Logitech and Tencent Games are partnering to create a handheld device tailored for cloud gaming. There are no images of it yet, but the handheld will support multiple cloud gaming services including Xbox Cloud Gaming and Nvidia GeForce Now when it launches later this year.
Brad Pitt made a rare comment about one of the teenaged daughters he shares with his ex-wife Angelina Jolie.
While at the Los Angeles premiere for his new action movie Bullet Train on Monday, the 58-year-old Oscar winner said that Shiloh is ‘beautiful.’
And the actor also told ET’s Nischelle Turner that the 16-year-old’s incredible dance moves are so good ‘it brings a tear to the eye, yeah.’
Dad talks: Brad Pitt made a rare comment about one of the teenaged daughters he shares with his ex-wife Angelina Jolie. Seen Monday at the Bullet Train premiere in LA
Proud papa: While at the Los Angeles premiere for his new action movie Bullet Train on Monday, the 58-year-old Oscar winner said that Shiloh is ‘beautiful’
She has star power! And the actor also told ET ‘s Nischelle Turner that the 16-year-old’s incredible dance moves are so good ‘it brings a tear to the eye, yeah.’ Seen in 2021
Shiloh has been seen recently on social media performing dance moves with her pals.
‘I don’t know where she got it from. I’m Mr. Two-Left-Feet here,’ he added with a laugh.
In June Shiloh was seen in a black Beatles T-shirt when dancing to Doja Cat’s song Vegas in a video posted on YouTube by Los Angeles-based choreographer Hamilton Evans.
Shiloh loves dancing. She’s seriously talented and she has been going to these classes for a few years now, ‘an insider told Us Weekly.
The family: From left, Shiloh, Zahara, Angie, Vivienne, Maddox and Knox in 2021
Earlier days: Jolie with Shiloh , Vivienne, Zahara and Knox at the Dumbo film premiere in 2019
So long ago: In 2010 in Paris with dad Pitt; they were shopping at Bonpoint
‘She’s made some good friends through the dancing community too, and they’re all in chat groups and share their favorite playlists and that type of stuff.
‘The teachers are all very impressed with her and say the sky’s the limit if she wants to take it to the next level, and Shiloh may just do that.’
When asked by ET on Monday if he thinks his kids may go into acting like he or Jolie, he said he just wants them to be happy.
‘I love when they find their own way, find things they are interested in and flourish,’ Pitt said of his children.
Shiloh sure can dance: here she is seen center in a Beatles T-shirt as she danced
He has three bio kids with Angie: Shiloh and twins Knox and Vivienne. And three that were adopted: Maddox, Pax and Zahara.
This comes after Jolie said Zahara had landed a place at the historically black liberal arts college for women and will be relocating to Atlanta, Georgia, in the coming months.
Angelina shared a photo of her 17-year-old daughter and some of her fellow students, some of whom were in Spelman shirts, and wrote on Instagram:
‘Zahara with her Spelman sisters! Congratulations to all new students starting this year. A very special place and an honor to have a family member as a new Spelman girl. #spelman #spelmancollege #spelmansisters #HBCU.’
The former couple’s eldest son, 20-year-old Maddox studied at Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea, though his classes moved online and he returned to the US during the COVID-19 pandemic. Their second son, Pax, now 18, graduated last summer but is not believed to have taken up a place at college.
They were a Hollywood golden couple: Jolie and Pitt attend the World War Z film in 2013
Meanwhile, the 47-year-old actress previously joked Zahara is a better organize than her.
She said: ‘I want to give them a bit of structure. I try to make schedules at home. My daughter Zahara is better at organizing things than I am.’
She has also opened up about how she adopted some of her children, and how exciting and wonderful their journeys have been.
She previously said: ‘Each is a beautiful way of becoming a family. What is important is to speak with openness about all of it and to share. ‘Adoption’ and ‘orphanage’ are positive words in our home. With my adopted children, I can’t speak of pregnancy, but I speak in great detail and love about the journey to find them and what it was like to look in their eyes for the first time. All adopted children come with a beautiful mystery of a world that is meeting yours.’
Bullet Train will be released in theaters on August 5.
Ready for college: This comes after Jolie said Zahara had landed a place at the historically black liberal arts college for women and will be relocating to Atlanta, Georgia, in the coming months. Seen in 2021
The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) has officially declared yet another climatic phenomenon likely to add to unrelenting rain on Australia’s east coast.
Key points:
The Indian Ocean Dipole affects rainfall patterns across Australia
The IOD is in a “negative” phase for the second year in a row.
With eastern Australia already sodden, the risk of flooding remains higher than normal
Known as the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), the climate driver affects rainfall patterns across Australia.
Persistently warm seas to the north-west of Western Australia have swung the IOD into a “negative” phase for the second year in a row.
That typically means wetter than normal weather for most of the country, particularly the south-eastern states.
While every year is different, the areas shaded in green usually receive wetter than normal weather during a negative Indian Ocean Dipole — particularly the south-east of Australia.(ABC: Shakira Wilson)
Following a La Nina phase during the last two summers, it means rain-bearing climate drivers have now been in play for eastern states for two years straight.
Bureau of Meteorology head of long-range forecasting Andrew Watkins said there was also the chance La Niña could re-form for a third time during spring.
“Certainly, we are in an unusual time to have so many climate drivers pushing Australia’s climate toward wetter conditions for the past two to three years,” he said.
Increased flood risk for already sodden land
While rain is usually welcomed during winter, an already sodden landscape means the risk of flooding is a lot higher for the next few months.
“At the moment we have full dams, full rivers and we’ve also got high soil moisture, and with the wet outlook the flood risk is elevated in eastern Australia,” he said.
Since February, Australia’s east coast has endured four intense weather systems, leading to record rains and flooding.
The events, which have occurred in southern Queensland, northern New South Wales and Sydney, have been devastating, and at times even deadly.
Warm waters to the north-west of WA encourage the development of cloud bands full of tropical moisture that then sweep across WA’s Gascoyne, central Australia and into eastern parts of the country.(Supplied: Marcus Scott)
Dr Watkins said this year’s negative IOD was shaping up to be stronger than last year.
“This year is looking a little more on the weak to moderate scale, at least at this stage anyway,” he said.
But he said it would not change their winter outlook, which was already projecting a particularly soggy season for most of Australia.
Dr Watkins said this was because they had already anticipated it would occur and factored it into the outlook, along with a range of other drivers.
Impacts already at play
A negative IOD encourages the development of north-west cloud bands filled with moisture, which carry rain from the Gascoyne region of WA, across the central desert and into the eastern states.
This acts as a source of tropical moisture that typical winter systems, such as cold-fronts and lows, can tap into.
A negative IOD encourages the development of cloud bands, full of tropical moisture, that stretch from the ocean to the north-west of Western Australia into the eastern seaboard.(Supplied: BOM)
Dr Watkins said it is likely to have already played a role in some of the big rain events of the last two months.
“We have a seen a few north-west cloud bands already this year,” he said.
“So to some degree, it is having an influence already, alongside all of those other climate drivers that influence our climate.”
It is potentially playing a role in the severe weather currently being experienced across southern Australia, including damaging winds, heavy rain and dangerous seas.
The severe weather has been driven by a series of strong cold fronts moving across the country.
However, tropical moisture from a north-west cloud band has also fed into the system, adding to rainfall totals.
Not wet for everyone
Even though the IOD develops off the coast of Western Australia, its impacts are typically minimal to the state’s most populated area, the south-west.
In June, large parts of south-west Western Australia, including Perth, finished the month with less than half their average rainfall – a trend becoming more frequent with climate change.
July rainfall was closer to average for most.
The negative IOD is expected to last until November or December.
Republican Michigan Gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon, flanked by her children, speaks with members of the media outside the Norton Shores Fire Station 3 after voting on Tuesday, Aug. 2, 2022 in Grand Rapids, MI.
Kent Nishimura | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images
Tudor Dixon, a former conservative commentator and actor endorsed by ex-President Donald Trump, will win Michigan’s Republican gubernatorial primary election, NBC News projects.
Dixon will face off in the general against incumbent Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who ran unopposed in the Democratic primary.
In the tumultuous Republican gubernatorial primary, meanwhile, Dixon emerged as a frontrunner only after multiple leading candidates were disqualified from the ballot and another was arrested on misdemeanor charges related to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
Dixon could be facing an uphill battle against Whitmer, whose bid for a second term in office is buoyed by a well-funded campaign and strong approval ratings. Despite President Joe Biden’s unpopularity in the state threatening to dampen Democratic enthusiasm across the board, recent polls showed Whitmer above water. Surveys conducted before the primary also showed Whitmer leading Dixon in a hypothetical matchup.
But Dixon is also backed by the powerful DeVos family, which is reportedly connected to super PACs that have spent more than $2 million in support of her candidacy. Betsy DeVos was Trump’s former Secretary of Education, but she resigned after Jan. 6, 2021, later saying that Trump crossed a “line in the sand.”
Dixon took a consistent and growing lead in the GOP primary over the past month, according to polls compiled by RealClearPolitics. Trump endorsed her less than a week before Election Day.
Before Trump announced his endorsement, DeVos penned a handwritten note to the former president, urging him to back him Dixon, The New York Times reported.
Dixon, like other candidates in Michigan’s Republican primary, had previously echoed Trump’s false claims about key election results in 2020 being rigged through widespread fraud. On the weekend before the primary and after receiving Trump’s endorsement, Dixon offered more ambiguous language, saying she had concerns about how the race was prosecuted in her state.
It’s Melbourne’s turn for Five Guys fever, with the US burger joint planting its first flag in Victoria next week. A 79-seat restaurant will open in Southbank on August 8, where its red-and-white branding will match the red stairs near Queens Bridge.
The first two Five Guys stores in Australia, both opening in Sydney in the last 12 months, attracted long queues of people keen to get their taste, with brand manager Robby Andronikos saying some people waited up to four hours.
While Melbourne isn’t short of burger shops, not many offer the same level of individualism as Five Guys.
Five Guys’ Penrith store was its first Australian location and was quickly followed by another in Sydney’s CBD. Photo: Supplied
A menu of stripped-back burgers and hotdogs is complemented by an enormous array of toppings – 15 in total – that let the diner create their own perfect burger. Or it might just be whatever feels right to them that day.
“We don’t dictate to them how they should have their burger,” says Andronikos.
From hot sauce to onions (grilled or fresh), pickles (five to be exact) and even tomatoes, everything is optional. All the extras are “free” (read: built into the price of the base burger) so whatever toppings you go for, it will cost the same as your mate’s order.
All the extras are “free” so whatever toppings you go for, it will cost the same as your mate’s order.
The team has calculated this system means there are 250,000 burger variations on its menu.
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The same make-it-your-own philosophy applies to milkshakes, which can be elevated with pieces of banana, Oreo or even bacon. BLTs, grilled cheese and vegetarian-friendly grilled mushroom and pepper sandwiches make up the rest of the menu.
Five Guys claims its other point of difference is freshness and old-school attention to detail, whether it’s hand-cut potatoes or patties made fresh each day. They also famously claim there are no freezers in their stores.
Established in 1986, Five Guys started franchising in 2003. Local outfit Seagrass Hospitality, who also own The Meat and Wine Co, Ribs & Burgers, and The Butcher and the Farmer, are the master franchisee in Australia.
More stores across Melbourne and Sydney are on the way, with the next Melbourne location likely to open early next year in a central area with strong footfall. Seagrass plan to open 20 Five Guys stores on the eastern seaboard before tackling the rest of the country and New Zealand.
Each burger is purposely kept plain so the diner can choose which of 15 toppings they want to add. Photo: Supplied
Porsche restomod specialist Paul Stephens has revealed a modern take on the revered Porsche 911 993, with drastic weight reductions and power uplifts.
Called the Autoart 993R, it combines an altered body of the standard, air-cooled 993 Carrera 2 – which was produced between 1994-1998 – with original Porsche 993RS kit, as well as the latest Porsche GT-derived components, and bespoke, lightweight parts.
This, the firm says, gives it the “rawness and charm of an air-cooled Porsche” but fitted with modern technology, lightweight engineering, which delivers enhanced performance, styling and driving experience over the original model, but with modern-day comfort.
The car, born from a bespoke Autoart customer brief but now “production-ready”, weighs in at 1220kg wet, 150kg lighter than when the 911 993 was first released. This has come from a drastic cutting of fat, which includes the deletion of the original sunroof, the steel bonnet replaced with a Porsche Motorsport aluminum version, bespoke front and rear bumpers, and lightweight racing glass fitted for the side and rear windows.
Under the bonnet, a 360bhp flat-six powerplant – based on the engine from a 993RS – is found, but with capacity increased to 3.8 liters from 3.6 litres. A cheaper 330bhp engine option is also available.
Both engines have been upgraded with a crankshaft from a Porsche 911 GT3 997, along with RSR pistons, and other parts from Porsche Motorsport. As expected, this power is sent to the rear wheels, with brakes coming from the 993RS.
Inside, the original interior has been given bespoke tweeks, which includes carbonfibre Recaro seats, integrated roll-cage, and all non-essential electronics deleted to reduce weight and improve engagement.
Let’s hope the estimable Brad Pitt isn’t giving us his leading-man swansong with this weirdly exhausting and overwhelmingly unfunny gonzo-violent action comedy set on a Japanese bullet train from Tokyo to Kyoto – with the film’s frantically hyperactive tempo cranked up in homage to the locomotive speed. This film would be an awful way for Pitt’s performance career to hit the buffers and he is given lines like: “He follows me around like… something witty.”
It’s a semi-westwashed version of the bestselling 2010 novel by Japanese author Kotoro Isaka, and directed by David (Deadpool 2) Leitch, all about a bunch of wacky assassins aboard the train, their murderous destinies all chaotically colliding, and all turning out to have more to do with each other than they think.
With the whip-pans and crash zooms, the sudden flashbacks, the voiceovers, stylized punchups, shootings and stabbings and inter titles introducing the zany characters and geezer crims – two of whom are cockneys and serious West Ham fans – this is worryingly like something by Guy Richie. (Although Brad Pitt’s eccentric performance as a traveler in Ritchie’s film Snatch is better than anything here.)
Be on guard … Brian Tyree Henry and Brad Pitt in Bullet Train. Photograph: Sony/Scott Garfield/Allstar
Pitt himself, in goofy bucket-hat, nerdy glasses and superannuated surfer dude gear, plays a laidback hitman codenamed “Ladybug” whose handler (Sandra Bullock) gives him an easy job, to ease him back into the game after an uproarious series of calamities in previous missions.
All he has to do is grab a cash-stuffed briefcase belonging to two other killers: Tangerine (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Lemon (Brian Tyree Henry) who have just rescued the son of a noted mobster from a kidnapping and this money is the ransom they didn’t need to pay. They both talk with poundshop Laarndaarn accents and Lemon has an obsession with, of all the quirky-cool things, Thomas the Tank Engine – an elaborate yet perfunctory character touch which is about 47% as funny and well-observed as it needed to be.
Meanwhile there’s another bloodthirsty Brit aboard, codenamed the Prince: a psychopathic high-schooler played by Joey Prince, who has attempted to kill the infant son of a fellow passenger, Japanese killer Kimura (Andrew Koji) and retains a sinister hold over him – but may yet have to reckon with Kimura’s own father, known as the Elder, in which role veteran player Hiroyuki Sanada comes closer than anyone in the cast to actually being cool.
There’s another killer on the train called the Wolf (Benito A Martinez Ocasio) with a grudge against Ladybug, another called Hornet (Zazie Beetz) and towering over everyone in legendary evilness is the White Death (Michael Shannon) waiting on the platform at Kyoto.
It rattles strenuously on and on and on with unexciting and uninterestingly choreographed fights, cameos which briefly pep up the interest and placeholder non-lines where the funny material should have gone. Pitt’s puppyish good nature keeps it from flatlining entirely but he doesn’t have anything like the script and direction that he got from Soderbergh or Tarantino or Fincher. And the Japanese setting is handled really cursorily; there are gags about Japanese toilets which should have gone out in the 1980s. This is a tourist ride to nowhere.
The NRL are holding the NSW government to ransom over an $800 million promise by taking the Grand Final to Queensland as the Sydney stadium wars potentially head to the courtroom.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported the NRL will consider all options after NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet refused to commit funding to rebuild suburban stadiums after a handshake agreement, with flood reconstruction his main priority.
“I find it appalling that they’re using human tragedy of the floods to renege on an agreement,” V’landys, told the Herald.
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Perrottet’s decision sparked an angry confrontation with V’landys in Parliament, with the NRL now resorting to tactics that could lead to a legal battle over the future of Stadium Australia at Sydney Olympic Park.
A 2018 agreement reached by the then premier Gladys Berejiklian, stipulated the NRL grand final would stay in Sydney until 2042 as long as Accor Stadium at Olympic Park was reconfigured into a 70,000-seat rectangular stadium, which would cost taxpayers $800 million.
However, the pandemic caused the government to backflip on the plan and relocate between $250 to $350 million to upgrading suburban grounds in Cronulla, Manly, Leichhardt and Newcastle.
Leichhardt Oval will have to wait for redevelopment.Source: Supplied
While the plans to develop suburban grounds is not in writing and therefore not rubber-stamped, V’landys is adamant the original Sydney Olympic Park agreement still stands.
The Herald reported that V’landys and the NRL will now hold the government to their original Olympic Park agreement, which is in writing, despite their preference being to develop suburban grounds.
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Andrew Abdo the Chief Executive Officer of the National Rugby League and Peter V’landys the Chairman.Source: Getty Images
“When you consider the billions of dollars they spent in the recent budget, the amount they need to honor our agreement is insignificant,” V’landy’s said.
“We will press that they honor the original agreement, which will cost the NSW taxpayer more due to the way they have handled this.”
The NRL are exploring its legal options and have one of the country’s most respected barristers, Alan Sullivan QC on the case.
Perrottet released a statement saying the government were committed to upgrading suburban stadiums over a period of time, given the natural disasters and pandemic that remain a more pressing priority.
“The government has just received the Floods Inquiry Report, which will likely require a significant cost to the taxpayer, and I note right now there are still 1,366 people without a home in NSW due to flooding,” Perrottet said.
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NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet.Source: News Corp Australia
“It should come as no surprise that my top priority is therefore supporting those devastated by the major floods across NSW.”
The development has forced the NRL to consider taking the Grand Final to Queensland in response to the NSW government failing to honor their agreement.
“Everything is now back on the table,” V’landys said.
“It will be a board decision, not mine.”
Sports Minister Stuart Ayres labeled plans to take the Grand Final to Queensland “an extraordinary move”.
“We’ve got to make sure that we make investments that are in the best interests of the people of NSW,” Ayres said.
Madge’s take on Tigers coaching plan | 02:04
“It just might mean that we have to wait a little bit longer before we can spend additional money on those venues.”
The government will put on hold plans to develop Leichhardt and Newcastle stadiums, but are committed to a new venue at Penrith, which has angered Tigers chairman Lee Hagipantelis, who blasted the government for their change of policy on developing suburban stadiums.
“The government’s management of its stadiums policy from the outset has been amateurish and embarrassing,” Hagipantelis told the Herald.
“I assume if the state government is to backflip on its commitment to fund suburban stadiums, then the $300 million committed to the Penrith stadium can now be better utilized for schools and hospitals?
“It would be outrageous for Penrith to retain its stadium for the obvious political benefit of its local member.”
Even more so, in this case, when there is no provision (as there was with the 1999 proposal for the election by parliament of a head of state) for a special majority. To say “leave it to the parliament” means, in practical terms, to leave it to whatever deal Labor makes with the Greens and one independent senator (for instance, the left-wing activist David Pocock, or Jacqui Lambie). What sensible non-Labor voter would delegate the final decision on the architecture of the Voice to them?
While the prime minister may be spooked by the failure of the republic referendum, and has taken the wrong lessons from it, there are two other recent historical precedents that are instructive. In both cases, the government was transparent about its intentions, and was successful.
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The first is the GST. This was not, of course, a constitutional referendum, but those who remember the 1998 election know that it was a de facto referendum on the GST. It was the only issue in the campaign. John Howard and Peter Costello published the most complicated tax reform for a generation, in detail. In an act of real policy statesmanship, they argued the case for it thoroughly and slowly. They were not spooked by fear of failure; they showed true policy courage. Howard and Costello bet the entire government on their signature reform, and they won.
The other recent example is the same-sex marriage survey in 2017. Once again, although it was not a constitutional referendum, it was a massive act of public choice which, like the Voice, was an act of inclusion of a marginalized minority. As attorney-general, I instructed my department to prepare an exposure draft of the amendments to the Marriage Act and other legislation that would be required to enact marriage equality. Senator Dean Smith developed his own draft bill. Both drafts were published well before the survey. During the campaign, religious conservatives raised many arguments against same-sex marriage. But they were never able to argue that Australians didn’t know what the proposal meant.
There is virtually no chance that a referendum on the Voice would succeed without the opposition on board. If it isn’t bipartisan, it is bound to fail. There is no way that the Liberal and National parties would or should support a measure without insisting the full proposal be put before the public. Even then, they may oppose it. Dutton is a very tough-minded politician, unswayable by the blandishments of fashionable opinion or abuse from sections of the media. He is also highly strategic. It would not be lost on him how devastating to the Albanese government – and personally, to Albanese himself – the loss of this referendum would be.
But the real devastation, were the referendum to fail, would be that felt by Indigenous Australians. Rightly or wrongly, they would see it as a betrayal. It would poison the already difficult relationship between Indigenous and other Australians for generations to come. As was the case with the republic referendum, the opportunity for constitutional reform would be put back for decades.
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If that were to happen, it would not mean – although some would undoubtedly claim it – that Australia is a racist nation. It would mean that an opportunity readily within our grasp had been fumbled. That would not be the opposition’s fault. Nor would it be the fault of a public only too willing to embrace Indigenous constitutional recognition if it is put to them in an honest and open way. It would be entirely the fault of those who, through lack of political courage and fear of transparency, turned a winning position into a losing one.
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Aug. 2, 2022 Kansas, Missouri Primary Election Results
Stay with KMBC for the latest election updates
Updated: 8:38 PM CDT Aug 2, 2022
I’M CHRIS KATZ ON THIS PRIMARY ELECTION NIGHT. THE LATEST RESULTS RUNNING AT THE BOTTOM OF YOUR SCREEN AND AT KMBC.COM IN KANSAS, SENATOR. JERRY MORAN WINS THE GOP PRIMARY HEADING TO NOVEMBER THE AP HAS ALSO DECLARED, KANSAS GOVERNOR KELLY THE AND THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY FOR GOVERNOR, AND AGAIN, NO SURPRISE THE AP DECLARING ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC SMITH THE WINNER IN THE GOP NOMINATION THE SUNFLOWER STATE FIRST STATE OF THE NATION TO VOTE ON ABORTION SINCE THE SUPREME COURT STRUCK DOWN ROE VS. WADE. HERE IS A LOOK AT THE LATEST NUMBERS WITH JUST A BARELY A QUARTER OF THE STATEWIDE VOTE IN AND WE HAVE YET TO HEAR ANYTHING IN TERMS OF NUMBERS FROM JOHNSON COUNTY. WE HAVE TEAM COVERAGE TONIGHT KMB TONIGHT’S EMILY HOLWICK IS FOLLOWING OPPONENTS OF KANSAS AMENDMENT 2, EMILY. OF MONEY SOLUTIONS A SUPPORTERS OF THE NO VOTE WHO HAVE GATHERED HERE IN OVERLAND PARK TO WATCH THOSE RESULTS COME IN TELL ME THAT THEY ARE STILL CAUTIOUSLY OPTIMISTIC. THEY NOTED THAT OF COURSE SINCE YOU SAID ONLY ABOUT 25% OF THAT VOTE HAS COME IN. THEY SAID THEY KNOW IT IS STILL EARLY, BUT RIGHT NOW THEY DON’T WANT TO GET AHEAD OF THEMSELVES. SO AGAIN CAUTIOUSLY OPTIMISTIC IS WHAT THEY ARE SAYING RIGHT NOW, OF COURSE, THEY SAY THAT THEY WANT TO PROTECT REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOMS REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS HERE IN KANSAS. THEY HAVE WORKED HARD. THE PAST COUPLE OF MONTHS GETTING THAT MESSAGE OUT KNOCKING ON DOORS TEXT PHONE CALLS. WE’VE HAD MANY SUPPORTERS TAKE THE STAGE HERE TONIGHT TO ADDRESS THE CROWD IN SUPPORT OF VOTING. NO, SO THEY CONTINUE TO WATCH THOSE RESULTS COME IN AND WE’LL KEEP BRINGING YOU LIVE COVERAGE FROM HERE IN OVERLAND PARK THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT REPORTING LIVE EMILY HOLWICK KNBC 9 NEWS EMILY. THANK YOU CAME. IT’S A NICE HALEY HARRISON ALSO LIVE IN OVERLAND PARK WITH SUPPORTERS OF KANSAS AMENDMENT TWO HALEY. AND THE MOOD IS FESTIVE HERE TONIGHT CHRIS IN OVERLAND PARK WHERE IT’S REALLY OF THE KANSAS PRO-LIFE MOVEMENT. WE ACTUALLY JUST HAD AN APPEARANCE FROM KANSAS ATTORNEY GENERAL AND GOVERNMENTAL CANDIDATE DEREK SCHMIDT. IT’S ALSO SEEN THE PRESIDENT FOR KANSANS FOR LIFE AND FORMER CASEY KAY MAYOR, DAVID ALVEY THEY KICKED OFF THIS EVENT TONIGHT WITH A PRAYER ASKING PTHAT GOD’S WILL BE DONE. THEY ALSO SPOKE ABOUT THE RECENT ACTS OF VANDALISM AGAINST CHURCHES THAT HAVE STOOD IN SUPPORT OF THIS AMENDMENT REPORTING LIVE IN OVERLAND PARK HALEY HARRISON, KMC 9 NEWS. ALRIGHT DAILY. THANKS. HERE’S A LOOK AT OTHER RESULTS COMING IN TONIGHT MCCAB. 9 YOUR HOME FOR ELECTION COVERAGE WILL HAVE UPDATES THROUGHOUT THE EVENING SCROLLING AT THE BOTTOM OF YOUR SCREEN. AND OF COURSE LIVE COVERAGE TONIGHT AT 9:00 ON KCWE AND AT 10 ON KMBC.
Aug. 2, 2022 Kansas, Missouri Primary Election Results
Stay with KMBC for the latest election updates
Updated: 8:38 PM CDT Aug 2, 2022
Voters headed to the polls Tuesday to decide a number of candidate races and issues. The polls closed at 7 pm in Kansas and Missouri.The latest unofficial election results will display here after polls close:TOP RACES RESULTS:KANSAS ELECTION RESULTS:MISSOURI ELECTION RESULTS:KANSAS CITY-AREA RACES, BALLOT QUESTION RESULTS:
KANSAS CITY, Mo. —
Voters headed to the polls Tuesday to decide a number of candidate races and issues. The polls closed at 7 pm in Kansas and Missouri.
The latest unofficial election results will display here after polls close:
[Click here to see Kansas results, or scroll down.]
[Click here to see Missouri results, or scroll down.]