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Entertainment

Breakstuff! How Limp Bizkit, rioting fans and a huge candle handout led to a music festival fiasco | Documentary

NEtflix’s Fyre festival documentary was one of those out-of-the-blue hits that seemed to dominate conversation for months when it was released in 2019. A film about a woefully organized festival that spiraled out of control with alarming ferocity, it was the sort of thing you had to watch through the cracks in your fingers. But something tells me that Fyre festival is going to be superseded, because Netflix is ​​about to release a series about Woodstock 99.

Trainwreck: Woodstock ’99, as it is aptly titled, is a three-part, chronologically told series about one of the most appallingly assembled music festivals in history. Held to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the original Woodstock, which has come to be seen as a benign force of positivity, Woodstock 99 became renowned for the consequences of its spectacularly bad decision-making. The original Woodstock? Held on a dairy farm. This one? An abandoned military base. The original Woodstock had free food kitchens. This one sold plastic water bottles at $4 a pop. The original Woodstock’s lineup included Ravi Shankar and Joan Baez. This one was a celebration of mindlessly aggressive nu-metal. Do not wonder it ended in flames.

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“It was almost like a perfect experiment,” says Tim Wardle, the show’s executive producer, of the conditions that led to all the chaos. “You could almost look at it as an inadvertent psychological experiment.” What’s so incredible is the speed at which all the contributing factors – the heat, the dehydration, the violence, the drugs – went berserk. At the start of day one, we see the crowd catcalling a rattled Sheryl Crow; by the end of day three, everything is on fire and the police are attacking everyone with sticks.

I speak to Wardle and the show’s producer Cassie Thornton a day after I have hammered through all three episodes in one sitting, and the mayhem is still ringing in my ears. This isn’t necessarily how the pair would like you to enjoy the show. “We watched all the episodes together when we were cutting it, and it’s almost too intense,” says Wardle. “It builds and builds, and you think: ‘Well, it can’t build any more,’ and then it builds again. And then something else happens and it builds again. On a technical level, it’s really interesting in terms of story construction. Just how long can you take without a release?”

One thing the show does well is put the festival in historical context. Post-Columbine and pre-9/11, Woodstock 99 took place when US culture was riddled with examples that appeared to celebrate explosive male entitlement. Fight Club (about men who bond through violence) came out in 1999. American Beauty (about Kevin Spacey essentially being cucked to death) was released in 1999. The biggest band of the time were Limp Bizkit, a toddler tantrum of a project that took Rage Against the Machine’s political fury and evaporated it down to the pointless slogan “break stuff”.

The festival also took place in the infancy of the internet, Wardle points out. “You don’t have people with cameraphones, and there are very few with cellphones. There isn’t the crazy amount of footage you’d have if the festival took place today. But it was also being covered by every rock photographer on the planet. And there were loads of different outlets filming it as well.”

Muddy hell … luckily, brown was in fashion that season.
Muddy hell … luckily, brown was in fashion that season. Photograph: New York Daily News/Getty

This means that, when things do start to go south, we get to see it from most angles. We watch MTV hosts grow more and more spooked as angry attendees start pelting them with missiles. We see performers look out at the seeingthing crowd with a mixture of awe and horror. And thanks to the Woodstock 99 pay-per-view channel, which was just as intent on filming frat boys gurning at breasts as it was showing music, we see the speed at which mob mentality envelops the crowd.

That really is something to behold. A kind of collective frenzy takes hold from the middle of the second day, and the show demonstrates how dangerous a large group of people can be when they start acting as one. When things get really dark – an attendee steals a van and drives it through the middle of the rave tent during Fatboy Slim’s DJ set, or the crowd start tearing down the sound tower – it is genuinely terrifying. There is blood. There are sexual assaults. It is carnage. forget fyre festival; the closest equivalent I can think of is Four Hours at the Capitol, the recent anxiety-inducing documentary about the 6 January insurrection.

“You can definitely see, certainly visually, parallels between the two,” says Wardle. “And definitely it’s a predominantly – almost exclusively – white, male crowd that’s reacting in this way. But with the more recent situation, it’s been about the breakdown of the norms of political discourse. Back then, it was more or less a Lord of the Flies thing. There were physical conditions that contributed to this. Being deprived of access to water, shade, food and being ripped off. But, you know, human behavior goes to dark places.”

Fiddling about while Rome burns… Woodstock 99.
Fiddling about while Rome burns… Woodstock 99. Photograph: Netflix

There isn’t a single moment in Trainwreck that will transcend everything else, in the way that Fyre festival had that poor organizer who was prepared to perform oral sex on a stranger for bottled water. This is purely because so many bad decisions were made with such frequency that it’s hard for anything to stand out. But the final performance of the festival comes close. On the Sunday night, Red Hot Chili Peppers performed to a crowd at the absolute end of their tether. The audience were exhausted, dehydrated, on drugs and – thanks to the festival’s insufficient sanitation plan – had spent much of the previous 48 hours splashing around in pools of human effluent.

Towards the end of the set, the Woodstock organizers – in a truly idiotic attempt to revisit the spirit of 1969 – handed out thousands of lit candles, for a planned vigil against gun violence. Inevitably, the furious crowd decided it would be better to use it for the purposes of Arson. This collided with the Chili Peppers’ attempt to revisit the spirit of 69 by performing Jimi Hendrix’s Fire. You couldn’t write a more perfectly sequenced disaster.

Incredibly the festival’s two main organisers, John Scher and Michael Lang, both agreed to extensive interviews in the series. They don’t acquire themselves particularly well – Scher is keen to blame anyone but himself for the debacle, while Lang is slippery and evasive – which makes you wonder why they agreed to take part at all. “On one level they know it went awry, but they also don’t think it was a total disaster,” says Wardle. “And they’re keen to have a say in their legacy. They’d rather they said something than just have other people shape the story.”

Breaking bad … Limp Bizkit fans storm the stage.
Breaking bad … Limp Bizkit fans storm the stage. Photograph: Frank Micelotta Archive/Getty

“There were some aspects the promoters felt were incredibly positive, and they stand by that,” adds Thornton. “Especially when something is in chaos, if you feel like there are actually positive elements, you want to get out there and share those with the world.” The same can be said for the performers who agreed to take part. Korn’s Jonathan Davis is more than happy to discuss the way he controlled the crowd’s aggression on the first night. Meanwhile, Limp Bizkit’s Fred Durst – who whipped the audience into a state of total uncontrolled violence, crowdsurfed on plywood that rioters had torn off then whined “It was n’t our fault” as he left the stage – is conspicuous by his absence from the. “We did have some early conversations with Durst,” says Wardle. “He was very keen. But then… I do not know if it’s his management team, or whatever. He’s sort of tried to reinvent himself recently. But he decided he didn’t want to take part.”

“I think Jonathan Davis is a very intelligent, nuanced person,” says Thornton. “And he really wanted to come from the perspective of: ‘This was amazing in certain ways, and not so great for many attendees in other ways.’ He felt very open speaking about his 360-degree experience of him. ”

The catastrophic failure of Woodstock 99, not to mention the recent death of Michael Lang, seems to have killed the spirit of Woodstock for ever. But even though this was an unmitigated disaster, it’s important to remember that the original wasn’t that much better. There was a point in 1969 when, fed up with being overcharged for hotdogs, attendees torched some concession stands. And as Wardle points out, “There were sexual assaults and rapes at the original Woodstock as well. History is creating this mythology around the original Woodstock. The original Woodstock never really existed, do you know?

Trainwreck: Woodstock ’99 is on Netflix from 3 Augustt.

This article was amended on 1 August 2022 because after publication, the name of the documentary was changed from Clusterf**k: Woodstock ’99, to Trainwreck: Woodstock ’99.

Categories
Australia

Ryan Butta says Afghan cameleers were ignored by Henry Lawson, and our national story is the poorer for it

It’s a bold move to pick a bone with one of Australia’s best-known and most celebrated writers, but Ryan Butta doesn’t shy away from it.

The writing of Henry Lawson, he says, “gave a sense of national identity … which still permeates how white Australians thinks about [themselves]”.

However, there are some glaring omissions in that writing, argues Butta, a NSW-based author and editor.

In 1892, when Lawson was reporting on his time in Bourke, in north-western New South Wales, he “not only ignored the Indigenous people, but [also] the Afghans”, Butta says.

Yellowing black and white photo of a camel with saddle and man holding its reigns wearing turban and squinting into the sun.
Cameleer Bejah Dervish leaves on an expedition from Mullewa, WA, in 1896. Camels carried heavy loads over long distances with little need of water.(Image: State Library of South Australia)

Butta spent several years researching this history for his book, The Battle of Abdul Wade.

Wade was a young Afghan entrepreneur who first brought his camel trains to the outback in the 1890s.

He was revered by many in and around Bourke for his business nous and his generosity.

Among other things, Wade offered hundreds of his camels to Australia’s war effort at the outbreak of World War I.

However, he was attacked by other sections of the community, who saw him as a threat to their business interests, and to white Australia.

Black and white grainy photo of Henry Lawson with thick mustache and round cap, and jacket, vest and tie, standing.
Henry Lawson, pictured in 1911, was sent to Bourke on assignment for The Bulletin newspaper, and spent about nine months there,(Supplied: Trove)

Wade was not alone in dividing opinions. Newspapers from the time heave with conflicted community sentiment about early camels.

For example, after flooding in 1890, the Cunnamulla Argus reported that: “When provisions had nearly run out and not even the lightest vehicle could stir on any highways leading to us, the despised Afghan came with his camels through wastes of water and saved us from semi-starvation.”

An 1892 editorial in the Bulletin put forward another view, saying “the imported Asiatic … is another cheap labor curse in a land where such curses are already much too plentiful”.

Butta believes it would have been impossible at that time to have missed the Afghans’ “ubiquity” in social, political and business life.

Yet, he says, Lawson wrote about none of it.

“If you know Bourke, you know Australia,” Lawson told a friend in a 1902 letter.

But which version of Australia?

Black and white image of one man holding camel's lead while another man mounts the camel.
In 1916, Abdul Wade donated camels to the Australian war effort. Here, men from the Imperial Camel Corp, deployed to fight in World War I, train to ride them.(Supplied)

How camels came to Australia

There’s some confusion about exactly when the first camels and their handlers arrived in Australia, and for what purpose.

We do know that “Harry” was the first camel to arrive in Australia after landing in Port Adelaide on 12 October, 1840. The animal was shipped from Tenerife, Spain, by the Phillips brothers, Henry Weston and George.

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Categories
US

US imposes sanctions on Alina Kabaeva, Putin’s rumored girlfriend

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The United States imposed sanctions on Russian President Vladimir Putin’s reported romantic partner Tuesday, part of the latest raft of penalties targeting Kremlin-linked officials and entities in response to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Alina Kabaeva, 39, was among 13 Russian nationals added to the Treasury Department’s list of sanctions. A former star gymnast with two Olympic gold medals, Kabaeva has become better-known in recent years as the 69-year-old Russian leader’s rumored girlfriend.

The US announcement Tuesday cited Kabaeva’s “close relationship to Putin,” though it did not point to a romantic tie specifically. But the US government holds that Kabaeva is the mother of at least three of Putin’s children, the Wall Street Journal reported, and had previously prepared a sanctions package against her before making a last-minute decision in late April to hold off to avoid hurting prospects for a negotiated peace in Ukraine.

Kabaeva has also served as a lawmaker for Putin’s party in the State Duma and currently heads the pro-Kremlin National Media Group, which operates a network of TV and radio stations and publishes newspapers in Russia. Kabaeva was already under EU and UK sanctions.

“As innocent people suffer from Russia’s illegal war of aggression, Putin’s allies have enriched themselves and funded opulent lifestyles,” Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said in a news release. “The Treasury Department will use every tool at our disposal to make sure that Russian elites and the Kremlin’s enablers are held accountable for their complicity in a war that has cost countless lives.”

Kabaeva, who was born in Uzbekistan in 1983, rose to prominence in Russia as one of rhythmic gymnastics’ most decorated athletes. Her athletic career was not without controversy, though — she had to return two medals from the 2001 Goodwill Games after a doping scandal.

Kabaeva retired from the sport around the same time reports emerged that she was romantically linked with Putin.

The Kremlin has denied the alleged relationship. A Russian newspaper that published an article in 2008 saying Putin and Kabaeva were romantically involved was quickly shut down under mysterious circumstances.

Putin and his wife of 30 years, Lyudmila Putina, divorced in 2014.

Kabaeva and her family have benefited handsomely from connections to Putin’s circle, according to Russian and US media reports. A classified US intelligence assessment of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US election listed Kabaeva as a beneficiary of Putin’s wealth, the Journal reported in April, citing a US official.

The luxurious lifestyles of Putin’s reported girlfriends have fueled speculation about their relationships with the Russian president. The Pandora Papers, a trove of documents revealed by The Washington Post and a consortium of news organizations last year, showed that another woman who was reportedly romantically involved with Putin owned a fancy apartment in Monaco and a shell company in the British Virgin Islands — even as it was unclear how she had amassed so much wealth.

Kabaeva was spotted publicly for the first time in months in late April, when she led her annual “Alina Festival,” a patriotic rhythmic gymnastics festival in Moscow. She stood in front of a backdrop decorated with the letter Z, the state’s symbol for its invasion of Ukraine.

The United States previously imposed sanctions on Putin’s daughters from a former marriage, Katerina Tikhonova and Maria Vorontsova, after evidence emerged of alleged war crimes committed by Russian forces during their occupation of the suburbs of Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital. The atrocities included the beheading and torture of civilians.

The latest sanctions are aimed at Russian elites and businesses operating in sectors “that generate substantial revenue for the Russian regime,” the announcement said.

In addition to Kabaeva, they include Andrey Grigoryevich Guryev, founder of a Russian chemical company and owner of London’s second-largest estate after Buckingham Palace, and Viktor Filippovich Rashnikov, the majority owner and board chair of MMK, one of the world’s largest steel producers. . Two MMK subsidiaries were also placed under sanctions.

The sanctions freeze the US property of those targeted and ban US individuals or entities from transacting with them.

The State Department, meanwhile, announced new sanctions on three Russian oligarchs and Kremlin-backed officials in areas of Ukraine occupied by Russian or proxy forces, including Mariupol and Kherson. The sanctions also target 24 Russian defense and technology-related entities, including research centers.

“Our actions target some of Russia’s most important defense-related research and development institutions, semiconductor producers, and advanced computing and electronics entities,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement. “These actions will further isolate Russia’s defense and high-technology industries and limit their contributions to Moscow’s war machine.”

The department also imposed visa restrictions on nearly 900 Russian officials as well as “31 foreign government officials who have acted to support Russia’s purported annexation of the Crimea region of Ukraine and thereby threatened or violated Ukraine’s sovereignty.”

Canada also unveiled a new round of sanctions Tuesday, targeting 43 military officials and 17 entities “that are complicit in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s senseless bloodshed” including atrocities in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha, according to the announcement from Global Affairs Canada.

Categories
Technology

AMD Ryzen 7000 “Raphael” Desktop CPU Spotted Running DDR5-6400 Memory

We might have our first look at the DDR5 overclocking potential of AMD’s upcoming Ryzen 7000 “Raphael” Desktop CPUs.

Top Overclocker Shows AMD Ryzen 7000 “Raphael” Desktop CPU Running DDR5-6400 Memory

The latest or should we say “Alleged” leak comes from TOPPC who is a world-class and renowned overclocker hailing from Taiwan. The overclocker has posted a screenshot of a CPU-z from an alleged AMD Ryzen 7000 Desktop CPU platform that was running DDR5 memory with a 6400 Mbps transfer rate. That’s a DRAM frequency of 3202.7 (6405.4 Mbps effective). We can also see that the DRAM is running at some tight timings rated at CL-32-38-38-96-134.

The lowest latencies that we have seen for DDR5 so far are on the G.Skill Trident Z5 modules which go down to CL28 but also run at a lower transfer rate of DDR5-5600. However, G.Skill has other kits that can reach CL32 timings at the same speeds so it is possible that a high-end kit was used here or this could just be a manual overclock. We won’t know for sure but this is what we have in front of us right now. One thing is for sure, AMD’s Ryzen 7000 Desktop CPUs are looking to be great and will be able to support high-frequency memory without any issues.

Our first DDR5 platform for gaming is our Raphael platform and one of the awesome things about Raphael is that we are really gonna try to make a big splash with overclocking and I’ll just kinda leave it there but speeds that you maybe thought couldn’t be possible, maybe possible with this overclocking spec.

Joseph Tao, Memory Enabling Manager at AMD

AMD Ryzen 7000 “Raphael” Desktop CPU Spotted Running DDR5-6400 Memory. (Image Credit: HXL)

A new feature called EXPO (AMD Extended Profiles for overclocking) will allow enhanced DDR5 memory OC on the new platform, similar to Intel’s XMP. It has been a rough road for AM4 to offer decent DDR4 OC capabilities but that has more or less been sorted out by now, we can only expect DDR5 to have a much better OC and compatibility experience compared to DDR4 on AM4 platforms. This new feature is expected to allow AM5 boards to store two memory overclocking profiles which include:

  • An optimized profile for high-bandwidth (Higher Frequency)
  • An optimized profile for low-latency (Tighter CAS Timings)

Furthermore, it looks like the platform will only be DDR5 compatible and we won’t see DDR4 options as we do on Intel’s existing platform. But with DDR5 prices and availability improving, that won’t be that big of a deal for most high-end consumers for whom AMD will be aiming first. AMD’s board partners are expected to unveil more details for their upcoming X670E motherboards on 4th of August so it looks like this could be a warm-up to get users excited about the DDR5 capabilities of AMD’s Raphael platform.

NewsSource: HXL

Categories
Entertainment

Brad Pitt reveals why he wore a skirt to Bullet Train premiere

Brad Pitt isn’t skirting around the truth.

The Oscar winner, 58, has explained why he decided to rock a skirt at the German premiere of his new comedy-action film Bullet Train last month, reports the new york post.

the Fight Club star showed off his tattoos on the Berlin red carpet on July 19 where he sported a light pink shirt, combat boots, a brown kilt and a matching jacket.

At Monday’s Los Angeles premiere of Bullet TrainPitt revealed why he opted for the style choice.

“I don’t know! We’re all going to die, so let’s mess it up,” he told Variety.

For Monday’s event, the Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood actor wore a green suit and yellow sneakers.

Pitt previously described why he decided to wear a skirt at the Berlin show last month, jokingly telling the Associated Press: “The breeze. The breeze.”

The David Leitch film stars Pitt as a hitman who has encountered several killers aboard a fast-moving train. Sandra Bullock, Logan Lerman, Bad Bunny, Joey King, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Brian Tyree Henry also appear in the movie.

The father of six also revealed to the outlet how the movie’s violence is an ongoing theme throughout the plot and how he was happy to let his stuntman do some of the more hardcore moves dusting shooting.

“I try to get out of it. I love a stuntman,” Pitt said. “This one was action-comedy, something I’ve never done before.”

He continued: “David and I had always been big fans of Jackie Chan. We’d been talking about him for decades. He’s kind of our Buster Keaton. He’s so talented and underrated even. Just to do something in that direction was what was really appealing to me.”

Pitt also shed some light on retirement rumors at the LA red carpet yesterday.

I have told dead line on Monday: “I was just saying, ‘I’m past middle age and I want to be specific about how I spend those last things however they may be.’ I’ve never been a five-year plan kind of guy. I’m just, whatever feels right for the day. I still operate that way.”

Pitt previously revealed his inability to remember faces is a condition he suffers from, called prosopagnosia, or face blindness.

“Nobody believes me,” he told GQ. “But it’s a mystery to me, man. I can’t grasp a face and yet I come from such a design/aesthetic point of view.”

“Bullet Train” will be released in Australian theaters on August 4.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was reproduced with permission.

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Categories
Sports

F1 news 2022: Fernando Alonso blindsides Alpine with switch to Aston Martin, Oscar Piastri future, McLaren, Daniel Ricciardo

Fernando Alonso’s bombshell defection to sign a multiyear deal with Aston Martin caught the Formula 1 world by surprise.

It has now been revealed his current team, Alpine, learned of the news at the exact same time as everyone else.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Aston Martin released a statement confirming Alonso would be joining the team for the 2023 season, replacing the departing Sebastian Vettel.

But the bombshell news even came as a surprise to Alpine according to Formula 1 journalist Adam Cooper.

“Alpine boss Otmar Szafnauer confirmed the first the team knew of the news was when Aston Martin’s press release came out. As of Sunday night and there last discussions with Alonso, the team thought he was staying,” Cooper tweeted.

Alonso, the two-time champion announced a multiyear deal, starting in 2023, with hopes he could once again climb the drivers standings.

“This Aston Martin team is clearly applying the energy and commitment to win, and it is therefore one of the most exciting teams in Formula 1 today,” he said. “I have known Lawrence [Stroll] and Lance [Stroll] for many years and it is very obvious that they have the ambition and passion to succeed in Formula 1.

“I have watched as the team has systematically attracted great people with winning pedigrees, and I have become aware of the huge commitment to new facilities and resources at Silverstone.

“No-one in Formula 1 today is demonstrating a greater vision and absolute commitment to winning, and that makes it a really exciting opportunity for me.”

Alonso’s decision to depart Alpine now opens the door for young Aussie Oscar Piastri to get behind the wheel for the F1 team.

Alpine are now set to play hard ball with the talented youngster who is managed by Mark Webber.

Piastri and Webber are reported to have agreed to a deal with McLaren with Alpine’s plan to keep Alonso on board for one more season before installing Piastri behind the wheel.

Alonso’s bombshell defection however changed all of that. The rumored McLaren shift could spell the end for fellow Aussie Daniel Ricciardo.

Szafnauer said while he wasn’t privy to an argument between Piastri and McLaren, he reiterated the Aussie has contractual obligations to Alpine.

“I hear the same rumors that you do in the pitlane. But what I do know is that he does have contractual obligations to us. And we do to him. And we’ve been honoring those obligations all year,” Szafnauer said to autosport.

“And those obligations, last through ’23, and possibly in ’24, if some options are taken up.”

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Categories
Australia

Cashless debit cards linked to buy now, pay later services raise concerns ahead of end of scheme

The number of people using buy now, pay later services connected to their cashless debit card (CDC) has complicated the federal government’s plan to abolish the program.

During the election campaign, Labor promised to end the scheme, which quarantines 80 per cent of a person’s welfare payments onto a card that cannot be used for alcohol, gambling or cash withdrawals.

More than 17,000 welfare recipients in Western Australia’s Goldfields and East Kimberley regions, Ceduna in South Australia, as well as Bundaberg and Hervey Bay in Queensland, are on the card.

A significant number of them have linked their card to buy now, pay later services like Afterpay, which allows a person to buy products up front but pay them off in installations.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth said it means transitioning people off the card could take some time.

“A number of deductions that participants have connected to their card means that you can’t just close the card overnight,” she said.

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Categories
US

California store owner Craig Cope recalls shooting would-be robber

An elderly California liquor store owner who flipped the script on armed gunmen during an attempted robbery said Tuesday that he had no choice but to open fire on one of the assailants, insisting it was “either him or me.”

Craig Cope, 80, said he feared for his life as four would-be thieves drove up early Sunday to Norco Market & Liquor in Norco, where he was behind the counter when one of the assailants busted in with a rifle and yelled at him to freeze.

“I got a long gun pointing directly at me,” Cope told The Post. “It was either him or me and I was a little bit faster.”

Cope said he knew something was off when he saw a dark BMW SUV pull up alongside the store instead of into several nearby open parking spaces. They also “backed in” as they approached, which was another “red flag” for the quick-thinking owner.

“I got a long gun pointing directly at me,” Cope told The Post Tuesday, adding that he feared for his life. “It was either him or me and I was a little bit faster.”
Fox 11
Surveillance footage from inside the store shows Cope firing the shotgun just seconds after the gunman announced the robbery.
Surveillance footage from inside the store shows Cope firing the shotgun just seconds after the gunman announced the robbery.
Fox 11

“And then I saw them getting out of the car in masks and with guns,” Cope continued. “So, I figured what was going to happen. I just knew they were armed and masked and that they were coming in, so I was ready for them.”

At one point, three of the suspects hopped out of the SUV, while a fourth man stayed behind to act as a getaway driver, Cope said.

Surveillance footage from inside the store shows Cope firing the shotgun just seconds after the gunman announced the robbery, wounding the would-be robber in the arm.

“He was screaming that I shot his arm off,” Cope recalled. “That’s what he said.”

Cope, who suffered a heart attack and was rushed to the hospital after the shooting, is recovering at his Riverside home.

He said he intends to keep working at the store, but may soon cut back on his hours. That has nothing to do with Sunday’s attempted heist, which has characterized as a “terribly isolated” incident.

“I’ll be a presence one way or another,” he said.

Cope first purchased the store in 1976 and ran it for 19 years before selling it. He then bought it back about seven years ago. He declined to say whether Monday’s incident marked the first time the store had been targeted by criminals.

“I’m not going to release that one,” Cope said, adding the store had not been robbed during his most recent ownership stint.

Norco in Riverside County is not known as a “high-crime area,” Cope said. Many of the city’s residents own horses and the community is largely conservative.

“It’s not a good area for robbers to come,” Cope said flatly. “Many of the homeowners are conservatives and probably armed. These guys didn’t do their homework.”

Authorities tracked down the four suspects at a Southern California hospital, where one had a gunshot wound consistent with a shotgun blast, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.

At one point, three of the suspects hopped out of the SUV, while a fourth man stayed behind to act as a getaway driver, Cope said.
At one point, three of the suspects hopped out of the SUV, while a fourth man stayed behind to act as a getaway driver, Cope said.
Fox 11

Three suspects being held on $500,000 bond were identified as Justin Johnson, 22, of Inglewood, Calif., Jamar Williams, 27, of Los Angeles, and Davon Broadus, 24, of Las Vegas.

Sheriff’s officials praised Cope for preventing a “violent crime” while ensuring his own safety as he was confronted by multiple armed suspects.

Cope — who grew up in Illinois, where he hunted for food as a child — said he doesn’t regret his actions.

“It’s not going to be on my mind or keep me from doing anything,” he told The Post. “It’s not going to change how I operate. I’m already alert and pay attention to my surroundings at all times.”

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Categories
Technology

Blatant God Of War Knock-Off Being Sold On Xbox Store

god of war ragnarok is one of the most anticipated games of 2022 and has people around the world hyped, as the kids say. But it’s only coming to PlayStation consoles. Well don’t worry Xbox players, someone has spent at least 20 minutes developing an Xbox version of God of War. Except it uh…sucks, looks terrible, and is likely unauthorized by Sony.

As spotted by Eurogamer, there’s a new and fairly cheap action game available on Xbox that seems to star Kratos. The game has the not-at-all-clunky title of War Gods Zeus of Child and is available for $US4.09 ($6) in the US. Seems like a deal, until you see the game in action

The game has no sound effects or music, limited animations that are easily broken, and there’s no real depth to it. It’s just waves of the same enemy attacking Kratos over and over as he flails about, killing them and earning a point for each one vanquished. Nearly everything in the game looks to be an asset ripped from somewhere else, including the enemies, which seem to be a monster from a resident Evil game. Also, the title screen for the game has a different name, “God of Warning.”

Here’s the description of the game from its actual store page, which looks worryingly identical to any other game on the Xbox store:

War Gods Zeus of Child is a great war game. Destroy all enemies and creatures with the Zeus War Gods of challenge [sic]. Kill them all with your gun. Launch attacks with various combos. Reach the highest monster kills without dying. Feel the power of the warning god.

Kotaku contacted Microsoft about this clear knock-off and asked the company how it prevents these types of games from appearing in the store.

It appears this game, which was made in Unity and released on July 26, is part of the Xbox Creators Program. The idea is to let smaller teams and solo devs use their consoles as dev equipment, making it easier for people to make games and sell them across Xbox and PC. In theory, this is a cool idea that reminds me of a lot of the Xbox Indie program from the 360 ​​era.

But it also has the potential to be abused by naughty devs looking to flip a few assets to make a quick buck, especially if the vetting of games isn’t thorough enough. And while this God of War clone is more a terrible joke than a big problem, I’d be nervous about what else is being allowed to slide onto the Xbox store with what appears to be little oversight.

Categories
Entertainment

Holly Candy enjoys her friend’s birthday lunch in London

She made her final cameo in the last ever episode of Neighbors this week.

And after the last episode of the iconic Australian soap aired, Holly Candy was spotted having lunch at Scott’s in London on Monday.

The actress and singer, 39, looked effortlessly glamorous in an asymmetric striped blouse, tucked into a pair of skinny jeans.

Stepping out: Holly Candy was spotted having lunch at Scott's in London on Monday

Stepping out: Holly Candy was spotted having lunch at Scott’s in London on Monday

Holly styled her daytime look with a heart-shaped padded Chanel bag with a chain strap, while also wearing a pair of oversized cat eye shades from the brand.

Holly, who was joined by a female pal, wore her blonde locks in a loose straight style and opted for a subtle coat of make-up in natural tones.

The two women were seen leaving the famous Mayfair seafood restaurant before getting into a car which had been waiting outside.

Fashion: The actress and singer, 39, looked effortlessly glamorous in an asymmetric striped blouse, tucked into a pair of skinny jeans

Fashion: The actress and singer, 39, looked effortlessly glamorous in an asymmetric striped blouse, tucked into a pair of skinny jeans

Glam: Holly styled her daytime look with a heart-shaped padded Chanel bag with a chain strap, while also wearing a pair of oversized cat eye shades from the brand

Glam: Holly styled her daytime look with a heart-shaped padded Chanel bag with a chain strap, while also wearing a pair of oversized cat eye shades from the brand

Images from Neighbors filming showed Holly looking ageless as they returned to film the soap’s highly anticipated series finale in London.

Holly posed with Natalie Imbruglia, 47, who also pursued a pop music career after her exit from the show, and they wore matching pink Neighbors hats.

Natalie shared the selfie on Instagram alongside several other snaps, including pictures of her playing Beth Brennan in the ’90s.

Home time: The two women were seen leaving the famous Mayfair seafood restaurant before getting into a car which had been waiting outside

Home time: The two women were seen leaving the famous Mayfair seafood restaurant before getting into a car which had been waiting outside

She captioned them: ‘Such a laugh filming Neighbors final episode with Holly Candy in London.

‘I have so many happy memories from my time on Neighbors and I wouldn’t be where I am today without it! End of an era.’

On the show, Beth married Brad Willis, played by Scott Michaelson, and was the mother of Ben Hall’s character Ned Willis, though they never appeared on screen together.

Throwback: Natalie, 47, shared the selfie on Instagram alongside several other snaps, including pictures of her playing Beth Brennan in the '90s.  (Pictured with Melissa Bell, who played Lucy Robinson)

Throwback: Natalie, 47, shared the selfie on Instagram alongside several other snaps, including pictures of her playing Beth Brennan in the ’90s. (Pictured with Melissa Bell, who played Lucy Robinson)

Meanwhile, Holly, who is married to billionaire property developer Nick Candy, starred as Felicity ‘Flick’ Scully from 1999 to 2002.

She was last seen on screen in 2005 and now lives in Hollywood.

The actors-turned-pop stars weren’t the only special guests who returned to Ramsay Street on Thursday evening to say goodbye to the soap after 37 years on air.

The characters Harold Bishop (Ian Smith), Shane Ramsay (Peter O’Brien), Izzy Hoyland (Natalie Bassingthwaighte) and Mike Young (Guy Pearce) all featured heavily in the show’s swansong.

They were joined by returning favorites Joel Samuels (Daniel MacPherson), Joe Mangel (Mark Little), Amy Greenwood (Jacinta Stapleton), Nina Tucker (Delta Goodrem) and Des Clarke, memorably played by Paul Keane.

Group shot: On the show, Beth married Brad Willis, played by Scott Michaelson, and was the mother of Ben Hall's character Ned Willis, though they never appeared on screen together.  (Pictured: the cast and crew of Neighbours)

Group shot: On the show, Beth married Brad Willis, played by Scott Michaelson, and was the mother of Ben Hall’s character Ned Willis, though they never appeared on screen together. (Pictured: the cast and crew of Neighbours)

Kylie Minogue, best known for playing Charlene Robinson, and Jason Donovan, who played Scott Robinson, also reprized their roles, as did Melissa Bell, who portrayed Lucy Robinson.

Holly’s younger half-sister Olympia Valance, who portrayed Paige Smith, was also involved in the finale.

They were joined by Jane Harris (played by Annie Jones), Donna Freedman (Margot Robbie) and the ghost of the late Madge Bishop (Anne Charleston).

Neighbors announced in March that production would cease on the long-running soap due to lack of financial backing after losing their ‘key broadcast partner in the UK’, Channel 5.

Love life: Holly, who is married to property developer Nick Candy (right), starred as Felicity 'Flick' Scully from 1999 to 2002. She was last seen on screen in 2005 and now lives in Hollywood

Love life: Holly, who is married to property developer Nick Candy (right), starred as Felicity ‘Flick’ Scully from 1999 to 2002. She was last seen on screen in 2005 and now lives in Hollywood

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