Ten Fingers Are Overrated

At a booth in the back of the Frontier Family Restaurant, a diner in the blue-collar town of Washington, Iowa, Trashaun Willis is eating lunch. It is the middle of June, two months before the start of his sophomore year at Washington High School. Using his right hand, the only hand he was born with, the 15-year-old trades off bites of his bacon cheeseburger and swigs of Coke, turning a mundane ritual into a perfectly paced sequence.

For the early part of his life, before he set his sights on playing basketball or football in college, these were the skills he had to master. Eating a meal. Putting on his socks. Tying his shoes. Riding a bike. And, most recently, driving a car.

Born with amniotic band syndrome, a condition in which amniotic bands entangle the fetus and stunt the growth of parts of the body, Trashaun’s left arm ends where his elbow would be—his “little arm,” he calls it.

It’s a condition he shares with rookie NFL linebacker Shaquem Griffin, a similarity not lost on Trashaun.  

“The ultimate goal is to make it to college and then hopefully the next level,” Trashaun says. “Whether it’s football or basketball, it doesn’t matter to me as long as I’m playing. I feel like I can compete with anyone on the court or on the field as long as I continue to push myself hard enough.”


Watch the full story of Trashaun Willis…and stay tuned for the surprise ending:

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On the football field, Trashaun has found a home at middle linebacker this season after playing quarterback as a freshman. At 6’5″ and 220 pounds, he has the size to play at either spot. On the hardwood, thanks to his build and silky-smooth shooting motion, Trashaun can play almost any position.

It is on the basketball court that the world first learned of him. In 2017, Trashaun dunked in a game as an eighth-grader—a moment that went viral after a flood of national coverage. Almost two years later, college coaches are showing interest in a player who will be celebrated as an underdog because of his “little arm.”

But Trashaun wants no part of that story.

“I refuse to say that I am disabled,” he says. “Because I’m not.”


Jennifer Willis

Jennifer WillisB/R

Jennifer Willis was at work the day she learned her son would be born with only one complete arm. It was a beautiful late-summer day, and she was pregnant with her second child.

Initially, she viewed the call from her doctor as nothing more than a courtesy after her most recent ultrasound. But then her doctor told her the fetus inside her womb didn’t have a left arm.

“It felt almost like a time for mourning because I couldn’t imagine my son going through life with only one arm,” she says. “At the time, I was completely devastated.”

An amniotic band had wrapped around Trashaun’s left arm, limiting blood flow and halting growth of the limb above where his elbow would have developed. As the months passed, Jennifer wondered what life would look like for her son when he was born.

On Christmas Eve that year, Trashaun was born. “He was absolutely perfect,” Jennifer says. “From that moment, it didn’t faze me, and it hasn’t since.”

Korey Williams

Korey WilliamsB/R

Korey Williams, Trashaun’s stepfather, came into his life shortly after he was born. He initially felt bad for Trashaun, although those emotions quickly dissipated, since Trashaun seemed not even the least bit impacted. Even still, Williams made it a point to embrace Trashaun’s differences. “I just wanted him to know, even at that age, that he should be comfortable with who he is,” Williams says.

In the years that followed, Trashaun grew just like any other child. But along the way, his family was careful to celebrate each achievement—like the first day his stepfather saw him tie his shoes by himself, an accomplishment that still brings a smile to Trashaun’s face.

By second grade, Trashaun told his parents what he wanted to do with his life. He wanted to play professional football or basketball.


The dunk came against Fort Madison in a mostly unoccupied Washington Middle School gymnasium. Trashaun tipped away a pass, gathered the ball, dribbled and then unleashed a dunk, all with his right hand.

His friend and teammate, Zac Stout, saw the moment. And almost immediately, he felt the urge to share it with as many people as he could.

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

One-armed dunker, Trashaun Willis, doesn’t allow his condition to stop him from defying the odds. https://t.co/1hv3e8OOVY

The following morning, Stout asked the athletic director at Washington Middle School if he could see if the security camera inside the gym had captured the dunk. Within 48 hours, Stout had the footage and shared it on Twitter.

National news outlets, sports-related and otherwise, asked for permission to share the video. The dunk made it on the SportsCenter Top 10, which prompted the entire basketball team to gather and celebrate the moment as a group.

From that moment forward, the gymnasium was never empty during basketball games—filling up throughout the season. “I just think it was just the idea of an eighth-grader with one arm dunking,” Trashaun says. “It made everyone go crazy, and I certainly enjoyed it. As a teenager, who wouldn’t love that attention?”

Over the weeks and months that followed, Trashaun received letters of inspiration from others around the country who were born with amniotic band syndrome. But 100 miles away, in Des Moines, Iowa, Trashaun’s impact was felt most of all.

Cortney Lewis first saw the dunk on the local news, a moment that brought her to tears. Her son, Jayce Crowder, who was five years old at the time, was born with the same condition, affecting the same arm.

But unlike Trashaun, who says he never struggled with his condition growing up, Jayce began to question why he was different from his friends after he was teased about his arm at Pleasant Hill Elementary School. But when the video appeared, everything changed.

“Seeing that dunk made him understand that there are other people just like him,” Lewis says. “And they accomplish things that I don’t think he thought he could at that time.”

But just knowing Trashaun was out there wasn’t enough. The next hope was that the two could meet.

Although few things about Trashaun surprise the head football coach at Washington High School—having followed him well before he coached him—James Harris is still thinking about the catch he made the previous week in practice.

James Harris

James HarrisB/R

He stands up from his desk and begins drawing on his whiteboard. With Trashaun playing tight end, the play call had him running a deep post route down the middle of the field. The pass was thrown high and in traffic. Trashaun leapt and used his 6’5″ frame to snag the ball in midair.

“I mean,” Harris says, sitting back down, “he looked just like Odell grabbing that thing.”

Odell Beckham Jr., of course, has trademarked the art of catching footballs with one hand. On the practice field, Willis has a similar reputation as a receiver—creating regular highlights under far different circumstances.

Although much of his life has been spent at quarterback, where he still plays as the team’s backup, Trashaun’s size is being put to use this season on the defensive side of the ball.

While Trashaun was passionate about playing quarterback, he has taken to playing linebacker. The timing of this and Shaquem Griffin’s NFL debut at the same position is not lost on him, although it is not the sole reason he has accepted his new role. For him, it feels like the best place to put his physical gifts to use.

At 220 pounds, Trashaun runs a respectable 4.8 40-yard dash. He’s also a member of the team’s “315 Club,” a small collection of players who can squat 315 pounds. And while he does not do a traditional barbell bench press like his teammates, Trashaun is capable of bench-pressing a 90-pound dumbbell with his right arm.

Trashaun Willis

Trashaun WillisB/R

“He has a disability,” Harris says. “But he is not disabled. What I’ve told my coaches, and what I think is important, is that we don’t impose our own limitations on him.”

Junior varsity basketball coach Nathan Matthes adopted this same mentality when he first met Trashaun before last season. He knew nothing about the player other than he had tremendous size and was coming off an ankle injury playing football.

He was curious what his game would look like with the use of only one hand—curious enough to play his star player in a game of one-on-one with his hand tucked behind his back the whole time.

“I wanted to understand what it was like and how he was able to do the things he was able to on the floor,” Matthes says. Trashaun won convincingly.

When Matthes’ parents attended one of Trashaun’s games, they had the same initial reaction as opposing fans before tipoff. They were curious, perhaps even skeptical. A few hours later, after Trashaun buried a handful of three-pointers, blocked shots and scored points in the paint, they left the gym in awe.

“His jumpers are just so pure,” Matthes says. “I know how this sounds, but I think he could contribute to a college team right now.”

Shortly after his freshman season, the inquiries from colleges began. With three seasons still to play, Trashaun already has heard from Division II and Division III schools. They are not asking the Washington High coaching staff members how they believe Trashaun will fare in college. Instead, the college recruiters are asking about Trashaun’s attitude and work ethic—the same thing they’d ask a coach about any other player.


Photo by Adam Kramer

Photo by Adam KramerTrashaun Willis and Jayce Crowder

It is two hours before football practice, and Trashaun is inside the high school gym shooting three-pointers. He lifts the ball up with his right hand, stabilizes it with his “little arm” and sends it airborne. The motion is natural and smooth as he fires off shot after shot.

He is not alone. Chasing him, tackling him and occasionally shooting at the basket is seven-year-old Jayce Crowder, who made the drive from Des Moines to see his friend.

Jayce, like Trashaun, is without the majority of his left arm. He wears a gray shirt with “TEN FINGERS ARE OVERRATED” written across the front in orange text—a gift from Trashaun.

Since the video of the dunk first appeared nearly two years ago, Jayce and Trashaun have spent time together on a handful of occasions. When they first met, knowing Jayce was struggling, Trashaun gave him advice: “I told him we were made this way for a reason. And we can’t let others get us down or feel down about something we cannot control. That he should embrace who he is, because he is special.”

Today, as their parents look on and laugh from the sidelines, the two enjoy each other’s company. Occasionally, Jayce tries to take Trashaun down with a wrestling move—the sport Jayce has only recently picked up.

Two hours go by, and the Washington football team eventually trickles into the gym. Rain has pushed the practice indoors, and Trashaun quickly transitions from one sport to the other.

Trashaun’s hope is that a few years from now, whether it’s through basketball or football, he will find his way onto a college team. And that one day, children around the country will look to him as inspiration, the same way they look at Griffin now that he’s made it to the NFL.

But on this day, being that sort of role model for one seven-year-old is more than enough.

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All you need to know about Afghanistan’s parliamentary elections

Afghanistan is set to vote in long-delayed parliamentary elections for the third time since the fall of the Taliban in 2001.

The polls, which were originally scheduled for early 2015, were last pushed to October 20 due to security fears and reforms in the voter registration process.

The Afghan government has striven to assure people that it will be safe to vote, but in a country wracked by violence – largely attributable to attacks by the Taliban armed group – many are still wary.

The Taliban has vowed to disrupt the “bogus elections”.

“People who are trying to help in holding this process successfully by providing security should be targeted and no stone should be left unturned for the prevention and failure [of the elections],” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement last week.

Here is what you need to know about the upcoming elections:

When’s election day?

Saturday, October 20. Polls open at 7am (02:30 GMT) and close at 4pm (12:30 GMT).

There are 21,000 polling stations in 5,100 polling centres in the country’s 33 participating provinces.

 

What are people voting for?

The Afghan parliament comprises the Mesherano Jirga (upper house) and the Wolesi Jirga (lower house).

Saturday’s vote will be for the Wolesi Jirga, whose elected parliamentarians serve five-year terms.

There are 250 seats in the Wolesi Jirga, including 10 seats that are reserved for Kuchis (nomads) and one jointly for the Sikh and Hindu communities. There must be 68 female representatives, with each province having at least one.

The Meshrano Jirga consists of parliamentarians chosen from local councils and those appointed by the president, as well as members elected in district elections.

 

Who can vote?

All Afghan citizens who are 18 years of age or older with a valid voter identification card have the right to vote.

In order to get a valid card, Afghans registered themselves on a new biometric system that was put in place to prevent voter fraud.

All previously issued registration cards have been cancelled.

The Independent Election Commission (IEC) announced that 8,918,107 people have registered to vote in the elections, of which 3,067,918 are women and 5,681,592 are men.

The IEC said that more 600,000 registrations were cancelled as they were invalid for various reasons.

Who are the candidates?

According to the IEC, there are 2,565 candidates running in the Wolesi Jirga elections, 417 of whom are women. 

A total of 205 – nearly eight percent – of candidates have registered as members of political parties. The rest are independent candidates.  

According to an Afghan Analyst Network count, Vice President Abdul Rashid Dostum’s party, Jonbesh-e Melli-ye Islami, has the most candidates, with 44, including eight women.

It is followed by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hezb-i-Islami with 42, including two women; and Deputy Chief Executive Haji Muhammad Mohaqqeq’s party, Hezb-e Wahdat-e Islami-ye Mardom, with 22 candidates, including five women.

 

Will the whole country vote at once?

Voting in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar will be delayed by one week following this week’s assassination of the powerful provincial police commander, General Abdul Raziq.

The election will also not take place in the eastern province of Ghazni due to two intertwined issues: firstly, the precarious security situation in the province because of a high level of Taliban activity and their complete control over some parts of it; and secondly, the ongoing dispute over how to divide Ghazni’s electoral constituencies to have a more balanced ethnic representation.

In the 2010 parliamentary elections, the Pashtuns and Tajiks of Ghazni were not able to cast ballots because voting could not be held in their Taliban-controlled areas. This resulted in the Hazaras, a minority community, winning all the seats in Ghazni, leaving the Pashtuns and Tajiks without representation.

Why is this election important?

The Afghan government aims to send a message to the Taliban with this election: that despite the ongoing violent campaigns by the armed group, the government is functioning and that the Taliban will have to come to the negotiating table through a political process acceptable to all Afghans.

 

What are the challenges?

The Taliban, who have been fighting Afghan and US-led NATO forces for the past 17 years, have rejected the elections and warned candidates and Afghan security forces that they would be targeted, as would schools whose premises will be used as polling stations.

The IEC said in a statement on Wednesday that at least 10 candidates have been killed since July.

At least 2,000 polling stations that were threatened directly by the Taliban will remain closed.

Local media reported that some 70,000 soldiers will be deployed across Afghanistan to provide security.

Meanwhile, the IEC has taken measures to avoid possible vote-rigging in a country with a history of voter fraud.

A few weeks ahead of the election, the government introduced a biometric system which records each voter’s photo and fingerprints in order to register.

Following the polls, this information will be sent to the IEC’s main data centre where it will be checked for repeat votes.

The election will be observed by more than 400,000 civil society activists, local election watchdog institutions and representatives from media outlets.

When will the results be announced?

Ballot counting will begin upon the conclusion of voting at 4pm Kabul time in the presence of election observers.

The IEC has not set a timeline for announcing official results, but preliminary results are expected within a month.

 

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Lil Wayne’s ‘Uproar’ Video Is A Party So Proper Shiggy Had To Be There



YouTube/Young Money

Lil Wayne was one of the stars of the BET Hip Hop Awards earlier this week. Accepting the I Am Hip Hop trophy during the ceremony, Weezy took time out to thank the off-duty police officer who saved his life after a suicide attempt at age 12. The result was a resounding round of applause and a standing O from the crowd (including folks like Busta Rhymes).

With all that in mind, it’s good to know that A) Tha Carter V has been out there for nearly a month now, and B) Wayne’s latest video for “Uproar” is a celebratory affair, complete with appearances by Swizz Beatz and by the maker of all things celebratory, Shiggy. It’s the #UproarChallenge, y’all. Join in.

When the album dropped in late September, the challenge went wide, so it only made sense that the song’s video would capture the experience. And with Wayne’s smiling face and plenty of dancers ecstatically making the song’s electricity come to life, it’s a proper celebration indeed.

That tenor makes sense given the piled-up legal battles that prevented Tha Carter V from being released for about four years. In an interview on The Tonight Show earlier this month, Weezy elaborated a bit on how the troubles sidelined his creativity.

“I’m so into what I’m doing every day, meaning my craft, that when I have to go too far into something else, I put somebody else in charge of it,” he said. “When there’s somebody else that was in charge of it messes up, then everything blows up. That’s how everything blew up. We just needed the debris to clear.”

In the “Uproar” video, there’s not a trace of debris to found. And it feels good. Check out the clip above.

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Facebook hires one of the least popular party leaders in modern British history’ to fix its image

Facebook has hired the former UK Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg as its head of global affairs and communications. The former Liberal Democrat politician will be relocating to Silicon Valley in the new year, but starts work on Monday, according to the FT.

SEE ALSO: Facebook users in the UK will now see who paid for the political ads in their feed

Clegg takes over from Elliot Schrage, who held the position for a decade. Schrage stepped down in June after being a key player in addressing Facebook’s recent struggles with fake news, alleged election meddling, data breaches, and the Cambridge Analytica scandal. 

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg wrote in a Facebook post that Clegg “understands deeply the responsibilities we have to people who use our service around the world.”

Sandberg also praised Clegg for “his experience and ability to work through complex issues.”

In a 2014 YouGov poll, Clegg was voted the least popular party leader in modern British history. In his later years as leader of the Liberal Democrats, Clegg was criticised for having a “toxic brand” following a controversy over the party failing to deliver on an election promise to oppose any increase in university tuition fees. 

Clegg stepped down as leader of the Liberal Democrats after the 2015 election, where the party was reduced from 57 seats in Parliament to just eight. In the 2017 election, he lost his seat to Labour. 

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Roll your eyes all you like, but Instagram poets are redefining the genre for millennials

We millennials like our poetry typed out in neat fonts on rustic pastel backgrounds, centred in a tiny square on a small screen. We read short, simple, and relatable poems which may strike a chord with us for a second before we scroll on to the next Timothée Chalamet appreciation post or #brunch pic.

I’m talking, of course, about poetry native to Instagram. A budding genre scoffed by the literary community but loved by millions of young readers. 

SEE ALSO: This Instagram poet is rewriting fairy tales with modern gender roles

This Insta-friendly verse, with its distinct tone and aesthetic, is serving sincerity and feeling in the place we need it the most: the ever ironic, cynical internet. It’s this vulnerability on a platform that’s more-often-than-not replete with inauthenticity and polished veneers that makes it so striking. 

Roll your eyes all you like, but Instagram poets are defining the genre for the millennial generation with a radical democratisation and push for diversity in the poetry world. Their work is accessible in more than one sense of the word, and while the critics may not always like it, their work is now being celebrated as “gateway poetry” — and that can only be a good thing. 

Household names in the Instagram poetry realm are now also recognised names in bookstores and the literary world in general. The most famous poet of Instagram is 25-year-old Rupi Kaur, whose poetry has — apart from securing seven-figure sales numbers — reached the level of popularity and recognisability where it is now a (frankly hilarious) meme. R.M. Drake, or Robert Macias, is perhaps best known for being reposted by the Kardashians, but he is also the author of several bestsellers. British poets Charly Cox (read her poem about kale) and queer poet Yrsa Daley Ward are making strides in Europe. Not to mention Nayyirah Waheed (read up on her plagiarism dispute with Kaur for real-life Insta poet drama), Tyler Knott Gregson, Amanda Lovelace, and Lang Leav. 

This is a diverse group of poets, many of whom have long since graduated from Instagram to print poetry, causing some to argue that the term”Instagram poet” is a lazy one, that their medium is the least interesting thing about them. But these poets do have more in common than their platform of choice, poetry experts say. The Instagram poets have given birth to a genre of their own.

“What the poets of Instagram tend to have in common is what I would call emotional relatability or accessibility, and a tone and vocabulary that is reminiscent of the self-help or self-improvement movement — many read like motivational quotes,” says Dr Eleanor Spencer-Regan, digital director of the Institute of Poetry and Poetics at Durham University.

“It is not really about complex language, it is more about easily translatable universal emotions.”

It is precisely this relatability that makes Instagram poetry so resonant among millennials. Rather than alienating a young audience with convoluted language or complicated form, the ultimate goal of the Insta poets is always to connect directly with their audience. 

Judith Palmer, Director of the Poetry Society, says that one of the defining characteristics of Instagram poetry is that it’s less about flexing your linguistic muscles and more about gaining instant understanding from readers. “The language isn’t often being pushed and I don’t see a complex vocabulary,” says Palmer. “It is not really about complex language, it is more about easily translatable universal emotions.”

While short form diary-style writing has been an internet culture staple pretty much since the days of LiveJournal, Insta poets are breaking new ground by insisting that their writing is poetry and demanding it be viewed and respected as such.

According to Martha Sprackland, Associate Editor at Poetry London, that’s one of the things that sets high profile Insta poets apart from your average inspirational quote account. 

“There has long been light verse, slogans, inspirational quotes, whatever else; what’s more recent is their determination to be included in the bounds of ‘poetry,’” Sprackland tells Mashable. Per Sprackland, their dedication to belonging in the poetry genre is part of what has helped them gather an eager young audience around poetry. “I know that the rise of Instagram poetry has changed the perception of ‘poetry’ as a whole for large numbers of young people,” says Sprackland. 

While Instagram poets have achieved great mainstream commercial success, literary critics have unsparingly criticised them and their supposedly “amateur” writing. With their style and medium of choice, they are leading a commercialisation of the poetry genre and diluting the quality of poetry, a once high-brow literary genre. 

Poet Rebecca Watts argues in the poetry journal PN Review that Instagram poets are ruining poetry as an art form. “In the redefinition of poetry as ‘short-form communication’ the floodgates have been opened, writes Watts. “The reader is dead: long live consumer-driven content and the ‘instant gratification’ this affords,” Watts writes in the piece entitled ‘The Cult of the Noble Amateur.’ 

Watts wants the literary community to “stop celebrating amateurism and ignorance in our poetry, ” and insists that the size of one’s following says nothing of the quality of the writing (Watts even goes as far as to make a comparison to Donald Trump).

There is of course some truth to the point that a massive following does not ensure quality, as one trickster poet attempted to prove when he obtained thousands of followers writing four word poems on Instagram. 

But, according to the poetry experts, we’re looking at emerging poetry the wrong way. The exposure that Instagram has brought to the genre is a good thing, despite the fact that they’re taking the genre in a direction that the critics might not like. 

“What are those critics doing over there?” Sprackland asks. “It’s not for them. It’s a different genre, and it’s daft to try and approach it bristling with all the usual tools of the ‘contemporary page poetry’ critic,” Sprackland says. “It’s not a case of merit, but of misfiling, of mislabelling, and then a wilful refusal to admit that mislabelling for fear of either causing offence or appearing snobbish.”

But, this critical snobbery to newcomers to a genre isn’t exactly a new thing. Spencer-Regan points out that frowning upon art in a new more accessible medium it is “definitely not a new response.” 

“The emergence of this new kind of poetry can really make us question what poetry is and what makes it good. But these poets do reach large audiences, and their work clearly resonates with a lot of people — though it may not be to the personal taste of many academics and literary critics,” says Spencer-Regan. 

“It’s giving opportunities to many women, people of colour, members of the LGBTQ+ community, and people who publicly disclose mental illnesses.”

Spencer-Regan argues that the Instagram poets have, in fact, succeeded at securing more diversity in a genre traditionally perceived to be dominated by white, straight people (both when it comes to both readers and writers). Spencer-Regan argues that these poets and their strategic use of social platforms have in fact reinvigorated and democratised the poetry world. 

“This is a radically democratic method of publishing that is giving opportunities to many women, people of colour, members of the LGBTQ+ community, and people who publicly disclose mental illnesses,” says Spencer-Regan. “These people are rejecting the old rules of a literary world that they feel may have rejected them.”

According to Palmer of The Poetry Society, the Insta poets have successfully managed to bring poetry into people’s everyday life. Many poems deal with topics found in all sorts of Instagram content, such as body image, sexuality and gender. 

“What we’re seeing is contemporary life reflected and that is the big appeal. People have for too long had this idea that poetry is a small world, and that poetry is one thing. This is an unnecessary narrowing,” says Palmer. 

And, like it or not, Instagram poetry has introduced young people to a genre that, in the recent years, hasn’t had much of a hold on them. 

The poetry of Instagram may not be to the critics’ likings, or the likings of some adult readers, but that shouldn’t make us write it off as meaningless, trivial diary scribbles.

“Poetry will no longer be something remote or intimidating, but an art form that these young readers feel they can claim as their own.”

“You could argue that some of the poetry is trite, clichéd, bland or derivative. But we’re coming to it as more mature, more sophisticated readers,” says Spencer-Regan. “I can imagine being 14 and then finding these pages — they would speak to me in a whole other way, giving voice to feelings and experiences that I perhaps couldn’t have articulated for myself at that age.” 

Spencer-Regan sees Instagram poetry as a harnessing of the power of social media to get young people excited about verse. 

“We talk about Harry Potter as a ‘gateway’ book, and I suspect that these poems can work in the same way — to make young people curious about poe,” Spencer-Regan says. “Poetry will no longer be something remote or intimidating, but an art form that these young readers feel they can claim as their own.”

Whether you like or dislike the poetry in your feed, or you relate to the minimalist relatability of the Insta poets, their influence must be acknowledged. After all, if you have haters, you must be doing something right. 

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Put Thanos’ face on a pumpkin and you’ll get a pretty glorious Photoshop battle

Halloween will soon be upon us, which means that it’s almost the time of year where we collectively turn the humble pumpkin into an elaborately carved and decorated work of art.

SEE ALSO: This artist’s incredible, hyperreal pencil drawings look like photographs

One such embellished pumpkin in particular is getting a lot of attention on Reddit. 

A photo of a big pumpkin with the face of Marvel villain Thanos painted on it was posted to the subreddit r/photoshopbattles. 

The photo, which also features a smaller pumpkin decorated as Thanos’ clenched golden fist, was uploaded by Redditor MOVIEREVOLT, and soon inspired an epic Photoshop battle.

The pumpkin head and hand was put on the body of the man himself, obvs.

<img alt="" data-credit-name="Imgur/Daedagon/Walt Disney Studios” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/KUoS6lUf8Vsb7wuSNvvey45J1WI=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F867015%2Fa3eb5005-91d5-4d67-b404-db349b6b911e.jpg”&gt;

Image: Imgur/Daedagon/Walt Disney Studios

See the similarity between pumpkin Thanos and Handsome Squidward from Spongebob Squarepants?

<img data-credit-name="imgur/SchrodingersNutsack/Nickelodeon” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/u9hXpNTAE8boM3mCEP1f5E1dHf8=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F867017%2Ffc9970d6-d181-4159-9c22-659358e6a749.jpg”&gt;

Image: imgur/SchrodingersNutsack/Nickelodeon

Did you see the iconic cosplay mashup of Thanos and McDonald’s mascot Grimace? This Redditor clearly did. 

<img data-credit-name="imgur/cheetox23” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/PAswnOEAth1KVFwSNjhISP5IA4s=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F867029%2Fc2d2e4a7-f18c-4eae-827c-75d866b05706.jpg”&gt;

Image: imgur/cheetox23

Which of course led to…

<img class="" data-credit-name="imgur/wienerpoop/walt disney studios” data-credit-provider=”custom type” data-fragment=”m!c99b” data-image=”https://ift.tt/2R2Rkba; data-micro=”1″ src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/0LZfzKiZv7MorBVoMuyJ9FaPZX0=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F867033%2F2cee2520-e965-4ad1-bb8d-4683c4aff30f.jpg”&gt;

Image: imgur/wienerpoop/walt disney studios

Let’s make pumpkin season synonymous with Photoshop battle season, shall we?

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BepiColombo launches to Mercury on Friday

Artist's illustration of BepiColombo at Mercury.
Artist’s illustration of BepiColombo at Mercury.

Image: ESA/NASA/JHU-APL/CARNEGIE

By Mark Kaufman and Miriam Kramer

Most deep space missions send spacecraft hurtling far from the sun, into the frozen unknown hundreds of millions of miles beyond Earth. But on Friday, the European Space Agency (ESA) will blast two orbiters to heavily cratered Mercury, the planet closest to the sun.

Liftoff of the two craft — collectively called BepiColombo — is scheduled for 9:45 p.m. ET on Friday. It can be watched live here.

A European Ariane 5 rocket will lift BepiColombo into space. The two craft will then spend seven years traveling through the void before arriving at their Mercury destination, a metallic outpost in a relatively warm part of the solar system. 

Read on for the vital facts about this monumental excursion. 

1. Why they’re visiting Mercury

Radiation-blasted Mercury is still a little explored place. 

Only two NASA spacecraft, Mariner 10 and Messenger, have visited Mercury before, with Messenger intentionally crashing into the planet in 2015.

By improving our understanding Mercury’s composition, atmosphere, and magnetism, scientists can better understand how rocky-Earth-like planets came to be — and provide insight into whether other far-off solar systems may have formed similar planets. 

“Exploring Mercury is therefore fundamental to answering important astrophysical and philosophical questions such as ‘Are Earth-like planets common in the Galaxy?’,” the ESA writes.

2. Why the name is “BepiColombo”

Like many great spacecraft — here’s looking at you, Hubble and Kepler — BepiColombo is named after a scientist. 

“The mission is named after the Italian mathematician and engineer Giuseppe (Bepi) Colombo (1920–84),” ESA said in a statement. 

“He is known for explaining Mercury’s peculiar characteristic of rotating about its own axis three times in every two orbits of the Sun.”

Now Colombo’s namesake is heading to the planet he helped us all get to know a little better.

3. Why there are two spacecraft involved

BepiColombo is made up of two different spacecraft with two very different jobs. 

One craft, called the Mercury Planetary Orbiter, will carry 11 scientific instruments to the small planet; they’re all focused on mapping Mercury and the space environment that surrounds it.

The other spacecraft, called Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter, was built by Japan’s space agency and will focus on studying the planet’s magnetic environment. 

4. How BepiColombo will deal with being so close to the sun

BepiColombo’s sensitive instruments will encounter temperatures rivaling those in a pizza oven. But ESA has a plan to keep the two spacecraft nice and cool. 

“To cope with this, the spacecraft’s external items, such as the antennas, solar arrays, Sun sensors, and multilayer insulation, have temperature-resistant outer layers and protective coatings, which were individually qualified to prove their capability,” ESA said in a statement

The Mercury Planetary Orbiter will also come equipped with a radiator designed to reflect heat from the spacecraft, keeping it functioning even when close to the sun.

5. How long it will take

It’s not exactly a quick trip to the closest planet to the sun.

Once BepiColombo launches, it should travel through space for a little over 7 years before making it into orbit around Mercury. 

Before beginning its orbit of Mercury in 2025, the spacecraft will flyby Earth in 2020, flyby Venus in 2020 and 2021, and then perform six different flybys of Mercury before making it into orbit.

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‘It is time’: Women candidates in Afghanistan promise change

Kabul, Afghanistan – Pashtana Arabzai feels she has done her homework and says it is only a matter of days before she realises her ambition.

For the past three weeks, she has travelled back and forth across Afghanistan‘s capital, Kabul, trying to convince voters to back her in Saturday’s parliamentary elections.

Arabzai is among the 118 women candidates trying to secure one of the nine seats in the city reserved for women. Kabul has a total of 33 seats.

As campaigning drew to a close, Arabzai was in an upbeat mood, promising change if she won.

“It is time for women. It is time for young people. It is time for us to decide our future and implement our vision,” the 27-year-old former TV presenter told Al Jazeera.

“It is only us, the young generation, which can bring real change to our country. Our society needs us,” Arabzai said while three of her women supporters sitting nearby nodded in agreement.

The Afghanistan parliamentary election – delayed repeatedly for the past three years – is the third since the Taliban was ousted from power in 2001 by US-led forces.

A record 417 women are fighting for a seat in the 250-member parliament.

The country’s constitution reserves 27 percent of the seats for women, making the Afghan parliament one of the most representative as far as women are concerned.

Daunting task

But women candidates say they face a daunting task as they aspire to leaderhip positions in a country marred by nearly two decades of armed rebellion waged by Taliban armed group.

The armed group, which still controls a third of the country, is boycotting the elections and has promised to disrupt the process.

The polls are also the first since the NATO combat mission ended in 2014, when the Afghan forces took over responsibility for security in the country.

Arabzai is among 118 women in the fray for Kabul’s nine reserved seats [Hamza Mohamed/Al Jazeera]

Since the beginning of the campaign on September 28, at least 10 candidates have been killed and dozens injured. Two other candidates were abducted.

But that hasn’t deterred the women candidates from holding rallies and campaigning.

Shenkay Karokhel is a former Afghanistan ambassador to Canada and resigned from her post earlier this year to return to Kabul and contest again.

Karokhel says the threats won’t stop her from trying to make a difference in her country.

“Life in Afghanistan is full of risks and challenges. Even walking down the street is a risk. And it’s not just politicians facing them, but also the average citizens,” the former diplomat told Al Jazeera.

Karokhel has served in parliament twice and was not planning to contest again, but that changed when her close friends intervened.

“They forced me to resign from my post in Canada. But my children are not happy because they know how dangerous the job is,” she said.

‘Women less corrupt’

Arabzai and Karokhel say the reason why more women are now deciding to take part in politics is simple: to fight corruption.

“Women are less corrupt than men in our country. We are the first victims of corruption. More women in places of power means less corruption and more development,” Karokhel said.

Money continues to play a role in who makes it to the top offices in Afghanistan. Campaigning is expensive and some candidates allege people demand money in return for their votes.

“Many people have asked for money to vote for me. But that is not how I want to be voted in. That is not the politics that I’m interested in. That is the politics that got our country here in the first place,” Arabzai said.

In Khusahal Khan Mina neighbourhood of Kabul, the challenge facing Sabri Andar is greater than that faced by Arabzai or Karokhel.

Andar is disabled and moves around in a wheelchair. But she is determined to become a lawmaker.

“I decided to run for office three years ago after seeing all the problems young people and women in particular face in our society,” Andar told Al Jazeera as a small crowd of supporters waited outside her office.

She was the first speaker of Afghanistan’s youth parliament.

“In our society, some people believe women should not lead. I want to show them that it is possible to be young, a woman, disabled, and also be a member of parliament,” the 26-year-old said.

With polling stations in Afghanistan set to open in less than 24 hours, Andar has a message for the country’s youth.

“We should not lose hope. Only we can change our situation, not others. The youth need to go out and exercise their right tomorrow,” she added.


Follow Hamza Mohamed on Twitter: @Hamza_Africa

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James Corden turned ‘Halloween’ into a ridiculous true crime documentary

By Laura Byager

You’ve gotta love a good true crime documentary, with all its real-life drama and grainy courtroom footage.

James Corden took it upon himself to give Michael Myers, the famously silent killer of the Halloween movie franchise, the true crime treatment. In a sketch on The Late Late Show, Corden donned the signature Halloween mask and sat down for interrogation with a pretty thin claim to innocence. 

“I don’t know where this ‘he doesn’t talk’ thing comes from, I thought I had the right to remain silent, but whatever,” Corden says.

You’ve got 11 movies worth of evidence stacked against you, mate.

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Julia Louis-Dreyfus opens up about breast cancer, says she’s feeling strong

2017%2f09%2f12%2fd7%2fsambwBy Sam Haysom

Julia Louis-Dreyfus is back at work again, and she’s feeling good.

The Veep star, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in September 2017, has been sharing regular updates on social media as she goes through treatment.

And on Jimmy Kimmel Live on Thursday, she confirmed that she’s beaten the disease.

SEE ALSO: 32-year-old YouTuber shares his terminal cancer diagnosis in really moving video

“I feel very strong,” she told Kimmel. “Everything is good, I’m back at work on Veep, which is amazing.”

Louis-Dreyfus explained that she’d previously had to stall production on the show, which factored in to her decision to make her situation public.

“A lot of people worked for me and I knew I couldn’t really keep it private because I had to tell everybody what was going on, and then I just sort of embraced that and I got a lot of positive feedback,” she said. “I think people liked that I had a sense of humour about it, and also I think it’s an important conversation to have about health and healthcare, and I very much considered the notion that, as someone battling this disease, the idea that I might not have health insurance, which I do thanks to my great union, is completely terrifying.”

Louis-Dreyfus first shared the news of her breast cancer in a tweet posted last September. 

In the months since, she’s posted updates on her social media channels.

Hero.

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