mangakiko – Page 29 – Michmutters
Categories
Sports

Kalyn Ponga video, toilet cubicle footage, Newcastle Knights investigation, security guard escorts Kalyn Ponga and Kurt Mann out of toilet

The Knights have launched an investigation after footage emerged of star fullback Kalyn Ponga and utility Kurt Mann being escorted out of a toilet cubicle.

In the vision which has been circulating in the last 24 hours, security from the venue can be seen directing Ponga and Mann away from the toilets

According to The Daily Telegraph, Newcastle learned of the video on Monday morning and have since questioned Put over the footage.

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It is currently unclear when the video was captured or why Ponga and Mann were in the cubicle together.

The 24-year-old has been ruled out for the season after failing his third HIA of the season in Round 19.

Ponga revealed to Triple M on Sunday he could have returned for the final round of the season claiming “there’s nothing wrong with me” but the club are taking a cautious approach.

Ponga’s dad Andre has since given an excuse as to why the Maroons gun was in the cubicle with Mann.

“He made an exciting house purchase Saturday and celebrated with a few mates drinking. Sick in the toilet and his mate went in to help him, ”Andre Ponga said to The Daily Telegraph.

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The Knights marquee man signed a mega five-year $5-million contract in April to remain in the Hunter until at least the end of 2027.

Mann has also spent an extended period sidelined with a quad injury.

Adam O’Brien’s side are currently struggling in 14th place on the ladder, suffering a 28-10 loss at the hands of the Broncos in Round 22.

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Categories
Australia

Australia has a steep hill to climb on electric cars – but if ever there was a time, it’s now | Adam Morton

Llast week an acquaintance who owns a secondhand Japanese electric car, brought to Australia as part of a bulk purchase by the Good Car Company, posted a quiet boast. His wife of him had put their Nissan Leaf in for its annual service of her. No major problems were found – just an underinflated tire. The total bill? $120.

Reading that sent me to the mess of my glovebox to work out how much I had paid mechanics to keep my Subaru Outback running over the past year. It added up to more than $700.

I don’t have the time or the inclination to estimate what I’ve spent on petrol over the same period, but I know I coughed up $115 – nearly as much as for the annual service on the Leaf – just to fill the tank last Monday.

If this sounds like a prelude to making a case that the time for an EV expansion is well overdue – and that there is a unique political opportunity in the months ahead – it is.

Last year, about 2% of new cars sold in Australia were electric. It was a jump from 0.8% in 2020 but still thousands behind many other countries. Across the globe, the average in the final quarter last year was 13%, with Europe and China leading the pack.

This isn’t surprising when you consider there are about 450 EV models available on the global market, but fewer than 10 can be bought in Australia for less than $60,000 and buyers may have to wait months for their car to be delivered.

Data from 2018 shows the average greenhouse gas released per kilometer by a new passenger car in Australia was about 30% higher than in the US, 40% higher than in the EU and nearly 50% higher than in Japan.

Not coincidentally, greenhouse gas emissions from transport in Australia surged by more than 20% between 2005 and when Covid-19 hit in 2020. They fell a bit during the lockdown years but are expected to jump back to pre-pandemic heights this year.

Official projections last year showed little change was expected in Australia’s transport emissions before 2030. Again, this isn’t surprising. There is no national policy to reduce them.

The lack of policy is not due to a lack of policy ideas. Among the most popular is the introduction of mandatory vehicle fuel efficiency standards. They would set an emissions target for manufacturers, measured in grams of COtwo released per kilometer and averaged across all the new cars they sell. The target would be gradually reduced to zero, when it would effectively become a ban on new fossil fuel cars.

While Australia has resisted, fuel efficiency standards are common elsewhere – they cover about 80% of the global light vehicle market.

why? There are arguments relating to climate impact, energy security and supporting manufacturing industries. Car companies themselves want fuel efficiency standards, arguing there won’t be an adequate supply of EVs into the country until a decent policy is in place.

And the evidence says efficiency standards make economic sense – they reduce fuel costs.

According to a recent report by the Australia Institute’s Audrey Quicke, if Australia had introduced fuel efficiency standards six years ago, the country’s drivers would have saved $5.9bn. A ministerial forum on vehicle emissions standards in 2016 found the net benefit across the country by 2040 could be nearly $14bn.

MPs from what was then the Coalition government were persuaded. Josh Frydenberg, then the minister for energy and the environment, famously compared the rise of EVs to the iPhone and predicted people who mocked the technology would one day be using it.

weekend app

Despite this, the Coalition shelved its plan for mandatory standards in the face of resistance internally and from the auto industry. It abandoned it completely during the 2019 election campaign, when Scott Morrison claimed a Labor policy based on the forum’s recommendation would “end the weekend”.

Unreleased polling suggests the attack set back community support for EVs. And, of course, the Coalition won that election.

Labor responded by winding back its commitments. Its pledge on EVs before this year’s election was that it would reduce tariffs and taxes, require 75% of commonwealth fleet purchases and leases to be low-emissions vehicles – a step that should help create a second-hand market – and increase spending on charging infrastructure. It would then develop a broader national strategy if it won power.

That brings us to this week.

An invitation-only national EV summit will be held in Canberra on Friday bringing together car company executives, infrastructure bosses and senior MPs from across the country to discuss the best path ahead.

Its main subject will be how to design fuel efficiency standards. There is a growing expectation that it is now a matter of when, not if, they are introduced. The evidence in favor is overwhelming and the biggest roadblock – the federal Coalition government – ​​has been removed.

The summit has been instigated in part by Boundless, a new not-for-profit created by the tech billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes and his wife, Annie. Led by Eytan Lenko, the former chair of the thinktank Beyond Zero Emissions, Boundless aims to accelerate climate solutions needed for Australia to become a renewable energy superpower by 2030, with an initial focus on EVs.

No one should underestimate the scale of transformation needed to get the country’s vehicle fleet to zero emissions in just 28 years. Given the average life of a car on Australian roads is about 10 years, the sale of new fossil fuel cars would have to end by about 2035. Any policy that doesn’t set the country on that path is not a policy for net zero.

But the Albanese government has a freedom on EV policy that it has not granted itself in other climate-related areas. By ruling nothing out before the election, it starts with a clean slate – and the resistance from the auto industry, while not nonexistent, is less powerful than in other parts of the economy.

The climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, has so far responded to questions about fuel efficiency standards by acknowledging that “everything is on the table”. A final policy is still some way off, but he is expected to use his keynote address to the summit to start to flesh out just what the road ahead will look like.

Categories
Business

Why Cheerios are better than coffee for breakfast, new study claims

When it comes to eating healthily, it seems there’s a new piece of advice every week.

Take eggs. Once demonized for being high in cholesterol, they gained hero status when protein-rich diets became the holy grail for weight loss. No wonder we’re so confused.

But a new study could be the definitive guide that we’ve all been looking for.

Researchers from the US have created the Food Compass, which, they say, is the most comprehensive system ever devised to assess the nutrition content of what we eat. The team in Boston spent three years looking at more than 8,000 foods and drinks, from melon to a McDonald’s, and used cutting-edge science to rank them according to 54 different attributes.

They gave each food a score between 1 and 100 — the higher the score, the healthier the food. Foods scoring between 100 and 70 are encouraged, those between 69 and 31 should be eaten only in moderation, while anything under 30 is bad news.

Researchers from the US have created the Food Compass, which, they say, is the most comprehensive system ever devised to assess the nutrition content of what we eat

Researchers from the US have created the Food Compass, which, they say, is the most comprehensive system ever devised to assess the nutrition content of what we eat

Some of the highest scoring foods will come as little surprise. Legumes, nuts and seeds (average score 78.6), fruits (73.9) and vegetables (69.1) all do well. Savory snacks and desserts (average score 16.4) are on the no-go list.

But there are some surprises. Sweet potato crisps get a score of 69, the same as bulgur wheat, usually considered a healthy grain. The vitamins and minerals in both are comparable. But break it down further, and other factors emerge.

Sweet potatoes have more vitamin A and potassium, and are low in sodium.

Bulgur wheat does have more protein and fiber than sweet potatoes, but it also has more starch (a bad thing) and fewer healthy fats.

And those of you who have ditched cereal in favor of eggs for breakfast might be surprised to find that Cheerios (95) and Shredded Wheat (83) are not only top scorers in the grain category, but score more highly than a boiled egg (51 ).

‘Cereals aren’t inherently bad. In fact, if they have a high whole grain content then they will get a good score for that, and if they don’t have added sugar, they won’t lose any points,’ explains Professor Jeffrey Blumberg, one of the co- authors of the study.

Coffee addict?  Curiously, an espresso (55) isn't the best choice, according to the Food Compass

Coffee addict? Curiously, an espresso (55) isn’t the best choice, according to the Food Compass

What’s more, although eggs are a great source of protein, they may not contain as many nutrients as, say, a cereal that’s been fortified with vitamins and minerals, hence the lower score.

Fancy super-charging your diet? Here’s what to choose—with their Food Compass ratings in brackets.

FOLLOW THE FOOD COMPASS

Highest scoring foods – 100/100

  • avocado
  • Raw or lightly cooked broccoli
  • celery juice
  • raw salmon
  • Watercress
  • red kidney beans
  • cherries

Lowest scoring foods – 1/100

  • fizzy drinks
  • white pitta bread
  • boiled sweets
  • Frankfurters
  • biscuits
  • fudge
  • instant soups

BREAKFAST

For juice, opt for celery (100), which contains a range of vitamins and minerals including potassium, magnesium and calcium, or tomato (100), which is a great source of the antioxidant lycopene.

Coffee addict? Curiously, an espresso (55) isn’t the best choice. The healthier option is a skimmed milk cappuccino (73), which has some protein and, unlike the full-fat version (58), not too many saturated fats.

As for cereals, Special K might seem a good option, but with a score of 18, it’s on a par with Cornflakes (19) and not much better than Frosties (15).

Eggs alone, boiled or poached, score only 51. But make an omelette and you can push that up or down, depending on what you put in it. A ham and cheese omelette cooked in butter drags the score down to 15, but with an egg-white omelette with vegetables, you’ll hit 59. If toast is your thing, ditch jam on white (1) for reduced-fat peanut butter on whole wheat (63).

LUNCH

Unadulterated sashimi (thinly sliced ​​seafood) is a good choice (100), while a sushi-style California roll (1) has almost no health benefits thanks to its starchy rice, sugary vinegar and processed crab sticks.

White rice noodles (17) might look healthy but they’re almost empty calories. But if you go for wholegrain spaghetti (70) you get a lot more fiber, plus iron and potassium. Add a tomato-based sauce, with seafood and vegetables, and you’ll score 78.

Sandwiches aren’t a great choice, regardless of filling. Even a vegetable submarine sandwich with fat-free spread only gets 14, while roast beef gets 11. If you must grab a sarnie, go for grilled chicken on a wholewheat roll with lettuce and tomato (68). Sadly, but predictably, cakes (1) and cookies (4) aren’t advised.

dinner

You won’t be surprised to learn that a McDonald’s cheeseburger (8) isn’t massively nutritious. Ditch the meat and starchy carbs in favor of seafood — it’s high in protein, low in saturated fats, and packed with vitamins and minerals.

Try mussels in a tomato-based sauce (95), or a tuna salad made with light mayo (73). For top marks, go for a seafood salad with lettuce, tomato, carrots and other vegetables. The bad news is you need to hold the dressing to get a perfect 100.

If you can forgo meat, a curry isn’t a bad option. Vegetable curry scores 90, beef curry just 51.

Finally, while an ice cream sundae, with chocolate sauce and whipped cream, scores 10, you can still get a chocolatey fix — chocolate frozen yogurt made with skimmed milk scores a pretty impressive 81.

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Categories
Technology

How surfing and ice baths helped Hard Fizz head of marketing Joel Scott overcome the stresses of the past few years

How do you feel about traveling overseas to surf?
I’m excited to travel again. I’ve had some amazing experiences surfing in Indonesia and Hawaii, among other locations, and now that my son has the froth for surfing too, I’m looking forward to taking him to some of these places. That said, I still love pulling up at my local with my boy and think that I can’t ever be beaten.

Most memorable surfing experience?
This might sound kind of cheesy, but I’m just grateful for every experience I get in the water these days. If I had to say one particularly memorable session, though, it would be last year at a secret spot on the Gold Coast (I know, not many of those left). I was out there with some of my best mates. The waves were insane. Then one of my mates got hit in the head by his board from him. We couldn’t find him for at least two minutes. We were terrified he’d drowned, but then we saw him floating facedown in the water, so we raced over on the jet ski and got him back to shore. Luckily, one of our other mates is a paramedic and got him breathing again. In the end, the rescue helicopter had to come and get him. That day was certainly a rollercoaster. He was wearing a float vest, which brought him to the surface – that’s what saved him.

Scott putting one of his four surfboards through his paces. “Surf as much as you can” to improve, he advises.

How many boards do you own?
Right now, I’ve got about four boards on rotation: a JS board, an Album board and a couple from Gold Coast shaper Stuart Surf Design.

Do you surf on your own?
Very rarely.

Favorite surfer?
Honestly, my mate Josh, who I surf pretty much every session with. It has been epic seeing him grow from a grom to a semi-professional surfer on the World Surf League Qualifying Series when he was younger, and now into a hero firefighter. I still have my mind blown watching him surf some days.

Most like to go surfing with?
Again, I know this is cheesy, but honestly, my son, Ace.

Tips to become a better surfer?
Nothing secret about this tip: surf as much as you can.

Ever been scared in the water?
All the time. Sharks, big waves, jet skis, debris – you never know what’s coming, so you always have to keep your wits about you.

Any serious injuries or catastrophes?
No, touchwood.

Dislike anything about surfing?
Nope!

Your view on sharks?
We are in their home and must respect them.

Most like about surfing?
I’m not joking here: not having any devices on me.

What do you think about when you’re sitting out there on your board? lots. I think being in the ocean is the best meditation of all. It just calms my mind, especially if we’ve got a lot going on with Hard Fizz. It’s weird but seriously, all my worries just disappear after I get a crazy barrel or pull an epic turn. The happiness I get from surfing – be it a good or bad session – is the best feeling.

We all lead busy lives with work and family and being social, and that can get overwhelming. The past few years have been tough for me, like everyone. At one stage I was unfit, stressed and drinking a bit too much – but surfing, in combination with breath work and daily ice baths, has changed my life. I’m a better husband and father, a better business person and workmate, and just generally, a lot happier. Nothing gets me down any more.

[email protected]

Categories
Entertainment

Wife’s decision to make Facebook account exposes husband’s 17-year affair

A woman has shared her heartbreak after discovering that her husband of 25 years and the father of her children has a whole other life.

The devastated lady, who shares three children with the man she thought was the love of her life, said she’d been left “broken” by his deceit and lies.

Taking to Reddit in an anonymous post, she opened up about his betrayal and how she has coped since being delivered the blow, The Sun reports.

She explained: “My husband has a second family. The ultimate cliche has happened in my life and I’m absolutely broken.

“My husband, my rock, has been having an affair for over 17 years. We have been married for 25 years.

“We have three beautiful children, two in college and one who still lives at home – but turns out he’s had another set this whole time.”

The woman then shared further details, as she revealed that her other half is an insurance broker and therefore often travels with work, spending one week on and one week off at home.

However, now it has emerged that on his “week off”, he’s been playing happy families with his fiancee and their two teenage children.

She then shared how social media helped her to discover his infidelity after she decided to set up a Facebook account.

She explained: “When I searched my husband’s first name, another profile with another last name popped up, through that profile were the links to his fiancee and other kids.

“My husband is currently with said family and I know it’s him because his most recent post is a photo of him and that other family eating dinner.

“Among those photos were photos of him kissing the girl and him being fatherly with the kids who look nearly identical to my husband.”

The anonymous woman then said she is unsure how she will confront him, but “almost every part” of her “wants to scream in his face and reprimand him for ruining” her life.

Yet, she also admitted that as “her heart is in shambles” and that a different part of her wants to pretend she never saw so as not to disturb their “peaceful” family life.

She concluded: “I don’t know what to do anymore. I can’t be in the home where we’ve raised our kids, where we’ve spent every Christmas for the last 26 years.“ And where I’ve been alone on New Years’, taking care of our babies while he “ works”. I just can’t.

“I want to leave a note for him too, to hurt him like he’s hurt me, but I don’t think that’s possible. I don’t know how I’ll ever face him again.”

This article originally appeared on the US Sun and was reproduced with permission

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Categories
Sports

Nathan Buckley’s five takeaways from Round 22

The Buck Stops Here.

Nathan Buckley has gone through his five biggest takeaways from the weekend of footy.

Buckley has touched on Ben Cunnington, Jake Melksham, Tom Lynch, Dane Rampe, and Jake Lever.

Cunnington’s inspiring return to football

“At the end of Round 22, we’re a week away from the finals, and winning and losing seems to be the most important thing.

“It means a little less to me.

“The number one story I think out of the weekend was Ben Cunnington and his return after two bouts of cancer for North Melbourne.

“For a club that’s won two games for the year, lost their coach, has nothing to play for, but a universally respected player and person in Ben Cunnington, to see the human side that exists underneath this game, it’s a professional game that we all love, that story alone I think was brilliant for the club.

“It’s brilliant to see that Ben’s up and about and has a chance to play the game that he loves.

“I thought it was well handled by the North Melbourne footy club and Ben himself, so all credit.”

Melksham establishes himself in Melbourne’s side

“Halfway through the year his skirmish with Steven May and the words that were exchanged were seen as nearly something that wasn’t going to be overcome.

“But his performance on the weekend was first class.

“Whether the words were, ‘we wouldn’t have won the flag if you’d have played’, whether it’s anything like that, that sticks to a player.

“His contested mark with a minute-and-a-half to play gave Melbourne a chance.

“15 disposals, seven marks, four goals playing as a defensive forward, looks after the leading intercept marker of the opposition, and he’s established himself.

“Wherever Melbourne goes, he’s going to be there, because he’s played an important role recently.”

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Lynch cherry ripe approaching finals

“Eight goals at the ‘G yesterday (Sunday) at three-quarter time.

“He’s kicked 55 for the year. This guy could well be the joker in the pack for Richmond going into the finals.

“Taking clunks and pack marks is pivotal in finals football and in big games.

“You take three or four clunks in the forward 50 in a big game, in a tight game, final on the MCG, that’s going to make a difference.

“I think he’s cherry ripe to have a big September.”

Rampe’s defensive effort to deny Mihocek

“Dane Rampe’s goal in the first quarter was amazing, but his defensive effort to stop Brody Mihocek kicking a goal in the middle of the last quarter was a significant moment.

“When you get great games and great contests like that… it’s key moments that make the difference.

“Dane Rampe, as one of the captains of the club, stood up.”

Lever’s role in match-winning Demons play

“Right at the end of the Saturday night game, Jayden Hunt took that ground ball and was able to kick it in long.

“But to get the ball in the first place, it was squared up by Jake Lever, it was a great heads up play to put the ball in a dangerous position.

“Did they (Carlton) get enough numbers back behind the ball? Because when that ball went in it was actually even numbers, you can’t have that when you’re defending less than a one-goal lead with seconds remaining.

“But Jake Lever was able to get his hand on the ball … that kick was just a blind, 90-degree, perpendicular kick into the middle of the field, (Jesse) Motlop was the only Carlton player against three Melbourne players, Hunt swooped on it and was able to get it down for Kysaiah (Pickett) to finish off.

“A great heads up play by an experienced player. It would’ve been coached, but you’ve still got to keep your head in the moment to trust and to execute when it matters.”





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Categories
Australia

NDIS taskforce to hunt down organized crime groups ‘robbing’ billions from disability clients

A police taskforce to hunt down organized crime groups exploiting the National Disability Insurance Scheme will be established by the government in coming weeks, the NDIS Minister says.

An investigation by Nine newspapers has alleged members of the Hamzy and Alameddine crime groups in Sydney and other organized criminal gangs have been rorting billions of dollars from the NDIS scheme.

The head of the Criminal Intelligence Commission, Michael Phelan, told Nine newspapers that criminals were systemically “ripping off our most vulnerable people.”

Mr Phelan said there was evidence of criminals creating fake clients, skimming money, exploiting and intimidating clients and using pharmacy employees as “spotters” to find new NDIS clients to target.

The head of a dark-haired police officer wearing rimless glasses and standing in front of a Crime Stoppers poster
Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission boss Michael Phelan says organized crime groups have infiltrated the NDIS.(AAP: Mick Tsikas)

NDIS Minister Bill Shorten gave a scathing assessment, as he announced a multi-agency taskforce would be established to track down fraudsters.

“I think they’re literally gutless cowards,” Mr Shorten told Nine this morning.

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Categories
Business

Tattarang launches $250 million biotechnology fund, Tenmile

Billionaire Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest is on the hunt for Australia’s next biotech household name with the launch of a $250 million venture capital fund for healthcare investments.

The fund, called Tenmile, will be backed by Tattarang, the private investment group co-owned by Forrest and his wife Nicola. It will be one of the few Australian investment vehicles purely focused on backing health technology companies.

Chief executive of Tenmile portfolio company Carina Biotech, Dr Deborah Rathjen, with Dr Steve Burnell.

Chief executive of Tenmile portfolio company Carina Biotech, Dr Deborah Rathjen, with Dr Steve Burnell.

Tenmile’s executive chair Dr Steve Burnell said while COVID-19 has proven to be a significant tailwind for the biotech sector, Australian companies still needed access to more private capital beyond initial grant funding.

“Australia could be the sort of health technology superpower, in a way…the foundations have been laid. We really think the missing ingredient is capital to help these companies reach ‘exit velocity’, as I say,” he told The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.

The pandemic has shone a light on the global value of healthcare companies, though valuations have slid and share prices have taken a hit amid this year’s global market selloff. The ASX health care index is down by 7 per cent over the past year, with even giants like CSL and ResMed declining over the past 12 months.

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Burnell said there is still plenty of cutting-edge research that needs funding to produce long-term value beyond the pandemic. Tenmile is willing to be patient with its holdings, looking at investment horizons from a couple of years to a decade.

“The point is we’re not driven to push companies towards premature IPOs or some sort of exit,” Burnell said.

The fund’s maiden investments are focused on relatively new therapeutic areas, including personalized cancer treatments and the use of psychedelics and medicinal cannabinoids.

Categories
Technology

Intel has no Arc GPUs for Arc Scavenger Hunt winners, CPUs instead

Intel kicked off its Xe HPG Scavenger Hunt in early 2021, and a rather large 18 months later we have no Arc graphics cards in the wild… meaning no Intel Arc graphics cards to give away to Arc Scavenger Hunt winners.

Intel has no Arc GPUs for Arc Scavenger Hunt winners, CPUs instead 02 |  TweakTown.com

VIEW GALLERY – 2 IMAGES

The company is now offering an alternative prize because there are simply no Intel Arc GPUs, so instead of an Intel Arc A7-series graphics card (Intel was giving Grand Prize winners an Intel Arc A770, while the first place prize was an Intel Arc A750 ) winners can now opt for an Intel Core i7-12700K and Core i5-12600K processor.

Intel sent an email to its winners, explaining to a Xe HPG Scavenger Hunt Top 300 prize winner that they would be provided with an alternative to the original hardware prize, in addition to the standard merchandise and swag prizing. The company confirms that the winners only have a few days to decide — up to August 19 — if you want to switch over your Arc GPU to an Intel 12th Gen Core “Alder Lake” CPU.

But now, this is the clincher: if you opt back into the original GPU pricing, Intel warns that you will have to do so with the understanding that such pricing is tied to the launch timeline of Intel Arc A7-series GPUs. Because we don’t know when that happens, and neither does Intel, you could be waiting a while.

Intel has no Arc GPUs for Arc Scavenger Hunt winners, CPUs instead 01 |  TweakTown.com

Intel does note that while they anticipate that the hardware should get to you ahead of Intel Arc A7-series GPU availability, Intel “cannot guarantee that to be the case, as Intel is very close the Intel Arc A7-series GPU launch“. I guess Intel means to say in that email that they are “very close to the Intel Arc A7-series GPU launch”. Mistakes everywhere, Intel.

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Categories
Entertainment

McLeod’s Daughters actor Marshall Napier dead aged 70

McLeod’s Daughters actor Marshall Napier has died aged 70, after a short battle with brain cancer.

The New Zealand-born thespian, who has starred in a string of Australian TV shows and films over the years, passed away on Sunday surrounded by family.

His daughter, fellow McLeod’s Daughters star Jessica Napier, announced the sad news on social media.

“It is with great sadness that I share the passing of my beautiful dad Marshall Napier. After a short and intense battle with brain cancer he left us this morning. He was peaceful and surrounded by family,” Jessica wrote on Instagram.

“Dad you are one of a kind and I can’t even understand what the world will be like without you in it. Your charisma and charm was second to none. Your creativity and intellect was my inspiration. I love you so much and feel completely lost without you. I’m glad that you can dream free of the pain and confusion.”

Napier played Harry Ryan on the beloved Australian TV drama from for five years from 2001.

Prior to that, Napier had roles in All Saints, Water Rats and Police Rescue. Napier also had a sprawling film resume, having starred in Babe Down Under and Little Monsters.

Fellow Australian showbiz stars have paid tribute to the actor.

Napier’s McLeod’s co-star Rodger Corser wrote on Jessica’s post, “What a commanding presence he was on a screen and stage. He always loved working with your Dad, a drier wit you could not find. ”

Another co-star from the hit TV drama, Charlie Clausen, said he was “so sorry”. “I loved working your dad. He was so generous with his time when I was just starting out in my career. He also had such a great sense of humour.”

Packed to the Rafters actress Rebecca Gibney said, “So sorry for your loss Jess. Marshall was such a beautiful man and a wonderful actor”, while fellow rafters star Erik Thomson added, “What a man. This is big. He was such an inspiration to so many.”

Director Nash Edgerton added, “So sorry to hear. Much love.” While Patrick Brammall wrote, “I’m so sad to hear it. He was such a beautiful man.”

Over on Twitter, more figures from the entertainment industry have also expressed their sadness over the news:

Napier, a father of three, was born in New Zealand before moving to Australia with his wife and children in the late ’80s.

He initially worked as a worker, before successfully transitioning to acting after moving to Australia.

While he is most recognizable from his TV work, Napier was a regular figure in local theater productions, and in 2017 starred alongside Cate Blanchett for The Sydney Theater Company’s production of The Present.

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