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Entertainment

Anne Heche is ‘brain dead’ but remains on life support for organ donation

One week after fiery car crash, Anne Heche is “brain dead” but remains on life support, according to a statement from her family and friends shared with CNN by their representative.

“We have lost a bright light, a kind and most joyful soul, a loving mother, and a loyal friend. Anne will be deeply missed but she lives on through her beautiful sons, her iconic body of work, and her passionate advocacy. Her bravery for always standing in her truth, spreading her message of love and acceptance, will continue to have a lasting impact,” the family’s statement read.

Heche has not been taken off life support, according to the representative, so they have time to determine if she is a match for organ donation.

One week after a fiery car crash, Anne Heche is “brain dead” but remains on life support, according to a statement from her family and friends (FilmMagic)

“It has long been her choice to donate her organs and she is being kept on life support to determine if any are viable,” the family said in a previous statement on Thursday night.

Heche suffered a severe anoxic brain injury, which deprives the brain of oxygen, as a result of the crash, according to the family’s representative.

A woman inside the home at the time of the crash suffered minor injuries and sought medical attention, according to Lee.

Anne Heche takes photo with salon owner minutes before horror car crash.
Anne Heche took a photo with a salon owner minutes before her horror car crash. (instagram)

In their message on Thursday, Heche’s family and friends thanked her care team at the Grossman Burn Center at West Hills hospital and paid tribute to Heche’s “huge heart” and “generous spirit.”

“More than her extraordinary talent, she saw spreading kindness and joy as her life’s work – especially moving the needle for acceptance of who you love,” the statement read.

Heche rose to fame on the soap opera Another Worldwhere she played the dual role of twins Vicky Hudson and Marley Love from 1987 to 1991. She earned a Daytime Emmy Award for her performance on the show.

He followed that success with numerous films, including Donnie Brasco, wag the dog and Six Days, Seven Nights opposite Harrison Ford.

He followed that success with numerous films, including Donnie Brasco, Wag the Dog and Six Days, Seven Nights opposite Harrison Ford (pictured) (Supplied)

In more recent years, Heche has appeared in television shows like The Brave, quantumand Chicago P.D.

Following the crash, there was an outpouring of support for the actress from the Hollywood community.

Her ex and former Men in Trees co-star James Tupper, with whom she shares one of her two sons, wrote on Instagram: “Thoughts and prayers for this lovely woman, actress and mother tonight Anne Heche. We love you.”
Ellen DeGeneres and Anne Heche
Ellen DeGeneres and Anne Heche attend the 49th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards on September 14, 1997 at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium in Pasadena, California. (Ron Galella Collection via Getty)
while her ex Ellen Degeneres made some brief remarks about the situation regarding her former partner on August 12.

“We’re not in touch with each other, so I wouldn’t know,” DeGeneres said of Heche, according to Entertainment Tonight.

“I don’t want anyone to be hurt,” DeGeneres added of the crash.

The pair, who dated from 1997 until 2000, were one of Hollywood’s first openly gay couples.

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Sports

AFL: ‘Reaching my prime’: Star GWS Giants forward Jesse Hogan excited for future

Reborn spearhead Jesse Hogan’s emergence from a difficult few seasons is complete, with a new two-year deal the reward for his best campaign since 2018.

The star Giants forward booted a season-high four goals last week in a best-on-ground performance as they put a disastrous derby defeat to the Swans behind them to take down Essendon in Sydney.

Hogan is up to 30 goals from 16 games this season, and 50 from 25 overall since crossing to Greater Western Sydney on a one-year deal after a somewhat tumultuous end at Fremantle.

Another one-season, prove-it-to-us pact followed his first year with the Giants but now the ex-Demons prodigy has security again amid what he describes as the “most consistent” football of his life.

As pleasing for the 27-year-old as his goal tally is how many matches he has played this season, after managing no more than 12 in any of the past three years, when foot and soft-tissue setbacks besieged him.

Former coach Leon Cameron and the Giants’ high performance team hatched a pre-season plan for Hogan to rest twice this year either side of the mid-season bye, which has worked wonders for him.

“Last year wasn’t ideal with being injured and having a few calf injuries to deal with, and not really having too much confidence in my body,” Hogan told News Corp.

“Then this year, being able to link together 14, 15, 16 games and play some more consistent footy has been massive for me mentally, just to have faith in my body again and a decent season overall.”

Hogan’s agent, Matt Bain, of TLA Australia, is thrilled to see him playing well again and optimistic about greater things ahead.

“It’s a great result for Jesse. He’s happy there and deserves the two years,” Bain said.

“He’s put in a lot of work and it’s showing in his footy. I’m very proud of him.”

No key forward in the competition is averaging more than Hogan’s seven marks per match this season, with that part of his game always serving as a barometer for his performance.

“It’s not that I’m chasing marks or chasing kicks but that’s something that’s always kept me in the game – my ability to find a pocket of space,” he said.

“I’m not the most athletic, I’m not the quickest and I’m not the fittest but I think I’ve got a pretty high IQ when it comes to forward craft.”

The next step for Hogan is playing a full year, which he thinks is within his grasp if he can enjoy a big summer and enter the 2023 season injury free.

Part of that goal is also to ramp up his training between games, too, after largely staying off his legs until Wednesday or Thursday after a match and completing just one main session weekly this year.

“I’d get everything I needed to out of that session to feel sharp, then not much after that,” he said.

“But with the confidence I have in my body going into next season; I feel like I can get more training done, keep working on my craft during the week and be more confident going into games.”

Hogan, who has moved out of Shane Mumford’s Maroubra granny flat into a Balmain home, was among the eight players spared interim coach Mark McVeigh’s wrath after the disappointing display against the Swans.

The Giants’ underwhelming season has frustrated Hogan at times and he has spoken strongly recently about the players needing to be better defensively, but he has come a long way personally.

Hogan conceded several times since his Dockers exit that he made mistakes but also that escaping the constant houndings in Perth for somewhat of an anonymous existence in Sydney was badly needed.

“Hindsight is a wonderful thing. It’s kind of hard to reflect on – I have a lot of regrets and you can’t change the past, so I’ve just done the best I can to move on,” he said.

“It’s a bit of a littered few years, unfortunately, and that’s something I’m just going to have to live with, but this year and last year, I’ve taken steps forward.

“Hopefully, I’m just reaching the prime of my career and I can finish off my year really well and play some good seasons and have some deep finals runs.”

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Categories
Technology

The Zoom installer let a researcher hack his way to root access on macOS

A security researcher has found a way that an attacker could leverage the macOS version of Zoom to gain access over the entire operating system.

Details of the exploit were released in a presentation given by Mac security specialist Patrick Wardle at the Def Con hacking conference in Las Vegas on Friday. Some of the bugs involved have already been fixed by Zoom, but the researcher also presented one unpatched vulnerability that still affects systems now.

The exploit works by targeting the installer for the Zoom application, which needs to run with special user permissions in order to install or remove the main Zoom application from a computer. Though the installer requires a user to enter their password on first adding the application to the system, Wardle found that an auto-update function then continually ran in the background with superuser privileges.

When Zoom issued an update, the updater function would install the new package after checking that it had been cryptographically signed by Zoom. But a bug in how the checking method was implemented meant that giving the updater any file with the same name as Zoom’s signing certificate would be enough to pass the test — so an attacker could substitute any kind of malware program and have it be run by the updater with elevated privilege.

The result is a privilege escalation attack, which assumes an attacker has already gained initial access to the target system and then employs an exploit to gain a higher level of access. In this case, the attacker begins with a restricted user account but escalates into the most powerful user type — known as a “superuser” or “root” — allowing them to add, remove, or modify any files on the machine.

Wardle is the founder of the Objective-See Foundation, a nonprofit that creates open-source security tools for macOS. Previously, at the Black Hat cybersecurity conference held in the same week as Def Con, Wardle detailed the unauthorized use of algorithms lifted from his open-source security software by for-profit companies.

Following responsible disclosure protocols, Wardle informed Zoom about the vulnerability in December of last year. To his frustration, he says an initial fix from Zoom contained another bug that meant the vulnerability was still exploitable in a slightly more roundabout way, so he disclosed this second bug to Zoom and waited eight months before publishing the research.

“To me that was kind of problematic because not only did I report the bugs to Zoom, I also reported mistakes and how to fix the code,” Wardle told TheVerge in a call before the talk. “So it was really frustrating to wait, what, six, seven, eight months, knowing that all Mac versions of Zoom were sitting on users’ computers vulnerable.”

A few weeks before the Def Con event, Wardle says Zoom issued a patch that fixed the bugs that he had initially discovered. But on closer analysis, another small error meant the bug was still exploitable.

In the new version of the update installer, a package to be installed is first moved to a directory owned by the “root” user. Generally this means that no user that does not have root permission is able to add, remove, or modify files in this directory. But because of a subtlety of Unix systems (of which macOS is one), when an existing file is moved from another location to the root directory, it retains the same read-write permissions it previously had. So, in this case, it can still be modified by a regular user. And because it can be modified, a malicious user can still swap the contents of that file with a file of their own choosing and use it to become root.

While this bug is currently live in Zoom, Wardle says it’s very easy to fix and that he hopes that talking about it publicly will “grease the wheels” to have the company take care of it sooner rather than later.

Zoom had not responded to a request for comment at the time of publication.

Categories
Sports

Brisbane Lions v Carlton Blues, Callum Ah Chee, racial abuse, targeted, Patrick Cripps, bump, concussed, tribunal, ban, suspension, cleared

Brisbane Lion Callum Ah Chee has called out online racial abuse in the wake of Carlton’s successful appeal of skipper Patrick Cripps’ two-week suspension and the club has referred it to the AFL Integrity Unit.

Cripps was cleared by the AFL appeals board on Thursday night, having been given a two-week ban for a big hit on Ah Chee in last week’s clash at the Gabba.

The AFL on Friday confirmed it would not appeal that decision and Cripps was free to play against Melbourne this weekend.

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But amid the fallout, Ah Chee, who was injured in the incident and will miss Brisbane’s match with St Kilda due to the AFL’s concussion protocols, was the target of racial abuse that he spoke out against on his personal Instagram account.

“Not something you want to wake up to in the morning,” I posted.

“How can this still keep happening. Why can’t my brothers and I just play the game we love without having to worry about s**t like this… If my son grows up playing the game – I hope he doesn’t have to deal with this hate.

“It hurts and I’m sick to death of seeing it.”

The Lions also condemned the comments calling the behavior “disgusting” and reported it to the AFL Integrity Unit.

“The Brisbane Lions celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and the incredible contribution Indigenous players have made to our club and to our great game,” a clubs statement said.

“It’s disappointing to have to do so, but in moments like this we take the approach as a footy club to urge people to educate themselves about the harmful impacts of racially motivated comments and online abuse.

“At the Lions we are a family and when one hurts, we all hurt.

“If you know anyone who behaves in this way, call it out as completely unacceptable.”

Ah Chee was supported by Brisbane teammate Mitch Robinson, who said the abuse was “as weak as it ever gets”.

“Sick of having to see our Indigenous and multicultural players subject to racism over and over again,” he posted on Twitter.

“If you see it, even if you might know these uneducated trolls on social media keep calling it out and report them.”

The AFL confirmed it would not appeal against Cripps’ ban being overturned, noting the case “involved complexities”, but the reasons for the decision would be closely reviewed.

“The AFL acknowledges and accepts the decision of the AFL appeals board in overturning the tribunal’s decision to suspend Patrick Cripps from the Carlton Football Club,” a league statement said.

“As the appeal board chairman commented last night, the case involved complexities and the AFL will closely review the appeal board’s detailed reasons for the decision that will be received in due course.

“That said, the health and safety of our players at an elite and community level is of paramount importance and that priority will continue to inform the AFL’s ongoing work in taking action where health and safety is impacted or at risk.”

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Categories
Business

(ASX:NOU) Behind cult favorite Milklab maker’s billion-dollar implosion

They’re the slick orange-and-white cartons that have become a mainstay in Australian coffee culture. Championed by baristas, chosen by McDonald’s, Starbucks and Muffin Break, and beloved by lactose-avoiding consumers, Milklab’s plant-based products are a common sight in cafes across the nation.

But few coffee drinkers would know that Milklab’s manufacturer is at the center of one of the most spectacular corporate implosions in recent Australian history.

The future of cult favorite MILKLAB is in the hands of a Noumi shareholder vote on Tuesday.

The future of cult favorite MILKLAB is in the hands of a Noumi shareholder vote on Tuesday.Credit:Janie Barrett/SMH

Milklab’s maker, an ASX-listed company once known as Freedom Foods, is still struggling to recover from revelations two years ago of significant accounting irregularities worth over half-a-billion dollars.

The irregularities, preceded by the sudden resignations of two top executives, forced the company into a nine-month trading halt. Two class action lawsuits and an investigation by the corporate regulator, ASIC, have followed.

Freedom Foods has changed its management team, secured support from a new cornerstone shareholder – the billionaire Perich family, one of western Sydney’s biggest landowners – and rebranded itself as Noumi (pronounced “new me”).

Despite this, the company behind a wide range of dairy and plant-based milk products and health supplements has failed to win back the trust of investors.

“Noumi was a ‘market darling’ as recently as a few years ago,” class action law firm Phi Finney McDonald associate Muhammad Arayne says. “The financial irregularity revelations made in mid to late 2020 genuinely shocked the market and caused the company to lose a substantial amount of trust from investors. The share price collapse … was catastrophic.”

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Noumi shares, currently hovering around 28 cents, are about 90 per cent below a September 2018 peak price of $5.30. With a market value of $78 million, Noumi is worth less than 5 per cent of a company once valued at nearly $2 billion.

Throughout this turmoil, Milklab has been one bright spot for the company, enjoying stratospheric growth and strong customer loyalty among baristas.

But now, even Noumi’s most prized brand, and the company’s future prospects, are hanging on a knife’s edge.

And this week, the company disclosed that a separate legal battle has been launched by French tea and coffee company Sunday Collab over rights to distribute Milklab in Europe.

Noumi had already been accused of fraud by its former supplier, Californian almond grower Blue Diamond, which sued Noumi for breaching a licensing agreement between the two parties relating to Milklab.

The pair of companies have reached a settlement of $US35 million ($49 million) – more than the embattled Noumi can afford. So to pay it all off, Noumi wants to sell its stake in a separate company – but this needs shareholder approval.

The future of Milklab rests in the hands of these shareholders, who will vote on whether to approve the stake’s sale at an extraordinary general meeting on Wednesday.

spilled milk

The first sign something was wrong at Freedom Foods came on Tuesday, June 23, 2020, when then chief financial officer Campbell Nicholas suddenly resigned.

Milklab has seen success amid the booming popularity in non-dairy milk drinks.

Milklab has seen success amid the booming popularity in non-dairy milk drinks.Credit:TRIBUNE

The following morning, CEO Rory Macleod went on leave. Trading on the ASX was suspended, pending a further announcement, but not before shares dropped to a five-year low. An unusually high volume of 21.5 million shares traded hands (there have been no allegations of insider trading).

Then on Thursday of that week, the company released a statement to the ASX revealing that its estimated value of useless assets, $25 million, had blown out to $60 million. A review of inventory levels showed there was more out-of-date stock, some from canceled orders, than originally thought. Sixty-one staff positions were made redundant.

Almost simultaneously, the company held a conference call. With the CFO and CEO gone, the unenviable task of hosting it fell to then-chairman Perry Gunner.

The most pressing question from investors and stakeholders was: where did things go wrong? The outdated stock and canceled orders went as far back as 2017. Why wasn’t it picked up earlier?

The company had been shifting stock from five external warehouses into its own facility, the chairman explained that. They knew there was “some amount” of stock that needed to be reworked (for instance, turned into dry powder) but didn’t realize just how much there was.

Over the years, vast amounts of milk had been going off in warehouses, and either no one had noticed or no one had reported it.

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But getting rid of it was expensive. Simply put, there was so much milk that had gone off that it was cheaper to write it off than to rework it.

“The difficulty is the cost of getting that milk out of the packages and into a vat … to allow it to be processed, does not justify the protein or the value of the milk powder that you would obtain from doing it,” he said, according to transcripts of the investor call. “That’s why the … likely provision has been increased from $25 million to $60 million.”

Gunner was pressed by investors on why the company hadn’t identified issues of such a scale with its inventory during a regular stocktake, and whether the company suspected fraud.

His answers did little to defuse the investor unease.

The revelations seemed as starting to him as they were for everyone else.

“This has only come to the attention of the board today effectively,” said Gunner. “We’ve still got a lot of further investigation to undertake.”

Hitting rock bottom

The trading halt in late June 2020 that was only supposed to last for a fortnight was extended until October 30, and then again. By the time trading eventually summarized in March 2021, the company was nearly unrecognizable.

The wealthy Perich family – and Freedom Foods’ key backer, owning 52.5 per cent of company shares – stepped in to play a central role in the company’s reformation.

Michael Perich, then a director at his family’s Leppington Pastoral Company, was installed as chief executive in August 2020. Billionaire brothers Tony and Ron Perich were already serving as board directors. The family committed $126 million, through their investment vehicle Arrovest, to turn the company around after negotiations with a hedge fund fell through.

Noumi CEO Michael Perich.

Noumi CEO Michael Perich.

But the worst was yet to come. In its 2020 full-year results released on November 30 of that year, Freedom Foods redid several years of accounting that laid bare the magnitude of just how badly the company had miscalculated.

The revision of the $25 million provisions to $60 million, which had been shocking enough, wasn’t even close: the real figure was $590 million. The $11.6 million in reported profits for the 2019 financial year swung to steep losses just shy of $146 million. Freedom Foods handed over documents to ASIC for an investigation that is still ongoing. No individuals have been identified as being under investigation.

The company had hit rock bottom. Having been installed as CEO, Michael Perich declared a transformation was under way at Freedom Foods. It would become a simpler business by identifying and selling off unprofitable divisions and reducing product lines.

Miklab’s growth

Among all of this, Milklab was an enduring beacon of good news, with sales growth of 73 per cent in 2020. The product is now sold in more than 20 countries and the company relies on the popularity of plant-based milk to drive revenue growth .

But the dispute with US almond supplier Blue Diamond that began over unpaid invoices continued to simmer away in the background. In September 2020, Blue Diamond sued Freedom Foods over its production of Milklab and other brands such as Australia’s Own, arguing it was fraud and a breach of their agreement.

A little more than a week after Freedom Foods unleashed its disastrous suite of restored figures, high-profile law firm Slater + Gordon filed a shareholder class action lawsuit. The second came in late February 2021 from Phi Finney McDonald funded by Omni Bridgeway.

The two class actions, which have been merged into one proceeding, allege that investors bought shares at inflated prices because the company overstated its financial position. The class action also seeks to prosecute Deloitte, arguing it shares some responsibility for signing off on numbers that turned out to be wildly inaccurate.

Barista Nando Lim from Bar Lume pours MILKLAB milk to make coffee.  Most baristas don't know about Noumi's colorful corporate history.

Barista Nando Lim from Bar Lume pours MILKLAB milk to make coffee. Most baristas don’t know about Noumi’s colorful corporate history.Credit:Janie Barrett/SMH

“Investors wanted to know how a company like Noumi allowed accounting irregularities of this magnitude to arise and why Deloitte, as its ‘big 4’ auditor, did not pick up on these issues,” Arayne told this masthead.

At the following annual general meeting in January 2021, Gunner (who was retiring as chairman) and Perich outlined a commitment to transform company culture. Their comments suggested the company’s failings may have been the result of rapid, unchecked growth and lack of accountability at senior levels of the company.

“I have worked with the board to instill and embed a culture within Freedom Foods where policies and procedures are applied uniformly, all employees are treated with respect and our workforce is united,” said Perich.

The company sold its cereals and snacks division, including the Messy Monkeys and Freedom brands in mid-December 2020. In November 2021, and with shareholders’ approval, it changed its name to Noumi.

What’s at stake? everything

Noumi declined to make Perich available for an interview, citing its media blackout period ahead of earnings results later this month.

The litigation woes have continued. On Thursday evening this week, Noumi disclosed that Sunday Collab is alleging it broke an agreement for the French company to distribute Milklab in Europe and is suing for around €17 million ($24.64 million) in what it says is lost profits. Noumi says the claims are “without merit” and “wholly unsupportable”, and will defend the action.

The future of iconic plant-based milk brand Milklab is in the hands of manufacturer Noumi's shareholders.

The future of iconic plant-based milk brand Milklab is in the hands of manufacturer Noumi’s shareholders.Credit:Christopher Pierce

With more than half-a-billion dollars in write-downs, two class actions, a countersuit and now a fresh legal battle to contend with, the outstanding $US18 million owed to Blue Diamond is weighing heavily on the business. The debt ($25.4 million) is equivalent to a third of the company’s total value.

Options are few. Shareholders are being asked to give their blessing for Noumi to sell its 9.4 per cent stake in Australian Fresh Milk Holdings (AFMH) for $28.6 million to the Perich family’s Leppington Pastoral Company.

Leppington already owns 37.9 per cent of AFMH.

Shareholders will most likely approve of the stake’s sale. But if they don’t, it won’t just be Milklab’s future in doubt.

“The company [will have to] explore other ways to satisfy its obligations under the $US18 million bank guarantee facility, including funding the payment obligations out of operating cash flow,” wrote Noumi chair Genevieve Gregor in a letter to shareholders.

“This would reduce the amount of the company’s available liquidity and may constrain the company’s ability to fund the transformation and growth initiatives previously outlined to shareholders.”

Noumi shareholders will agree to vote at the extraordinary general meeting on Wednesday 10am (AEST).

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Categories
Technology

Google Is Testing Launching Cloud Games Directly From Search Results

It looks as though Google has begun integrating Cloud Gaming services into its search results.

The Nerf Report’s Bryant Chappel noted in a series of Tweets (below) that the new feature appears to be rolling out across the search giant’s results pages. It gives users the ability to directly launch a cloud game from the search results using Google Stadia, as well as other cloud services.

The addition of a “Play” button to select search results allows you to launch the game you searched for directly from Stadia – provided it exists on the platform. And that’s a neat step forward when it comes to integrating cloud gaming across the Google platform.

It certainly feels like a natural progression for cloud gaming – reducing the time taken to go from looking up a game to actually playing it.

Considering we’re talking about Google here, integrating cloud gaming features across its other services is a neat move, but it’s not just Google products being integrated here. It turns out, that this also works for Xbox Cloud Gaming, and some other services, too.

Other cloud gaming services that appear in this manner include Amazon Luna and Nvidia’s GeForce Now.

However, when IGN attempted to replicate these results, we didn’t find the impressive new feature. Whether or not this is geo-locked or simply being rolled out across select users for testing is unclear. A likely scenario is that Google is A/B testing across its services, and that means that this new feature may (or may not) eventually be rolled out more comprehensively.

However, it’s an interesting new feature that really taps into the potential of cloud gaming. After all, going from search result to playing a game instantly is an impressive leap.

Google Stadia Review

Of course, it’s not quite that simple. You’ll need to be logged in on the service you’re trying to access, so there’s still some friction if you’re accidentally logged out. Otherwise, you’ll be sent to the service’s sign-up page, and that could be a little frustrating.

It also doesn’t appear to work with there games on the cloud gaming services. But since this is a very new feature, it could be that it’s still being rolled out – or is only appearing on select titles currently for testing purposes.

Either way, it’s a neat addition that makes cloud gaming feel even more impressive. Just make sure you’ve got a good internet connection.

Ryan Leston is an entertainment journalist and film critic for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter.

Categories
Entertainment

Anne Heche declared brain dead after car crash in Los Angeles

Police said on Thursday (US time) they were investigating whether Heche was driving under the influence at the time; a sample of her blood from her was taken and narcotics were found in her system, LAPD spokesperson Officer Jeff Lee said.

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Additional toxicology tests were being taken, to more clearly clarify what was in her system, and whether the initial test was picking up medication administered at the hospital during treatment. Those additional tests could take weeks to return a result.

Heche’s representatives released a statement on Thursday saying the actress had long held a wish to donate her organs, and that she would be kept on life support until a medical determination could be made over the viability of her organs.

Under California law, even though life support remains on, He has been declared legally dead.

“Anne had a huge heart and touched everyone she met with her generous spirit,” the statement said.

“More than her extraordinary talent, she saw spreading kindness and joy as her life’s work, especially moving the needle for acceptance of who you love. She will be remembered for her courageous honesty from her and dearly missed for her light from her.

Heche is best known for roles in films including I Know What You Did Last Summer, volcano and Six Days, Seven Nights. Her television credits include the series Men in Trees and the daytime soap opera Another Worldfor which she won an Emmy Award.

She published a memoir, call me crazyin 2001, and starred in Broadway productions of proofand Twentieth Century. For the latter of those two, she received a Tony Award nomination.

Between 1997 and 2000, Heche was romantically involved with comedian and talk show host Ellen DeGeneres. She was later in relationships with cameraman Coleman Laffoon and actor James Tupper.

She has two sons from her relationships with Laffoon and Tupper, Homer, 20, and Atlas, 13.

“Over those six days, thousands of friends, family, and fans made their hearts known to me,” Homer said. “I am grateful for their love, as I am for the support of my dad Coley, and my stepmom Alexi who continue to be my rock during this time.”

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Categories
Sports

Serena William’s retirement from tennis is proof women can’t have it all

Earlier this week one of the most successful and celebrated athletes of all time – 23-time Grand Slam winner – Serena Williams announced her retirement from tennis.

While the news was most definitely headline generating, the reason behind it was far from a shock.

The 41-year-old’s decision, explored in an ‘as told to’ article in Vogue, outlined that she was retiring, partly, in order to expand her family.

“Something’s got to give,” she said. And unfortunately, as sexist, unfair and outdated as this may be, she’s right.

“Believe me, I never wanted to have to choose between tennis and a family,” she wrote.

“I don’t think it’s fair. If I were a guy, I wouldn’t be writing this because I’d be out there playing and winning while my wife was doing the physical labor of expanding our family.

“These days, if I have to choose between building my tennis resume and building my family, I choose the latter.”

In response to this, some have criticized Williams for using motherhood as an excuse, as if retirement is some sort of cop-out for not being a good enough tennis player.

I read comparisons between her and past female tennis players who competed after having children, putting them up on nonsensical pedestals because they didn’t use being a mum as an excuse for ‘giving up.’

While no, Williams has not won a Grand Slam Singles title since the Australian Open in 2017 (while pregnant with her daughter, a feat in its own right), not many other female players of the Open Era have either. In fact, there are only three – Kim Clijsters, Margaret Court and Evonne Goolagong Cawley.

The majority have found motherhood and professional tennis an unworkable combination.

Despite the challenges that arose, Williams still persevered and still succeeded, coming Runner Up in four Singles Grand Slams finals (yep, mum and all).

“I went from a C-section to a second pulmonary embolism to a grand slam final. I played while breastfeeding. I played through postpartum depression,” she said.

The biological inequality of being a woman is so difficult that it’s leading some professional tennis players with a desire to have it all (both career and family) to explore fertility options early in their careers.

Former Australian tennis player, Rennae Stubbs told ABC Radio National Breakfast: “I know players that want to have children, that want to have a family, have [frozen] their eggs, because they want to play until their mid-30s or 40s.

“So, they freeze eggs so they can have kids later on in life. But think about Tom Brady or Roger Federer or Rafa [Nadal] now; you can have children and keep playing because you’re not the one birthing it and taking nine months to have the child and then the recovery after the child.”

But it’s not just professional tennis players facing these challenges, elite athletes of all disciplines often struggle to find a workable way forward because there is a certain level of commitment that is expected, and this often means sacrificing other aspects of their life.

There is often also a peak performance window, usually in their 20s and 30s which coincides with fertility.

While yes, arguably it is possible to do both, there is no doubt that there would be additional costs, extra work and huge obstacles to overcome, including these fertility treatments, and for some, these just aren’t worth it.

In Williams’ case, this would have meant postponing having a second child in order to keep playing. Given she is 41, this may have meant giving up on extending her family for good.

“I definitely don’t want to be pregnant again as an athlete. I need to be two feet into tennis or two feet out,” she said.

While Williams says the choice is clear, the reality is, for her and many women it isn’t really a choice, and it is definitely not fair.

Regardless of what industry women work in, this situation, of having to choose between career or family, is prevalent and it’s not just a biological inequality but something more entrenched in our society and culture – you only need to look at paid parental leave to see Este.

Over the last decade, data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows that 95 per cent of primary carer paid parental leave was taken by mothers, despite most primary carer paid parental leave schemes being accessible to both women and men.

Professor Marian Baird told Women’s Agenda that “Paid Parental Leave Act was “a giant leap forward” when it came out in 2010, but that it has “barely changed in a decade”.

“Our research shows that opening up opportunities for fathers to take paid carer leave will make significant headway towards gender equality,” said Professor Baird. “But after almost a decade since the Act was introduced, there’s been no movement in the duration of leave that’s accessible through paid secondary carer leave provisions like Dad and Partner Pay.”

While it’s easy to criticize anyone for their choices, the facts remain, as sexist and unfair as they may be – women can’t have it all – family and career – at least not at the same time. Williams is proof of that.

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Categories
Technology

Upcoming Steam Game Is Literally Just A Squirrel With A Gun

Video games can offer us a chance to inhabit new worlds or discover new experiences. They can show us things we’ve never seen or dreamed of. Like an ancient civilization or a far-off alien planet somewhere deep in the cosmos. Or uh…what about a squirrel with a gun who can shoot people? Yeah, that’s cool too.

Recently on Twitter, clips of a still-in-development game called Squirrel with A Gun have gone viral, with thousands of people sharing the video online. In the gameplay clip, we see a squirrel who happens to have a gun point said gun at a person who tries to take a photo of it. I mean, what did you expect? The game is literally called Squirrel with a Gun.

I do appreciate that the gun isn’t a squirrel-sized gun. That would be ridiculous and would imply that the squirrel had somehow figured out a way to build its own tiny firearms. Very unrealistic. Instead, in Squirrel with a Gunthe squirrel is using a gun it stole from humans against anyone who gets in its way.

Over on Steam — and yes, this game has a Steam page — there’s not much more information about this upcoming game-of-the-year contender. It’s being developed by Daniel DeEntremont and according to him, it’s a “sandbox game” that is all about “exploration and shooting” stuff. DeEntremont says you’ll be able to help people or rob them, and you’ll also be able to use gun recoil to reach out-of-the-way places. How does that work? Take a look at this gif.

Gif: Daniel DeEntremontGif: Daniel DeEntremont

Don’t you feel silly for asking?

There’s currently no release date for Squirrel with a Gun. On Steam the game’s release date is listed as “Good Question!” Fair enough.

If you are curious to see more about Squirrel with a Gun and its ongoing development, you can follow DeEntremont on Twitter. There he shares behind-the-scenes clips of his progress on the game, including videos of the squirrel fighting agents using hand-to-hand melee combat and more. watch out Grand Theft Auto 6you got some real competition.

Categories
Sports

AFL 2022: Max King torched, Brisbane Lions defeat St Kilda, finals, ladder

St Kilda had it all to play for on Friday night against the Brisbane Lions, but they repeatedly shot themselves in the foot.

A thrilling third quarter saw them come back to life and put the Lions to the sword. But when it mattered most, they fell apart.

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The Saints had ample opportunities in the final quarter to run away with the contest, but continually threw it away in front of goal.

Young star forward Max King was the prime culprit, finishing the night with five behinds to his name as his set shot routine abandoned him.

The yips seemed to have taken a hold as his routine changed on multiple occasions.

At the other end of the ground the Lions capitalized on their opportunities. The Lions’ last five scoring shots netted them four goals and one behind. The Saints’ last seven scoring shots were all behinds.

St Kilda fans in the stands were routinely spotted by the cameras with their head in their hands after each miss in front of goal.

“The set shots were relatively easy, they weren’t on tight angles. You just have to go back and suck up the pressure and put them through the big sticks,” Jonathan Brown said on Fox Footy.

Former St Kilda great Nick Riewoldt said King had zero confidence in his kicking by the end.

“He’s had four shots from directly in front and in the end he just looked completely devoid of confidence, his routine was broken,” he said.

“To the point that we watched him pretty closely the last five to 10 minutes and I don’t think he wanted the ball.”

Garry Lyon added: “That’s a horrible night. I agree that in the end he was saying I don’t want to go near it.”

Footy fans watching on were quick to lambaste King for his horror night out, when St Kilda were desperate for the win.

CODE Sports’ Daniel Cherny wrote: “There is no more excruciating sight in football than watching Max King kicking for goal.”

St Kilda will now need a minor miracle to qualify for the finals after losing to the Cam Rayner-inspired Brisbane Lions by 15 points.

Brisbane opened up a 26-point buffer late in the second quarter, but for the third game in a row, they either gave up a sizeable lead, or had one eaten into significantly, as the Saints exploded in the third quarter to lead by five points, putting the Lions’ top-four ambitions in peril.

The Saints will likely drop to 10th this weekend, meaning they will have to not only beat the Swans in Sydney in the final round next week, but will also need a raft of other results to go their way to make the finals.

The win launches Brisbane into a second spot on the ladder currently and keeps their hopes alive of securing a final home.

– with Ronny Lerner, NCA Newswire

Read related topics:Brisbane

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