Categories
Australia

‘Put your masks on’: Independent MP Monique Ryan blasts LNP members in question time for not wearing masks

The Independent MP for Kooyong has blasted LNP members in Question Time for not wearing a mask.

Dr Monique Ryan told the members of the Coalition to “put your masks on” after she was interrupted during Parliament while discussing the burden of COVID-19 reinfection rates on the health care system.

“COVID-19 infections in this country are at a record high and increasing,” the former pediatric neurologist said while posing her question to Health Minister Mark Butler.

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“There is an increasing risk of cumulative neurological and cardiovascular disease from infections from COVID-19.

“Can the Minister please explain how he proposes to manage the oncoming national significant burden of disability and chronic illness from repeated infection?”

During her question, Dr Ryan was jeered at by some MPs, before snapping back “put your masks on” as she pointed at the opposition benches.

The Member for Kooyong later took to Twitter later saying: “I don’t appreciate being interrupted while speaking on serious risks of repeated COVID infections.”

“I particularly don’t appreciate being interrupted by shouting LNP MPs who refuse to wear masks.

“We all have a duty to look after each other. Here & everywhere. Put your mask on!”

Mask-wearing is only a recommendation inside Parliament and most Coalition MPs exercise their free choice not to wear one, despite a few exceptions.

The former Melbourne Royal Children’s Hospital Neurology department Director was one of a slate of Climate 200-backed independents who toppled sitting Liberal MPs at the last election including the then-treasurer Josh Frydenberg who was seen as a future leader of the party.

Mr Frydenberg’s campaign spent an estimated more than $2 million to hold the seat which was once considered one of the jewels in the Liberal Party crown.

But Dr Ryan’s strong grass roots campaign targeting more ambitious action on climate change and greater integrity in politics, along with the personal unpopularity of then-prime minister Scott Morrison, delivered the independent a historic win.

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Categories
US

Trump-backed conspiracy theorist makes charge for chief election position in Arizona

In Arizona, where GOP state legislators have embraced Trump’s fictions and financed investigations into the 2020 vote count, Trump supporters are “gunning for secretary of state,” said Mike Noble, the chief of research and managing partner at the Arizona-based polling firm OH predictive insights. “[It] is definitely one they have really put a priority on.”

Finchem does face significant opposition in the primary, including from Beau Lane, a businessman endorsed by GOP Gov. Doug Duey. But if the latest polling is any guide, Arizona Republicans are poised to elevate someone who has relentlessly sought to undermine confidence in state elections as their pick to run future elections.

Finchem has been one of the chief proponents of election conspiracy theories since the 2020 election. He was a significant booster of the GOP-led review of all of the ballots cast in 2020 in Maricopa County, Arizona’s largest county, which was strongly opposed by the Republican-dominated county government and a bipartisan cast of election officials. Finchem also advocates the fanciful plan of “decertifying” the 2020 election results in Arizona, which has no basis in the law, and he counts others who worked to undermine American elections among his prominent supporters of him, including Michael Flynn, Jenna Ellis and Mike Lindell.

Finchem has charged ahead in the lone series of public polling from OH Predictive Insights. The group’s surveys over the last year have had Finchem in the lead but never getting above the mid-teens.

But in their final poll on the eve of the primary, Finchem stormed ahead, leading the field with 32 percent, compared to 11 percent for his closest rival in Lane. The Trump-backed candidates in the Republican primaries for governor and Senate, Kari Lake and Blake Masters, respectively, also had double-digit leads in the survey.

“Trump’s recent visit to Arizona really helped increase the awareness” of his endorsed candidates, Noble said, but particularly of the secretary of state’s race.

Finchem’s biggest challenger for the nomination is believed to be Lane, an advertising executive. Two state lawmakers — Michelle Ugenti-Rita and Shawnna Bolick — were in the high single digits in the OHPI poll, with a plurality of 41 percent still undecided.

Lane hails from the business wing of the state party. He launched his campaign touting the endorsement of dozens of business leaders in the state. And in July, he scored the endorsement of outgoing Ducey, the term-limited governor, who praised him for his integrity and “competence in [his] ability to actually do the job they seek.”

“I think the governor recognizes the importance of having someone who could actually be governor in addition to being secretary of state,” said Daniel Scarpinato, a veteran consultant and former top Ducey aide who is on Lane’s campaign team. “I think he sees Beau as being a mainstream conservative who could effectively execute our elections without politicizing it.”

Finchem has referred to Lane as a “Democrat plant” on his Telegram channel, and has claimed that internal polls have shown him up over the advertising exec. But supporters of Finchem have shown at least some concern about the rest of the field potentially splitting the vote.

Trump put out a statement days before the ballot request deadline in the state, reinforcing his endorsement of Finchem as “the kind of fighter we need to turn Arizona and our Country around.” The former president also attacked one of Finchem’s opponents in his statement by him — but went after Ugenti-Rita as “a weak ‘Never Trumper’ RINO” without mentioning Lane.

Lane and Finchem have been the only two candidates with notable advertising expenditures on the airwaves, according to data from the ad tracking firm AdImpact. Lane’s campaign has spent roughly $423,000 on TV and radio advertising, edging out the roughly $256,000 that Finchem has spent there. (Finchem also has about $79,000 in digital advertising.)

Lane’s most recent spot has been a contrast spot, attacking Finchem for once supporting the National Popular Vote Compact — “if he had it his way, Hillary Clinton would have been our president” — while playing up his background as a “business guy.” Finchem’s ad, meanwhile, features Trump praising him and boosting his role with the election review in the state.

But the combined spending of well under $1 million between the two men is merely a drop in the bucket compared to the tidal wave of political advertising that Arizonans are currently subjected to. Over $93 million has already been spent on radio and television ads in Arizona this year — headlined by the competitive Republican gubernatorial and Senate primaries.

“It is a low-information race, which is kind of unfortunate because it is an important position,” said Scarpinato. “Because you have so many competitive races, more than we’ve really seen in a generation in Arizona, you have a lot of people undecided and that is leaving some of these downballot races wide open.”

It is also the second major primary in the state that pits Ducey against Trump, who has publicly feuded since the 2020 election. In the governor’s race, Ducey has backed former state board of regents member Karrin Taylor Robson, while Trump has thrown his support behind Lake, a former TV anchor.

The Arizona secretary of state race is expected to be among the most competitive election administrator elections this year. And it will be an open race, with current Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs the frontrunner for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination.

The Democratic primary is a faceoff between Adrian Fontes, the former top election official for Maricopa County, and state House Minority Leader Reginald Bolding.

That primary has quietly become acrimonious between the two men. The political arm of a nonprofit founded by Bolding called Our Voice Our Vote has helped boost his campaign by him, leading to charges of self-dealing from Fontes’ camp. (Bolding told the Arizona Republic that he and his wife have walled themselves off from the political operation of the nonprofit.) And Fontes blamed Bolding’s apparatus for airing an overdue tax bill, which he said was inadvertent.

The race will also test the saliency of the election conspiracy theories that have been so potent in Arizona. Finchem and Lake have worked together in the past: The two filed a joint lawsuit looking to block the use of ballot tabulators in the state, a common target for unfounded claims about the security of American elections.

Barring a blowout in a statewide primary, there’s a strong chance that the winner of the election won’t be known on Tuesday night — the exact situation that Trump took advantage of in 2020 to discredit his loss.

Both Finchem and Lake have signaled they are more than willing to follow the former president’s lead with their own campaigns. In a joint Q&A at a late June fundraiser, which was first reported by Axios Phoenix, both candidates suggested that they would challenge a loss.

“Ain’t gonna be no concession speech coming from this guy,” Finchem said. “I’m going to demand a 100 percent hand count if there’s the slightest hint that there’s an impropriety.”

Categories
Business

Jim Chalmers takes on producers to ensure supply

The ACCC report warns of a significant domestic gas shortfall next year unless the LNG producers redirect some of the uncontracted gas to the local market.

(It marks a turnaround from the ACCC’s February assessment that the gas market would be in domestic surplus next year.)

The LNG producers say there is more than enough gas to supply the shortfall identified in the ACCC’s Monday report – effectively disputing there is a looming crisis.

The existing mechanism that outlines the way producers satisfy the government’s heads of agreement with producers to support domestic supply is referred to as a “gentleman’s agreement”.

However, it seems the government is skeptical of the gas industry’s willingness to honor it and can’t afford the risk to industry and consumers if it is not.

The ACCC’s report is clearly suggesting the behavior of some gas companies amounts to not playing cricket.

“There remain instances where some suppliers are not engaging with the domestic market in ways that are likely to result in supply agreements being reached and market conditions improving,” the ACCC wrote.

That includes offering uncontracted gas to domestic users at prices above the international market.

Invoking the Australian Domestic Gas Security Mechanism, or even threatening to do so, enables the government to flex it muscles on gas supply, but it doesn’t address the issue of price, according to a large group of industrial customers who lobby under the banner of the Energy Users’ Association of Australia.

Presumably, there would be little argument from the LNG industry over selling more product into Australia if the price was comparable to that being paid in the booming international spot market.

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But domestic users don’t have the stomach to pay the elevated international spot prices that are running as high as $US40 ($57) per MMBtu.

In Australia, 90 per cent of domestic customers are contracted and currently paying a fraction of that.

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Categories
Sports

Matt’s Merrett call, Marshall dominates, Fantasy semi finals – Ep. 536 – DT TALK

The first week of Fantasy finals have been played with a couple of teams in leagues through to the preliminary finals while others will face sudden death semi finals this week. Roy, Calvin and Warnie have everything you need to help you get on your way to a premiership.

Click here to download.

Episode Guide

1:00 – The Traders are facing do-or-die semi-finals this weekend.

3:10 – Stephen Coniglio as a late out upset Roy.

7:30 – A late change at the Saints had Warnie filthy as he missed Rowan Marshall‘s 163.

12:20 – “The torment of it” – one point separated Roy and Calvin.

15:00 – Zach Merrett‘s 172 was a thing of beauty with 135 points scored in the second half.

18:00 – A forward tagging role for ben keays earned him a -3.

9:00 p.m. – Matt, coach of Mottram’s Marvels, joins the boys.

24:45 – A bold captain choice, off the back of a hunch, has seen Matt take a 104 point lead into round 21.

28:50 – It looks like Stephen Coniglio will be available this week.

31:20 – An impending suspension and hamstring injury will see Jay Culley on the sidelines.

34:45 – Brodie Gundy is set to return for the Feet. time to trade Darcy Cameron?

41:20 – Who do you trade out of your backline? Jack Crisp, Nick Daicos or Jayden Short.

45:05 – You have harry himmelberg moved forward again?

47:20 – The Traders’ trades thanks to Toyota.

49:30 – Questions from social media – follow @AFLFantasy on Twitter and like the Official AFL Fantasy facebook page.

54:30 – Who goes first: harry himmelberg or James Sicily?

59:50 – The boys celebrate Mason Redman‘s scoring.

1:03:00 – The cupboard is bare for free agents in Fantasy Draft.

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Categories
Australia

ABC appoints former Coalition media adviser Fiona Cameron as ombudsman | Australian Broadcasting Corporation

The board of the ABC has appointed media executive and former Coalition adviser Fiona Cameron to the newly created role of ABC ombudsman.

The new role was recommended by an independent review that found the public broadcaster’s internal complaints unit was “efficient” but could benefit from the addition of someone to handle appeals and reviews.

The ABC commissioned the former commonwealth ombudsman John McMillan and the former SBS and Ten news chief Jim Carroll to conduct the review last year. This came after high-profile complaints about television programs Exposed: The Ghost Train Fire, Ms Represented, Inside the Canberra Bubble on Four Corners and Q+A’s Trauma and Truth Telling.

Cameron will head an expanded ABC editorial complaints unit and will have the power to review a complaint finding. The ombudsman will report to the board, not the managing director.

Cameron’s most recent role was as an authority member at the Australian Communications and Media Authority (Acma), and she was previously chief operating officer at Screen Australia for a decade.

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She was previously chief of staff and media adviser to the former communications minister Richard Alston, a strong critic of the ABC.

Jonathan Holmes, a former ABC journalist, has warned that keeping the ombudsman separate from editorial management by having them report to the board and not the managing director is highly unusual.

Ita Buttrose, chair of the ABC, says the new ombudsman role will help strengthen the existing complaints handling processes.

“We already have the highest standards of complaints handling in place of any Australian media organization and Fiona’s appointment will assist us in maintaining those standards,” Buttrose said.

The ABC’s managing director, David Anderson, said Cameron’s appointment will help the broadcaster maintain the strong bond of trust and confidence with audiences.

“The ABC Ombudsman will be key to us maintaining the high standards Australians know and expect from the ABC,” Anderson said.

Cameron said: “This is an important and challenging role and strengthens the ABC’s commitment to its audience. I look forward to getting my feet under the desk and grappling with all the many and varied issues.”

The ombudsman role is in addition to the existing two-tier model of in-house complaints handling and external review by the media watchdog, the Acma.

The complaints review was commissioned by the ABC board in October 2021.

Shortly after the review was announced, the ABC’s five-person complaints unit was targeted by the Liberal senator Andrew Bragg, who attempted to establish a government-led inquiry. That move was labeled “political interference” by Buttrose, and was voted down by Labor and the Greens in the Senate.

“The ABC gets to mark its own homework and as an organization paid for by the taxpayer, I believe there should be extra scrutiny,” Bragg told Sky News last year.

Cameron will start in late September.

Categories
US

All eyes turn to Sinema as Democrats face a week that could transform Biden’s presidency

But there remains at least one huge question mark — the vote of Sinema, whose support is just as critical as Manchin’s in the 50-50 Senate. Like Manchin, she has opposed dismantling the Senate filibuster to pass other Democratic priority bills. She did help remodel Biden’s larger Build Back Better bill before Manchin blocked it last year. But now there are questions about whether she will back tax changes affecting private equity investors in the Manchin-Schumer compromise. As the 50th Democrat needed to pass the measure with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote, Sinema has huge leverage to seek changes that threaten the bill’s fragile foundation, and she has so far avoided giving her verdict on the deal.

Manchin suggested on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that he hadn’t spoken to Sinema about the package since he agreed on it with Schumer. But he paid tribute to his Arizona colleague de ella and her previous work on reducing prescription drug prices – a goal that is included in the new draft law.

“When she looks at the bill and sees the whole spectrum of what we’re doing and all of the energy we’re bringing in — all of the reduction of prices and fighting inflation by bringing prices down, by having more energy — hopefully, she will be positive about it,” Manchin said. “But she will make her decision about her. And I respect that.”

Manchin wields his power

Manchin, blanketing Sunday TV talk shows, demonstrated his power at the fulcrum of a closely divided Senate as he put his spin on the legislation — always with an eye on voters back home in a deeply red state. Once again, Manchin has succeeded in putting his state of him, one of the poorest and smallest in the nation, at the center of Washington policy making.

He has also used his power to champion centrism at a time when both parties seem to be moving toward their most radical base supporters. After repeatedly infuriating Democrats by thwarting Biden’s agenda, he’s now disappointing Republicans who had hoped he would maintain his opposition to him. On Sunday, Manchin insisted his package would lower inflation, expand domestic energy production, ensure certain corporations pay their fair tax share, and would benefit Americans by cutting prescription drug costs for Medicare patients.

Clean energy package would be biggest legislative climate investment in US history
The measure would also spend nearly $370 billion on fighting climate change and developing a new green energy economy, reviving efforts that had seemed doomed just weeks ago by opposition from the coal-state senator. If the bill does pass the Senate and later makes it through the House, it would instantly transform Biden into the President who made the greatest commitment to cutting greenhouse gas emissions and would enshrine his global leadership of the effort to stave off the most disastrous future effects. of climate change. It comes as extreme weather events — from drought in the American West to flooding in Kentucky that has killed at least 28 people — are ravaging the US.

The climate funding is not the only key Democratic priority in the bill.

The Manchin-Schumer bill, now rebranded as the “Inflation Reduction Act,” includes extended Affordable Care Act subsidies that would also cement another key reform wrought by Democratic power in the 21st century — Obamacare. These twin achievements could go some way to changing perceptions of the Biden presidency — which, despite some successes, including a $1.9 trillion Covid-19 rescue package and a rare bipartisan infrastructure law — has seen key agenda items like voting rights and police reform founder in the Senate.

What's in the Manchin-Schumer deal on climate, health care and taxes

While the passage of the bill could come too late to save Democrats from the painful punch of high inflation in midterm elections in November, it might turnout of progressives demoralized by the failure to do more with the party’s thin control of Washington power. Taken together with the mobilization of liberals following the conservative Supreme Court’s overturning of the constitutional right to an abortion, and majority public support for gun restrictions in the wake of a string of mass shootings, Democrats would at least have a platform to run on in November if they can succeed in weaving a coherent narrative on their achievements.

While Republican strategists believe that the House is already heading toward them, according to new CNN reporting over the weekend, a late spike in Democratic enthusiasm could spur the hopes of party leaders who believe the Senate is not a lost cause — especially against a clutch of candidates in ex-President Donald Trump’s image who could scare off suburban voters.

GOP mobilizes to prevent Democratic win

Manchin explained on Sunday that he understood the invective hurled his way by many Democrats, and Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, after he derailed the previous “Build Back Better” plan over his belief that it would fuel already soaring inflation. He said that he hoped the new measure would pass by the end of this week, when the Senate is due to break for an August recess.

The timetable remains a high wire act — just one case of Covid-19 among Democratic senators, for example, could fracture the party’s majority since all Republicans are expected to be against it. There have been several recent positive tests among senators that have sent them into isolation, including Manchin.

Republicans argue Manchin and Schumer's energy, health care deal will raise taxes, citing nonpartisan data

In defending his deal with Schumer, the West Virginia senator said that “in normal times,” Republicans would support the bill, since it would pay down the deficit, accelerate permitting for oil and gas drilling and increase energy production — all of which the GOP has previously been on record supporting.

But GOP senators are mobilizing to try to prevent passage of the bill, which would represent a victory for Biden and the Democrats before the midterms.

“It really looks to me like Joe Manchin has been taken to the cleaners,” Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey told Jake Tapper on “State of the Union.”

“Look, this bill, the corporate tax increase, is going to slow down growth, probably exacerbate a recession that we’re probably already in,” said Toomey, who’s retiring. He argued that prescription drug price controls would slow development of life-saving medicines and that the bill would subsidize “wealthy people buying Teslas.”

Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana said on ABC News’ “This Week” that another multi-billion dollar spending bill could inject “an incredible amount of uncertainty” into the economy just as it entered a recession.

Debate is raging in Washington on that last point following the release of an official report last week showing a second straight quarter of negative growth. The White House insists that given strong job growth, the economy is not in a classic contraction. In practical terms, however, the inside-the-Beltway semantics make little difference to Americans confronted by grocery bills that are far more expensive than a year ago, even if the prices at the pump have eased somewhat in recent weeks.

Republicans accused of ‘cruelty’ over veterans’ health care

The battle over the climate and health care bill will take place in parallel this week with a fierce controversy over the GOP blockage of a bill that would provide health care to veterans exposed to toxic fumes from burn pits, which were used to incinerate waste at military installations during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Activists, including comedian Jon Stewart, have accused the GOP of “cruelty” after some senators who voted for a previous version of the bill voted not to advance this one. Republicans, meanwhile, accuse Democrats of inserting new spending and complain that their amendments were not included. Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough said on “State of the Union” that a Toomey amendment would put a “year-on-year” cap on what the department can spend on veterans exposed to burn pits and would lead to “rationing of care.”

VA secretary says Republican-backed amendments to burn pits legislation would lead to 'rationing of care for vets'
Biden, in a FaceTime call from isolation after he registered another positive Covid-19 test on Saturday, promised protesters at the Capitol that he’d fight for the legislation “as long as I have a breath in me.”

Toomey told Tapper, however, that he had long raised opposition to the measure since he wanted funding for burn pit care included in year-on-year appropriations rather than in the mandatory spending column. He said the current legislation would allow Democrats to divert $400 billion for other purposes. And he denied claims that Republicans are holding up the bill to prevent Democrats from scoring another win, following the closing of the Manchin-Schumer deal, as “absurd and dishonest.”

However, the sight of Republicans voting against veterans’ health care — whatever the intricate details of the case — threatens to further an impression that the party is becoming more extreme. And it also takes the focus off the key issues that are most likely to sway the midterm elections in the GOP’s favor, including inflation, gasoline prices and Biden’s low approval rating.

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Categories
Technology

Here’s what Sony, Ubisoft, WB, Riot and others think of Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal

We’re over six months on from Microsoft announcing plans to acquire Activision Blizzard, kicking off the lengthy process of gaining approvals from anti-trust organizations across the world. Most of the time, these investigations are highly secretive, but we do know that they involve seeking opinions from competing companies across the industry. Now thanks to recent filings in Brazil, documents containing these opinions have been posted online, giving us insight into what the likes of Sony, Ubisoft, WB and others think of the deal.

Recently, Brazil’s administration has been seeking feedback on the deal and posted documents online, giving us a look at what major publishers across the industry think of the impending merger. The list of companies included includes major rival console, Sony, as well as game publishers like Ubisoft, WB and Riot Games. Tech companies with an interest in the gaming market, like Google and Apple, were also contacted. Resetera user, Idas, discovered the filings on Brazil’s government website, and while much of the documents contain redacted information, we do get a good idea of ​​where the industry stands on the deal.

Sony naturally has the most to say, as it competes with Microsoft on both the console hardware front and the software front. As we all know, great software can give a hardware platform an advantage over another. Sony points out that while it is possible for almost anyone to make and release a game nowadays, there are just a handful of developers capable of producing AAA titles. Sony also adds that it would be very difficult for another company to create a franchise to rival Call of Duty and that the IP is powerful enough to influence a consumer’s console choice.

Sony also estimates that Xbox Game Pass has captured up to 70 percent of the global subscription services market, and that it would take several years and a lot of investment to create a true competitor. There are concerns that the lower cost of a subscription will lead to upfront sales for games and will create a difficult competitive environment for developers who choose to release their game for an upfront fee, rather than packing it in a subscription.

WB, which has been toying with the idea of ​​selling off its gaming division, is of the opinion that the industry has plenty of competition and adds that the industry does not have a high barrier for entry for developers to release software. Ubisoft is in a similar boat, saying that there are alternatives to Activision Blizzard games and putting forward the opinion that there is plenty of competition in the industry.

Riot Games and Bandai Namco also both responded with answers that suggest both companies believe there are alternatives to Activision Blizzard titles and lots of competition across the market.

The major tech companies, like Apple, Amazon, Meta and Google did not respond with much and most of their answers were redacted. Ultimately, none of them seem to have any interest in stopping the acquisition and acknowledge the distinction between the mobile games market and console/PC. However, Apple does seem to think that Apple Arcade is a competitor in the wider gaming market.

KitGuru Says: It doesn’t sound like there is much opposition to the acquisition amongst established publishers. Still, regulators like the FTC and the European Commission may have concerns and still need to finalize their own investigations into the acquisition.

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Categories
Entertainment

Pat Carroll dead: Voice of Ursula dies aged 95

Pat Carroll, the actress known for voicing the underwater villain Ursula in Disney’s animated tale, The Little Mermaid, died on July 30. She was 95.

The Emmy Award-winning actress passed away at her home on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, while recovering from pneumonia, according to Variety.

Carroll found a niche as a comedian on the late-night circuit beginning in the 1940s, and voiced several cartoon characters through the years before earning an Emmy for her work on Sid Caesar’s Hour.

Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, Carroll’s family moved to Los Angeles when she was five years old, and she picked up acting in local productions shortly after.

She graduated from the local, all-girls Immaculate Heart High School, whose notable alumni include Meghan Markle, Diane Disney (the daughter of Walt and Lillian Disney), Mary Tyler Moore, Lucie Arnaz, Tyra Banks and Yara Shahidi.

After enlisting in the Army, she attended the Catholic University of America, and began her career in the industry with the 1947 film Hometown Girl.

She co-starred as Prunella in a 1965 production of the musical version of cinderellaand worked on Laverne & Shirley, Busting Loose, The Ted Knight Show and She’s The Sheriff.

Other appearances included The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Love Boat, Designing Women and ER.

She won several theatrical awards for her one-woman show on Gertrude Stein. The recorded version won a Grammy for Best Spoken Word, Documentary or Drama in 1980.

In 1989, she played the villainous sea witch Ursula and sang Poor Unfortunate Souls, a role she once said was one of her all-time favourites.

She reprized the infamous character’s voice for a number of Disney video games and television shows, most recently in 2020 with The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse short series.

Carroll is survived by daughters Kerry Karsian, Tara Karsian and granddaughter Evan Karsian-McCormick.

This story originally appeared on Fox News and is republished here with permission.

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Categories
Sports

Cristiano Ronaldo leaves Old Trafford before final whistle of Manchester United draw

Cristiano Ronaldo left the stadium before the end of Manchester United’s 1-1 draw with Rayo Vallecano after being substituted at half-time.

Ronaldo, 37, made his comeback against the Spanish side after missing United’s tour of Thailand and Australia to deal with a family issue.

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I have started the game before being replaced after the first 45 minutes. He was pictured leaving Old Trafford before the final whistle, with United sources afterward refusing to comment on whether his early exit from him was sanctioned by manager Erik ten Hag.

Ronaldo is keen to leave the club this summer in a bid to find regular Champions League football elsewhere. He has been linked with moves to Bayern Munich, Chelsea and Atletico Madrid, although sources have told ESPN that United are yet to receive a serious offer for the Portugal forward.

Sources have told ESPN that Ten Hag encouraged the squad members who played against Atletico Madrid 24 hours earlier to attend the friendly against Rayo.

Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial and Scott McTominay were among the players who watched from the directors’ box while others were in hospitality boxes. They looked on as Ronaldo’s replacement, Amad, opened the scoring for United early in the second half before Alvaro Garcia equalized for the visitors soon afterwards as United ended their preseason campaign with three wins, two draws and a defeat from their six games.

“Overall, I am happy, we made a good preseason,” Ten Hag said. “We make good progress and we’re ready for the season, but still I know there is a lot of room for improvement and we have to improve.

“It’s also a process that continues during the season, but for next week it’s about a result as well. The reception was fantastic. I felt the vibe in the stadium, I felt the vibe they want to send to the team.

“There has to be co-operation between fans and the team so we get the right emotion and, especially, the right results.”

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Categories
Australia

Aboriginal staff laid off, youth left in limbo as ‘inspirational’ center abruptly closed

Young Aboriginal staff are being offered “small amounts” of money to leave their roles quietly, after a decision by owners to shut down operations at Redfern’s National Center of Indigenous Excellence.

The property, which has operated on George Street for 16 years, is currently owned by the NSW Aboriginal Land Council (NSWALC) after it was transferred from the Commonwealth’s Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation (ILSC) on June 30. The ILSC is still in charge of running operations at the site.

Services at the fitness and aquatic centers are set to stop on the 8th of August, with all staff notified on Monday morning.

Former NRL star Dean Widders told NITV News he got an anxious phone call from his son, Dean Jnr, an employee of the Centre, after he received the news.

“He just got called into a meeting without any notice, any explanation, to say that his job is going to be gone in five days and he’s not gonna have any work. He has to find out how he’s going to survive for the next few months,” he said.

Speaking from outside the Centre, Widders described how busloads of children were turning up to the NCIE for their afternoon programs only to be met with locked gates.

“Their hearts are broken,” he said.

It’s not just about paychecks, it’s a place of inspiration and building aspirations.

“Changing the ripple effect of how this community works in a positive direction. That’s the big loss out of this.”

NCIE youth

Gomeroi and Wiradjuri woman Margaret Haumono, co-founder and CEO of non for profit Redfern Youth Connect, posted a video on the group’s Instagram page from the scene.

“A lot of the young Aboriginal kids were quite distressed this morning,” she told NITV News.

“They’ve been told to sign non-disclosure agreements. They’ve also been given a small amount to actually be redundant from their jobs as well. And I was quite distressing to walk into that.”

Dean Widders said a parting offer of $500 was a slap in the face for his son.

“That was to say ‘keep your mouth shut, go away silently’. That was a bit of an insult to him, to say this is what your livelihood is worth,” he said.

Natascha Haupt, who works admin at NCIE, said not one member of staff was aware of the shutdown.

“There was no community consultation, no talks with anyone about this. It’s disrespectful,” she told NITV News.

“They’re basically closing down the centre, they gave us a letter that was stating the money they would give us depending on our salary, how long we’ve been there, how many hours we did – paying us out basically.

“But it isn’t enough to survive. One of the boys would get $700, that won’t even make the next rent.”

NCIE

‘They’ve insulted us’

Prominent Redfern community man Shane Phillips, who is a regular user of the Center and has been invested since its inception, said he was devastated by the news.

“It took us from, and I know this sounds bad, but it took us from getting on the charge and the streets being all over the place to a place where we could see our own strength,” he told NITV News.

“There are Elders there and there are families and I am gutted myself. If they stopped this now, without thinking about this properly, I can’t even imagine some of the crazy shit that could happen here.”

Mr Phillips said the communication from the ILSC has been “really poor” throughout the process and that community members felt “insulted.”

“They’re not interested in that social cost and the benefits of it… they’re just all about the numbers and I’m really saddened,” he said.

“They just thought it was beyond our people to be able to think about a model that could work socially and commercially. And that is how they’ve insulted us.”

Shane Phillips

‘Worked together in good faith’: ILSC & NSWALC

Ms Haumono said it was a surprise following a meeting with the NSWALC on Tuesday.

“They assured us there would be a three-year waiting process and then an EOI would go out for the fitness and aquatic center and the community would get the first option at the tender,” she said.

“This completely came out of the blue.”

In a statement, the NSWALC said they will be seeking new management for the centre.

“We will be opening a process to secure a suitable third-party to manage the fitness and aquatic center on the site,” said NSWALC’s Chairperson Danny Chapman.

“The process will be open to both community and industry to apply.”

Today’s events come after both ILSC and NSWALC could not come to negotiate a mutual agreement about the business.

Both ILSC CEO Joseph Morrison and NSWALC CEO Yuseph Deen said, in a joint statement, that both organizations “worked together in good faith” to try and secure NCIE’s future.

“Unfortunately, we have not been able to reach agreement on terms for ongoing support of the organization and as a result, it will close. We are disappointed by the outcome and will work to support affected staff and community.”

NCIE

‘We will fight’

For one of the young people outside of NCIE this afternoon, today signals the end of a long journey.

“I’ve been here for about half my life, since I was nine-years-old,” they said.

“I’ve been coming here every single day after school, so it’s going to be a big change.

Saying that NCIE was a “safe place” for them and their friends to come together, the youth told NITV News that things won’t be the same in the suburb if the space changed.

“I feel like this is kind of like a special spot for us because it’s somewhere can just come,” they said.

“It’s a place that we all rely on, like something we can always go back to. So, just like can’t even imagine the notion of it not being there anymore.”

Shane Phillips and members of the community have planned to turn up again on Tuesday at 1pm to protest.

“I will shackle myself to that fence. If they try and go do it the wrong way without the community being involved,” he said.

“Let them see what happens this time we will fight hard.”