how resources are distributed and what rules local officials must follow. During the pandemic, secretaries of state ordered absentee ballot applications to be mailed widely in an effort to make voting safer.

As top election officials, secretaries of state could also use their power to discourage voting and erode trust. In several states, they can order investigations or expansive audits, potentially legitimizing bogus election claims or pressing local election officials to conduct unnecessary recounts and hunt for nonexistent fraud.

Secretaries of state and governors also play a central role in formally certifying election winners, a largely ceremonial act but one by which allies of Mr. Trump have sought to block results. Though many legal experts say the courts would most likely disagree, the prospect of a rogue governor or secretary of state refusing to certify an election could create the atmosphere for a constitutional crisis.

In Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Nevada, Republican nominees for secretary of state (or governors who would appoint them) have indicated, or outright declared, that they would not have certified the 2020 election.

“They could tilt the counting, casting and certification of ballots, and that is really harmful,” said Benjamin Ginsberg, a prominent Republican election lawyer who has been critical of efforts to undermine the electoral process. “They have said that they’ll check registration harder, they could reduce polling places in non-Republican friendly areas, they could put up a wide variety of barriers to voting — which would be harmful to the basic principle of every legal voter gets to vote.”

Governors who reject lies about the 2020 election have halted Republican-controlled state legislatures from enacting new laws that would restrict voting or grant partisan lawmakers greater control of election administration. Over the past two years, governors in Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania vetoed nine bills that would have added restrictions to voting, according to the Voting Rights Lab.

Many of these proposals were part of a push for “election integrity,” responding to Republicans voters’ unfounded worries about fraud. (Despite Mr. Trump’s claims, there was no fraud in the 2020 election that would have affected the outcome, and nearly all of his allegations have been repeatedly debunked by local election officials, law enforcement and the courts.)

With an agreeable Republican governor or secretary of state, such far-reaching policies could become a reality, as could other, more drastic, right-wing goals.

Stephen K. Bannon, a former adviser to Mr. Trump, wrote on social media that when Ms. Lake, Mr. Hamadeh and Mr. Finchem took office in Arizona, “then the actual count will happen, and the Biden Electors decertified.” He was referring to the theory that the 2020 election can still be decertified, which has no legal basis in the Constitution. Mr. Bannon added that once this happened, “Arizona will be FREE.”

Both Ms. Lake and Mr. Finchem have made bold plans for overhauling elections in the state. They recently filed a lawsuit seeking to ban the use of electronic voting machines, and Mr. Finchem has previously tried to undo Arizona’s long-established and widely popular vote-by-mail system.

Should they win, they would probably find support for their election proposals in the Republican-controlled Legislature. One potential hurdle fell Tuesday, when Rusty Bowers, who as the Republican speaker of the House blocked the most extreme efforts to overturn the 2020 results, lost his primary bid for a State Senate seat.

Some Democrats are preparing to portray these candidates as dangerous extremists.

“We are going to focus on a return to stability and predictability,” said Adrian Fontes, who is leading the Democratic primary for secretary of state in Arizona, and said he would focus on the “wild-eyed fanaticism” of Republicans, including Mr. Finchem. “They have gotten themselves so far down this rabbit hole, I don’t think they can see the light of day.”

It is unclear just how much leading Democrats will try to appeal to voters on threats to democracy in the fall. Some top party officials believe that while the issue may motivate committed Democratic voters, it is unlikely to persuade swing voters who are more focused on gas prices, inflation and health care. These Democrats believe that painting Republicans as extreme on abortion, for example, may be more effective than focusing on the mechanics of elections.

Still, money has poured into some races for bureaucratic posts. Fund-raising by candidates for secretary of state in six battleground states has already topped $16 million, more than double that in the same time period of the previous cycle, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. The analysis found that the fund-raising race so far appears to slightly favor candidates running against election deniers.

The next big test comes next week in Wisconsin, where Republican candidates for governor have vowed to overhaul the state’s election system in response to unfounded claims about problems in 2020. All of the major GOP candidates in the race have pledged to eliminate the Wisconsin Elections Commission , a bipartisan agency that oversees state elections. It was created by Republicans in 2015, but the party turned on it after commissioners issued guidance that made voting easier during the pandemic.

Republicans are trying to oust Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat who since the 2020 election has vetoed more than a dozen bills advanced by the Republican-controlled Legislature to change how Wisconsinites vote. The legislation would have, among other things, allowed legislators to withhold money for the elections commission, made it harder for voters confined to their homes to vote remotely and prohibited private organizations from donating funds to help with elections.

The biggest debate among the candidates running to take on Mr. Evers, however, is largely a symbolic one. The candidates are split on whether to pursue decertifying Mr. Biden’s 2020 victory in the state — a legal impossibility that nonetheless has become an obsession of Mr. Trump and his most devoted followers of him.

Mr. Trump’s preferred candidate, Tim Michels, a construction magnate, has said he’ll consider it. “When I’m sworn in, in January, I will look at all the evidence and everything will be on the table,” he said this week. One rival, Tim Ramthun, has said he would sign decertification legislation “in a nanosecond.”

Only Rebecca Kleefisch, who has sought to present herself as the candidate of the Wisconsin Republican establishment, has said she is more focused on establishing new voting rules than revisiting the 2020 election.

“As the governor of a state, you must be grounded in reality,” she said in an interview on Tuesday in Sheboygan. “You make decisions based on data and facts, statistics and truth. And you can’t live in a land of your own imagination.”

Jennifer Medina reported from Phoenix, Reid J. Epstein from Sheboygan, Wis., and Nick Corasaniti from New York.

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Business

Mercedes-Benz dealers seek $650m compensation from German car maker in ‘fight of their lives’

Australian Mercedes-Benz dealers are in a $650 million “fight of their lives” against the luxury German car maker in a test case described as one of the most significant in franchise-law history.

Bob Craig sold his dealership of 48 years last year in frustration over Mercedes-Benz’s decision to move to a fixed-price agency sales model.

“I would love to have done 50 years with Mercedes,” Mr Craig said.

“In the last five years, there was a deterioration in relationships between the dealer and the manufacturer.”

Previously, dealers bought cars from Mercedes and could set their own sale price.

But under the agency model, which came into effect in January, the manufacturer retains ownership of the cars while dealers become agents that sell cars at a fixed price for a set commission.

Thirty-eight of the nation’s 55 Mercedes-Benz dealerships have launched legal action against the company in the Federal Court seeking compensation.

Dealers argue they were forced to sign new agency model deals with Mercedes that will dramatically reduce their profits and wipe out years of goodwill with customers.

Mr Craig is not involved in the court case because he sold his business in Orange before the agency model came into effect, but he is speaking on behalf of former colleagues too nervous to publicly criticize Mercedes.

“They’re all shattered, their livelihood is shattered,” Mr Craig said.

Bob and old photo
A photo of Bob Craig’s Mercedes-Benz dealership in Orange from the 1970s.(ABC News: Hamish Cole )

Dealers allege Mercedes hatched a secret plan in 2016 to switch to an agency model, undertook a sham consultation process, and pushed forward with a decision despite the majority of Australian dealers being against it.

They claim that in a bid to capture the profits of dealers, Mercedes has broken Australian Consumer Law by engaging in unconscionable conduct, along with breaching the franchising code’s good-faith provisions.

“This is an incredibly important case for the automotive industry,” Australian Automotive Dealer Association (AADA) chief executive James Voortman said.

“In fact, it’s probably one of the most important franchising cases in Australian history.”

James Voorten
James Voorten says dealers are arguing Mercedes-Benz has engaged in unconscionable conduct and breached its good-faith obligations.(ABC News: Matt Roberts )

Dealers involved in the case are seeking $650 million in compensation from the car marker.

“That takes account of all the millions of dollars of investment that has gone into facilities, but also equipment and the goodwill they’ve created,” Mr Voortman said.

“It’s a large claim, but it’s more than fair.”

“These are regional dealers, these are city dealers, they are Australian businesses, and they’re in the fight of their lives against a big multinational corporation.”

In March 2019, Deloitte modeled the impact of the agency model for dealers.

It found, for example, that under the agency model one particular dealer’s profits would decline by more than 50 per cent compared to the dealership model.

The case against Mercedes, which saw hearings begin in the Federal Court this week, is being funded by dealers involved in the legal battle, including billionaire businessman Nick Politis, the PR company working for AADA has confirmed.

“So many of these dealers have represented the brand for decades, they’ve invested so much money in the brand, and they’ve put in so much work to bring customers to the brand,” Mr Voortman said.

“And now all of that hard work is being taken away with change to a new business model.

“They need compensation for that change, and we hope that the court agrees with that.”

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Categories
Technology

Insider Reveals a Cold Truth About Rockstar Games Amidst GTA 6 Pressure

The iconic action RPG franchise, Grand Theft Auto, is now confirmed to be incubating its next installment, almost a decade after GTA 5’s release. Earlier this year, the Rockstar Games had declared the ongoing production of GTA 6, to end years of speculations. However, fans still await a concrete release window.

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While the game has received an official mention, informants never stop giving out more. In fact, the plot of the game alongside some location details were leaked earlier. The updates, until now, were quite satiating to anticipating fans. However, an informant ran into some new information that could upset a lot of fans.

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Considering the new speculation, Grand Theft Auto’s upcoming game could face further delay. So, as some fans were expecting, GTA 6 may not release next year. A more likely year could be 2024!

GTA 6 reportedly faced a lot of hindrances

According to an industry informant, Rockstar Games has had a lot of trouble with GTA 6’s production, both financially and development-wise. Although a speculation, this information comes from a figure who has been consistent with his revelations from him.

As it happens, the informant of the name ‘Matheusvictorbr’ claimed the situation of GTA 6’s production in Portuguese.

When translated, the tweet reads, “Rockstar Games faced several issues in the development of its next title Grand Theft Auto. As well as the ambitions left on paper, which appeared to be promising, but in practice was a nightmare, both as Financial and in its development itself.”

A second tweet from him read, “Rockstar games now tend to keep their current version of the upcoming Grand Theft Auto title’s goal of following the caliber of RDRII.”

As fans can decipher, Rockstar Games’ faced a major dilemma during GTA 6 production. While Rockstar Games didn’t make it apparent on paper during the announcement, the company struggled financially and with the game’s development. As a result, the company is now aiming for the upcoming game to match the caliber of its other successful action RPG game, Red Dead Redemption 2.

With the developmental and financial dilemma in question, GTA 6’s release may not happen soon. However, officials have confirmed nothing related to Matheusvictorbr’s tweets, so fans may want to take the same with a grain of salt. Moreover, it’s likely that Rockstar Games has figured out a way to tackle the issues by now.

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The upcoming GTA game will feature a female playable protagonist for the first time, according to a report. In fact, the game’s story takes inspiration from Bonnie and Clyde, a real-life criminal couple from the 1900s.

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What do you think about Rockstar Games facing financial and developmental problems with GTA 6? Let us know in the comments!

WATCH THIS STORY: Biggest celebrities who lent their voices to the popular GTA franchise

Categories
Entertainment

Jay Leno denies he ‘deliberately sabotaged’ Conan O’Brien’s The Tonight Show hosting gig

More than a decade after Jay Leno left and returned to The Tonight Showthe comedian has denied claims he sabotaged fellow late-night host Conan O’Brien‘s shot with the program.

In May 2009, the 72-year-old parted from The Tonight Show – now hosted by Jimmy Fallon – after 17 years and started hosting The Jay Leno Show at an earlier time on NBC, the same network.

O’Brien took over hosting duties of The Tonight Show after Leno’s departure, but ratings for both shows declined, and in 2010, Leno returned to host The Tonight Show until 2014.

Now, Leno has addressed the long-held speculation he played a part in ending O’Brien’s short-lived hosting stint on the program that became synonymous with Leno. Watch what he said above.

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Jay Leno and Conan O'Brien
Conan O’Brien briefly replaced Jay Leno on The Tonight Show before Leno replaced his replacement. (Getty)

“It doesn’t work that way. You try and do the best you can, and it didn’t work,” Leno said in a recent interview with Bill Maher on his Random Club podcast.

After Leno returned to The Tonight ShowO’Brien left NBC – the network with which he had been working since 1993 – to host TBS’ Conan.

Leno denied he did anything to “deliberately sabotage” O’Brien in the interview, and also explained why he stayed at NBC amid the controversy, rather than moving to a different network.

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“Sometimes the czar you have is better than the one you’re going to,” Leno said.

“Then you have your old team shooting at you as well. I just figured let’s just play this out and see what happens. This all happened fairly quickly.”

Leno said he even considered joining ABC at the time, which was the home of Jimmy Kimmel Liveand recalled calling Kimmel to discuss the potential switch – but never followed up with Kimmel after he decided to stay at NBC.

“I suppose I should have called Jimmy and explained to him again, but I didn’t,” Leno said. “I don’t know why I didn’t. I just didn’t. I thought he probably would figure it out. But I think maybe he was hurt by that, and I apologized to him for that.”

READMORE: The cost of restaurant cancellations around the world

O’Brien, meanwhile, you have previously claimed he and Leno don’t speak with each otherand in a 2010 sit-down interview with the American 60 minutessaid he would never have done to Leno what Leno allegedly did to him.

“He went and took that show back and I think in a similar situation, if roles had been reversed, I know – I know me, I wouldn’t have done that,” O’Brien, 59, said on the show.

O’Brien, at the time, said he would not have “surrendered The Tonight Show and handed it over to somebody publicly and wished them well – and then… six months later… But that’s me, you know.”

“Everyone’s got their own, you know, way of doing things,” O’Brien said, and added that he had been in Leno’s position, he would have “done something else, [gone] someplace else.”

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Angelina Jolie had a strained relationship with her actor father Jon Voight after her parents split when she was young.  She dropped her dad's last name for her early on in her career, opting for her mother's maiden name for her, Jolie.  Ange refused to speak to Jon for six years after he said during a 2002 interview that he believed his daughter had "serious mental problems".  The pair have since reconciled, and Jon is now a doting grandfather to Angelina's six children.

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US

Biden issues second executive order to protect abortion access

President Biden on Wednesday issued an executive order to protect people’s ability to travel out of state to access abortion.

The big pictures: This is the second executive order the president has issued to preserve abortion access after the Supreme Court’s ruling overturning Roe v. Wade.

State of play: Biden signed the executive order during the first meeting of the White House’s Task Force on Reproductive Health Care, which is focused on coordinating the federal government’s efforts on reproductive health.

Details: The executive order directs the Department of Health and Human Services to “consider action to advance access” to reproductive health services, including through Medicaid for patients who travel out of state.

  • Biden is also asking HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra to consider “all appropriate actions” to ensure that health providers follow federal nondiscrimination laws so that people can “receive medically necessary care without delay.”
  • Becerra must also “evaluate and improve research, data collection, and data analysis efforts” on maternal health.

What he’s saying: Biden said this executive order will respond to “the health care crisis that has unfolded since the Supreme Court overturned Roe and that women are facing all across America.”

  • The order will “help safeguard access to health care, including the right to choose and contraception. [It] promotes safety and security of clinics, patients and providers, and protect patients’ privacy and access to accurate information.”
  • “I believe Roe got it right. It’s been the law for close to 50 years. And I committed to the American people that we are doing everything in our power safeguard access to health care, including the right to choose that women had under Roe v Wade, which was ripped away by this extreme court.”

Zoom out: Although the Biden administration has taken several steps to respond to the Supreme Court ruling, the executive branch’s role when it comes to protecting abortion care is limited without congressional action.

Go deeper:

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Technology

Researchers Have Taught Machines How to Follow Lego Instruction Manuals

The enduring appeal of Lego comes not from the complexity of the sets, nor the adorable minifigure versions of pop culture icons, but from the build process itself, and turning a box of seemingly random pieces into a completed model. It’s a satisfying experience, and another one that robots might steal from you one day, thanks to researchers at Stanford University.

Lego’s instruction manuals are a masterclass in how to visually convey an assembly process to a builder, no matter what their background is, their experience level, or what language they speak. Pay close attention to the required pieces and the differences between one image of the partly-assembled model and the next, and you can figure out where all the pieces need to go before moving on to the next step. Lego has refined and polished the design of its instruction manuals over the years, but as easy as they are for humans to follow, machines are only just learning how to interpret the step-by-step guides.

One of the biggest challenges when it comes to machines learning to build with Lego is interpreting the two-dimensional images of the 3D models in the traditional printed instruction manuals (although, several Lego models can now be assembled through the company’s mobile app, which provides full 3D models of each step that can be rotated and examined from any angle). Humans can look at a picture of a Lego brick and instantly determine its 3D structure in order to find it in a pile of bricks, but for robots to do that, the researchers at Stanford University had to develop a new learning-based framework they call the Manual-to-Executable-Plan Network — or, MEPNet, for short — as detailed in a recently published paper.

Not only does the neural network have to extrapolate the 3D shape, form, and structure of the individual pieces identified in the manual for each step, it also needs to interpret the overall shape of the semi-assembled models featured in every step, no matter their orientation. Depending on where a piece needs to be added, Lego manuals will often provide an image of a semi-assembled model from a completely different perspective than the previous step did. The MEPNet framework has to decipher what it’s seeing, and how it correlates to the 3D model it generated as illustrated in previous steps.

Screenshot: Ruocheng Wang, Yunzhi Zhang, Jiayuan Mao, Chin-Yi Cheng, and Jiajun WuScreenshot: Ruocheng Wang, Yunzhi Zhang, Jiayuan Mao, Chin-Yi Cheng, and Jiajun Wu

The framework then needs to determine where the new pieces in each step fit into the previously generated 3D model by comparing the next iteration of the semi-assembled model to previous ones. Lego manuals don’t use arrows to indicate part placement, and at the most will use a slightly different color to indicate where new pieces need to be placed — which may be too subtle to detect from a scanned image of a printed page. The MEPNet framework has to figure this out on its own, but what makes the process slightly easier is a feature unique to Lego bricks: the studs on top, and the anti-studs on the underside that allow them to be securely attached to each other . MEPNet understands the positional limitations of how Lego bricks can actually be stacked and attached based on the location of a piece’s studs, which helps narrow down where on the semi-assembled model they can be attached.

So can you drop a pile of plastic bricks and a manual in front of a robot arm and expect to come back to a completed model in a few hours? Not quite yet. The goal of this research was to simply translate the 2D images of a Lego manual into assembly steps a machine can functionally understand. Teaching a robot to manipulate and assemble Lego bricks is a whole other challenge — this is just the first step — although we’re not sure if there are any Lego fans out there who want to pawn off the actual building process on a machine.

Where this research could have more interesting applications is potentially automatically converting old Lego instruction manuals into the interactive 3D build guides included in the Lego mobile app now. And with a better understanding of translating 2D images into three-dimensional brick-built structures, this framework could potentially be used to develop software that could translate images of any object and spit out instructions on how to turn it into a Lego model.

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Sen. Ron Johnson suggests ending Medicare, Social Security as mandatory spending programs

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Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) has suggested that Social Security and Medicare be eliminated as federal entitlement programs, and that they should instead become programs approved by Congress on an annual basis as discretionary spending.

Those who work in the United States pay Social Security and Medicare taxes that go into federal trust funds. Upon retirement, based on a person’s lifetime earnings and other factors, a retiree is eligible to receive monthly Social Security payments. Similarly, Medicare is the federal health insurance program that kicks in for people 65 and older, or for others who have disabilities.

In an interview that aired Tuesday on “The Regular Joe Show” podcast, Johnson, who is seeking a third term in the Senate, lamented that the Social Security and Medicare programs automatically grant benefits to those who meet the qualifications — that is, to those who had been paying into the system over their working life.

“If you qualify for the entitlement, you just get it no matter what the cost,” Johnson said. “And our problem in this country is that more than 70 percent of our federal budget, of our federal spending, is all mandatory spending. It’s on automatic pilot. It never — you just don’t do proper oversight. You don’t get in there and fix the programs going bankrupt. It’s just on automatic pilot.”

Johnson suggested that Social Security and Medicare be transformed into programs whose budgets are appropriated by Congress on an annual basis. I have pointed out that budgets for the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments are approved as discretionary spending.

“What we ought to be doing is we ought to turn everything into discretionary spending so it’s all evaluated so that we can fix problems or fix programs that are broken, that are going to be going bankrupt,” Johnson said. “As long as things are on automatic pilot, we just continue to pile up debt.”

Johnson’s comments prompted criticism from the White House and from Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (DN.Y.), who said Democrats would fight any attempt by Republicans to “pull the rug out from under our seniors.”

“The junior senator from Wisconsin wants to put Medicare and Social Security on the chopping block,” Schumer told reporters Wednesday. “He has argued that the benefits which millions of Americans rely on every day shouldn’t be guaranteed, but should be subject to partisan infighting here in Washington. He would like to revoke the guarantee of Medicare and Social Security and make them discretionary. Well, do you know what happens when we make things discretionary around here? All too often they get cut, or even eliminated. We don’t want to do that.”

A representative for Johnson’s office pushed back on the idea that Johnson wanted to eliminate Medicare or Social Security.

“The Senator’s point was that without fiscal discipline and oversight typically found with discretionary spending, Congress has allowed the guaranteed benefits for programs like Social Security and Medicare to be threatened,” Johnson spokeswoman Alexa Henning said in an email.

“This must be addressed by Congress taking its responsibilities seriously to ensure that seniors don’t need to question whether the programs they depend on remain solvent,” she added. “As he said, we need a process to save these programs and no one is doing anything to save them long term. We just continue piling up debt, mortgaging our children’s future, and putting these programs at risk.”

Asked Wednesday whether Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) would support such a plan, a representative for him pointed to his previous rejection of a proposal by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) that would have similarly increased Social Security and Medicare. In March, Johnson said he supported “most” of Scott’s plan and called it “a positive thing.”

On March 1, Sen. Mitch McConnell rebuked Sen. Rick Scott’s bill that the minority leader says will raise taxes and cut Medicare aid. (Video: Washington Post)

“If we’re fortunate enough to have the majority next year, I’ll be the majority leader. I’ll decide in consultation with my members what to put on the floor,” McConnell told reporters in March. “Let me tell you what would not be a part of our agenda: We will not have as part of our agenda a bill that raises taxes on half the American people and sunsets Social Security and Medicare within five years.”

Earlier this year, Johnson announced that he would seek reelection in November, despite a previous pledge to retire after two terms. He is widely expected to win his primary election next Tuesday.

Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, who is running for the Democratic nomination for Senate, criticized his would-be opponent’s remarks on entitlement programs.

“Ron Johnson is threatening to cut Social Security and Medicare,” Barnes tweeted Tuesday. “~surprise surprise~ the self-serving, multimillionaire Senator is trying to strip working people of the Social Security and Medicare benefits they’ve earned over a lifetime of hard work.”

According to the nonprofit Population Reference Bureau, Wisconsin ranks 17th in the nation in the percentage of the population 65 and older.

This was not the first time Johnson has made news for a proposal that prompted even other Republicans to distance themselves. In March, Johnson said he wanted to see the GOP repeal the Affordable Care Act if his party won the White House and the House and Senate majorities in 2024, something Republicans failed to do the last time they had majorities in Washington.