Sesame Street writer confirms that Bert and Ernie are a gay couple

Congratulations to the happy couple!
Congratulations to the happy couple!

Image: GEORGE WENDT/picture alliance via Getty Images

2016%2f09%2f16%2fe5%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzew.e9fc9By Heather Dockray

The queer fan community have long known that Bert and Ernie were gay Muppets. It’s just taken a little bit longer for the rest of the world to catch up.

In an interview with Queerty, one of Sesame Street‘s original writers, Mark Saltzman, finally confirmed the rumors. According to Saltzman, Bert and Ernie aren’t just gay. He thinks of them as a “loving couple.”

SEE ALSO: All the best queer memes inspired by Nintendo

“I remember one time that a column from The San Francisco Chronicle, a preschooler in the city turned to mom and asked ‘are Bert & Ernie lovers?’” Saltzman told Queerty. “And that got passed around, and everyone had their chuckle and went back to it. And I always felt that without a huge agenda, when I was writing Bert & Ernie, they were. I didn’t have any other way to contextualize them. The other thing was, more than one person referred to Arnie [Saltzman’s partner at the time] & I as “Bert & Ernie.”

Of course Bert and Ernie are gay. No one wants to hang around their roommate that much, regardless of how good they are at chess. How could Ernie put up with Bert’s pigeons if he didn’t love him in that way?

Saltzman explained how his own same-sex relationship became a model for Bert & Ernie — even if the rest of the cast wasn’t aware of the underlying queer dynamics:

“And Arnie as a film editor—if you thought of Bert with a job in the world, wouldn’t that be perfect? Bert with his paper clips and organization? And I was the jokester. So it was the Bert & Ernie relationship, and I was already with Arnie when I came to Sesame Street. So I don’t think I’d know how else to write them, but as a loving couple. I wrote sketches … Arnie’s OCD would create friction with how chaotic I was. And that’s the Bert & Ernie dynamic,” Satlzman said. 

Justice, served. Twitter seems to think so too:

Bert and Ernie were just confirmed gay and Snuffy was a closeted depressed gay how was this not the #1 trending news story today this is the most important cultural event of our time https://t.co/flzSjEjb2e

— Klaudia Amenábar // let a blind actress play Toph (@kaludiasays) September 18, 2018

However, I have more questions for Bert and Ernie: Are they still monogamous after all these years? Do they have to attend couple’s therapy to manage Bert’s anal retentiveness? Did any of them ever have a thing with Big Bird? 

Regardless of their answers, we should all be so happy for their love.  

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Here’s a new font that will help you fudge your next school paper

2017%2f10%2f20%2fa0%2fchloebryan11.0b114By Chloe Bryan

Remember how you used to adjust the margins on your school papers so you could write a little bit less? If you’re still in school, remember how you still do that? Now, at long last, there’s a font that will do all the cheating for you: Times Newer Roman.

According to its creator, the digital agency MSCHF, the typeface “kinda looks like Times New Roman, except each character is 5 to 10 per cent wider.” This means, ostensibly, that you can turn in a paper in Times Newer Roman without it being terribly obvious that you’ve downloaded a full new font instead of writing 200 more words.

SEE ALSO: Email sign-offs, ranked

Here’s a side-by-side comparison from the website. Honestly, the difference is incredibly subtle.

<img alt="A little extra length." class="" data-credit-name="Times Newer Roman” data-credit-provider=”custom type” data-fragment=”m!fd6a” data-image=”https://ift.tt/2OAGZCz; data-micro=”1″ src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/4qh6vkfStG3el1_B5cd9pNninnQ=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F847814%2Fd2d6f994-7a9e-4eff-bcfa-0e2e4cddbb92.png”&gt;

Image: Times Newer Roman

As with any shortcut, though, there is one major caveat. You’ll only be able to use the font on papers that you either print or save to PDF. As Lifehacker points out, if you submit the document in Word, the font will only register if it’s also downloaded to your instructor’s computer. Unless they’re also cheating on their term paper (if it’s a TA, maybe they are!), this will probably pose an issue.

Anyway, we should probably say that we don’t condone font-fudging of any kind. We’re just letting you know this exists.

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Apple’s iOS 12 saved my old iPad mini

Until yesterday, I was thinking of turning my old iPad mini 2 into a digital photo frame. The tablet worked, but it was painfully slow. Launching an app always had an unacceptable lag, and any serious multitasking was near-impossible. 

Then I updated it from iOS 11 to iOS 12, and suddenly the little guy was nearly as good as new. 

SEE ALSO: Here’s how to update your iPhone or iPad to iOS 12

I did not expect this, despite Apple’s claims that iOS 12 increases performance on its devices. The company says the same thing for every major release, but the differences have historically been negligible. In some cases, the iPad got slower after updating — but not this time.

I also updated my iPhone X to the iOS 12 beta a few weeks ago, and I haven’t seen any major performance improvements. But the iPhone X, which came out last year, was fast to begin with; the iPad mini 2 is five years old. 

Don’t get me wrong: My iPad mini 2 isn’t nearly as fast or fluid as a brand new iPad, especially the Pro. And not everything is perfect; firing up my favorite writing app Ulysses takes more than 10 seconds on the first go (it was considerably faster the second time around, but still slower than I would’ve liked). 

But at least my iPad mini doesn’t stutter as I swipe on the main screen. At least I don’t have to constantly fear my apps are going to crash. Because that’s been the case for the past year or so.

Perhaps all these improvements were only in my head — or specific to my particular iPad. But judging by what I’ve heard from friends and colleagues who updated their old iPhones and iPads to iOS 12, as well as this quick Twitter poll (below), most people feel the same. 

Have you upgraded an old iPhone or iPad to iOS 12? If yes, is it working:

— Stan Schroeder (@franticnews) September 18, 2018

For some hard data on performance improvements between an iPad mini 2 and older iPhones on iOS 11.4.1 and iOS 12, check out Ars Technica’s excellent comparison. I’m not sure those figures tell the whole story, though. More important, to me, is my overall experience while using the device, and it has simply been a lot better — more fluid, more responsive, far less stuttering. 

Https%3a%2f%2fvdist.aws.mashable.com%2fcms%2f2018%2f9%2ff5b1a1e2 a157 199f%2fthumb%2f00001

I also have to commend Apple for even including the iPad mini 2 in this update. In fact, iOS 12 is available for all devices that run iOS 11; not one of them was left behind. The iPhone 5S and the iPad mini 2 came out in 2013. Five years of support (and counting) is the type of commitment that’s expected for premium gadgets like these, and Apple delivered. 

All the iOS 11-compatible devices can run iOS 12.

All the iOS 11-compatible devices can run iOS 12.

Image: Apple, Stan Schroeder

This has not always been the case. Apple launched iOS 10 in 2016, and the original iPad mini — then a four-year-old device — was not supported. And from my experience, none of the major iOS updates significantly improved performance on iPhones, iPad or iPods, new or old. 

The official release of iOS 12 is, thus, a big step in the right direction. It doesn’t bring a ton of flashy new features, but, perhaps for the first time, it improves old iOS devices by a significant margin, and this is something a lot of users will appreciate. 

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Champions League Hype Tuesday 18

  1. The Stage Is Set

    B/R Football @brfootball

    The stage is set for the Champions League stars 🌟 https://t.co/38tJInjyir

  2. Matchday 1 Fixtures

    Bleacher Report Live @brlive

    It’s here.

    The #UCL Group Stage starts today 🙌 https://t.co/aknPRHZLSi

  3. UEFA Champions League @ChampionsLeague

  4. 5-Time Champs Barca Face PSV

    ⏰ 12:55pm ET/5:55pm UK
    📍 Camp Nou, Barcelona

  5. Barcelona vs. PSV Is Messi vs. Lozano 🔥

  6. How to Stop Messi—From Those Who’ve Done It

    via Bleacher Report

  7. PSV Star Lozano Wants to Play for Barca

    via Bleacher Report

  8. Messi: We Have Unfinished Business in the UCL

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Messi: “We still have unfinished business in the #UCL this year”

    (🎥 via @FCBarcelona)

    https://t.co/zQj2he0oU3

  9. B/R Live: Watch Every Champions League Game (🇺🇸 Only)

    via Br

  10. 5 x Winners Liverpool vs. Electric PSG

    ⏰ 3pm ET/8pm UK
    📍 Anfield, Liverpool, UK

  11. Who You Got?

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Liverpool vs. PSG

    Front three goals 😍 https://t.co/kA6J1T7oly

  12. Liverpool vs. PSG: There Will Be Goals ⚡

  13. Skills, Pace and Goals: Sadio Mane is Liverpool’s Latest Weapon

  14. #LIVPSG: Two Contenders with Plenty to Prove

    via The Independent

  15. Why Celebs Are All Over PSG

    via Bleacher Report

  16. Liverpool ‘Like a Virgin’ Ahead of PSG Opener, Says Klopp

    via Bleacher Report

  17. Who’s Gonna Win the Big One? 🏆

    B/R Football @brfootball

    The Champions League is BACK ⭐ https://t.co/E9m6r89rsw

  18. Inter vs. Tottenham

    ⏰ 12:55pm ET/5:55pm UK
    📍Giuseppe Meazza, Milan

  19. Inter vs. Spurs Is Icardi vs. Kane 💥

    via Football-italia

  20. INTER BACK IN THE CHAMPIONS LEAGUE | #InterIsHere ⭐⚫🔵

  21. Spurs Missing Alderweireld, Tripper, Lloris and Dele vs. Inter

    via Bleacher Report

  22. B/R Football @brfootball

    Throwback to 2010 when @GarethBale11 ran riot against Inter ⚡ #UCL https://t.co/mXuAu641fM

  23. The World’s Greatest Under One Roof 🌟

  24. Atletico Madrid Face off With Monaco

    ⏰ 3pm ET/8pm UK
    📍 Stade Louis II, Monaco

  25. Can Atletico Be Considered Favourites for the Trophy?

    via ESPN.com

  26. B/R Football @brfootball

    24 hours from now, the Champions League returns 🌟 https://t.co/qKiuKq4q9t

  27. Looks Like Napoli Are About to Win the Champions League

    Official SSC Napoli @en_sscnapoli

    Quote from Ancelotti’s press conference earlier: “I’ve played twice in Belgrade, once as a player and once as a coach. In both cases, I won the competition that same year.” #ForzaNapoliSempre https://t.co/OVhX5XflLb

  28. RONALDO, TOSUN, OSCAR: GREAT #UCL Match Day One GOALS!!

  29. Will Pulisic Deliver for BVB on His Birthday? 🎂

    Borussia Dortmund @BVB

    🎉 #HappyBirthday, Christian #Pulisic (20) & Marwin #Hitz (31)! 👍 https://t.co/DAM3RsGM3i

  30. Dortmund Start Their Quest for UCL Redemption in Brugge

    via Fear The Wall

  31. Injured Pulisic Returning for Dortmund

    via ESPN.com

  32. Novak Djokovic @DjokerNole

    Baš dirljiv momenat. Od klinačkih dana navijam za Crvenu Zvezdu i radujem se i nerviram uz njih. Momci, imate veliku podršku za dalje borbe i veru svih nas navijača da možete da pomerite granice! #Idemooo 🔴⚪ @crvenazvezdafk https://t.co/XJvZQ7W7gm

  33. Galatasaray Will Bring the Fire 🔥

    Galatasaray SK @GalatasaraySK

    #BugünGünlerdenGALATASARAY #GSvLMFC #HedefŞimdiAvrupa #UCL https://t.co/jOKRwFQHi1

  34. Schalke Pointless in Bundesliga as UCL Opener vs. Porto Arrives

    via the Guardian

  35. Schalke vs. Porto: Probable Line-ups

    via bundesliga.com – the official Bundesliga website

  36. FC Lokomotiv Moscow @fclokomotiv_eng

    🎥 Dima says ‘Hi!’ to y’all 👋🏻

    We’re off to Istanbul to face @Galatasaray in our first @ChampionsLeague game since 2003 😬 #UCL #LMFC https://t.co/jyv445dAXM

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Amid poll restrictions, Eswatini activists hope for change

Mbabane, Eswatini – Clutching a loudspeaker, a young man standing atop a pick-up truck repeatedly shouts “Votela! Votela!” as rush-hour pedestrians and shoppers walk past behind him, seemingly uninterested.

He is urging them to cast their vote in favour of his candidate standing for parliament in this week’s poll in the mountainous southern African kingdom of Eswatini.

On September 21, more than 500,000 registered voters in the country formerly known as Swaziland will elect 55 parliamentarians to the House of Assembly.

King Mswati III, Eswatini’s powerful monarch, will appoint the remaining 10 to make up the lower house of 65 representatives.

The elected MPs will then choose 10 senators for the upper house, while the king will select 20 more.

With a wide range of powers allowing the king to summon and dissolve parliament or declare a state of emergency, Eswatini, home to some 1.4 million people, is ranked among the world’s last remaining absolute monarchies.

A sombre battle for the ballot

Unlike many other countries, where the run-up to voting day is typically characterised by vibrant campaign rallies, catchy news headlines and posters of candidates lining the streets, in Eswatini the atmosphere seems much more subdued.

Friday’s vote comes against a backdrop of growing concerns among activists over the fairness of the monarchy’s electoral system, which bans parties and large rallies and forces aspiring MPs to run as independents.

Around the country’s constituencies, there is a scattering of posters of each candidate in their locale. Campaigning is done via loudspeaker patrols and community gatherings held in designated public areas with the approval of the local traditional chief who is appointed by the king. 

For some candidates and their campaign teams, the restrictive rules on public gatherings have made it difficult to canvass supporters.

“We are allowed to do our own individual campaign, but we can’t gather people to have rallies where we can say our manifesto,” said Bonisiwe Dlamini, a campaign manager for Sarafina Makha, who is running for the post of headwoman in Soweto, a semi-rural constituency on the edge of Manzini, Eswatini’s second city.

“We can only talk to small groups of people in our constituency so it takes a long time to get the message out,” added Dlamini.

With large gatherings banned, campaigners use other means to get their message out [Tendai Marima/Al Jazeera]

Jan Sithole, an opposition leader of the banned Swaziland Democratic Party (Swadepa) who was elected as an independent in 2013, said the limited two-week campaign period and the lack of access to state media for candidates without ministerial posts disadvantaged both new contenders and the electorate.

“People are shooting in the dark when they are electing a person … This is a big problem,” the former trade unionist told Al Jazeera in Manzini.

“Unless you are known publicly to stand for certain values, [then] it’s easier for people.”

‘No role for democracy activists’

In 2013, in the lead-up to that year’s parliamentary polls, the king declared Eswatini a “monarchical democracy”. Percy Simelane, government spokesperson, defended at the time the electoral system, saying it was rooted in Swazi culture. 

“Swaziland’s democracy is founded on the country’s values and way of life,” he said.

More recently, he told to the local Swazi Observer publication in April: “The way the nation goes to parliamentary elections in this country is constitutional, as attested to by the last party of international elections observers only five years ago”.

However, a recently-released survey by Afroquest, a local agency that works in partnership with poll analyst Afrobarometer, suggested that citizens have a different view.

According to a report in local newspaper The Times of Swaziland, 34 percent of all Swazis believe that there is no democracy, while 17 percent say democracy exists but it is fraught with problems.

However, according to a report this year by US-based democracy NGO Freedom House, the former Swaziland is not considered a free and democratic country, scoring an aggregate of 16 on a 1-100 scale ranking (“not free” to “free”).

Some critics say restrictions such as limited public gatherings, the ban on the participation of political parties and the monarch’s appointment of a prime minister make the election an undemocratic process designed to entrench King Mswati III’s power.

Pro-democracy activist Wandile Dludlu serves as secretary-general of the country’s largest opposition movement, the People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO) – which is classified as a “terrorist” organisation.

He told Al Jazeera the party would not field an independent candidate running in their personal capacity until there was an overhaul of the entire system.

“There can be no role we, as democracy activists, can play in these elections,” said Dludlu, who was charged with treason in 2009 but his trial is still pending.

“We remain with the bigger struggle of first and foremost democratising the country, which will help to level the political playing field to enable us to conduct elections towards [creating] a parliament that will have the power – unlike what we have now,” added Dludlu.

Although former Swaziland adopted a more progressive constitution in 2006, the 1973 decree passed by King Sobhuza II – the father of the current monarch – restricting political organisations remains in force.

Under the Suppression of Terrorism Act (2008), which was introduced following a series of petrol bombs targeting politicians in the 2000s, the PUDEMO is a prohibitedmovement after its members were accused of being responsible for the attacks.

Pro-democracy activist Wandile Dludlu [Tendai Marima/Al Jazeera]

‘A ticking time bomb’

Thulani Maseko, a prominent human rights lawyer who in 2015 was jailed for more than a year for criticising the king, argued the targeting of democracy groups is a deliberate strategy to enable the monarchy to maintain its political and financial interests.

To this end, Maseko said, the upcoming elections are intended to benefit the king, not the people.

“In this country, we don’t contest political power because power is vested in the monarch,” he told Al Jazeera in the capital, Mbabane.

“These elections are just a window-dressing exercise to make people feel as though they elect a parliament, but that parliament can’t even defend the interests of the people, it defends the king.”

Maseko has lodged a case in the kingdom’s Constitutional Court, arguing the decision by King Mswati III in April to change the mountain kingdom’s name – a move announced during celebrations for the monarch’s 50th birthday – was illegal.

The lawyer argues that the constitution prevents the king from imposing his own will and requires him to consult publicly with the people or table the matter in parliament.

“We are sitting on a ticking time bomb in this country because the more monarchy has its hand everywhere, the more people will resist,” said Maseko.

And like many other democracy activists, both Dludlu and Sithole, in their different ways, maintain that change is possible and inevitable.

“There is nothing as permanent as change,” said Sithole. “You can slow it down but it always keeps coming.”

Follow Tendai on Twitter and Instagram @i_amten

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Kavanaugh accuser has not yet agreed to attend hearing


Chuck Grassley

The lack of response from Christine Blasey Ford, who has accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her, “kind of raises the question, do they want to come to the public hearing or not,” Judiciary chairman Chuck Grassley said. | M. Scott Mahaskey/Politico

The woman who has accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her decades ago has not yet confirmed her appearance at a public hearing the GOP is planning next week, a top Republican senator said Tuesday.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said that his staff has reached out to Christine Blasey Ford’s camp several times since the California-based professor came forward with her story of a high-school-era assault by President Donald Trump’s high court pick. Although Ford’s lawyer said that her client would be open to “a fair proceeding,” it remains unclear whether she would agree to a planned hearing on Sept. 24 that Republicans have set up to help save Kavanaugh’s nomination.

Story Continued Below

The lack of response so far “kind of raises the question, do they want to come to the public hearing or not,” Grassley told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt on Tuesday. As of late Tuesday morning, Ford had not agreed to appear, according to a person close to the nomination.

“Our staff reached out to Dr. Ford’s lawyer with multiple emails yesterday to schedule a similar call and inform her of the upcoming hearing, where she will have the opportunity to share her story with the Committee. Her lawyer has not yet responded,” said Taylor Foy, a spokesman for Grassley on the committee.

Republicans have billed the public hearing as an opportunity for both Kavanaugh and Ford to share their sides of the story. GOP leaders made that decision under pressure from undecided members of their conference — chiefly Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), a Judiciary member who said he would vote against Kavanaugh in the committee if senators didn’t get more of a chance to hear from Ford.

“We have a woman who has come forward, she deserves to be heard, it’s important that her voice and her story is shared,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), an undecided swing vote on the nomination, on Tuesday.

One Kavanaugh ally suggested that Katz, a well-respected veteran of high-profile sexual misconduct cases, has “tried to impose some serious conditions on” Ford’s testimony, though it’s unclear what those conditions are.

Democrats had received no new commitments from Ford as of Tuesday morning.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) pushed back hard on the fast turnaround of the hearing and called for testimony from Mark Judge, the third person whom Ford alleges was in the room at the time of the assault. The GOP’s plan to omit Judge and hear only from Kavanaugh and Ford is “simply inadequate,” Schumer said.

Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, a Judiciary Democrat, said he would attend a hearing if it’s just Kavanaugh but is also pushing for far more, including an appearance from Judge.

“I do not think we will be meeting the test of a full and fair hearing without Mark Judge present, without Dr. Ford present and without the FBI doing an expanded background check,” Coons said. “There are questions to ask of [Kavanaugh] now. I do hope Dr. Ford comes forward and is treated respectfully.”

Flake, however, was unsure whether Judge would be called for the committee.

“I’m not sure who’s witness he would be,” he said.

If Ford and her lawyer ultimately opt out of the GOP’s public hearing invitation — Democrats have skipped a staff-level call with Kavanaugh on the matter, casting doubt on their participation — Republicans will face another tough decision on whether to press ahead with the nomination.

After Democrats declined to participate, Republican staff interviewed Kavanaugh on Monday evening. Foy said the nominee was “forthright and candid.”

One top Republican on Judiciary, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, said Monday night that he expects the committee to push for a vote on Kavanaugh next week regardless of whether Ford agrees to the GOP’s public hearing.

“She can come if she likes, but if she doesn’t want to, she doesn’t have to,” Graham said on Fox News. “Kavanaugh can come, and I think he will. We will vote on Wednesday.”

Grassley himself, however, declined to commit to any timing for a committee vote on Trump’s Supreme Court nominee in brief remarks to reporters Monday night as he left the Capitol following a chaotic day of speculation about the future of Kavanaugh’s nomination.

While the GOP waits to hear about whether Ford will testify, they also are discussing the use of a third-party to question Ford in an effort to make the hearing appear more fair and less political, according to one GOP senator. But Grassley appeared uncertain whether that approach could succeed, quipping Monday night that “I don’t know how you shut a senator up if they want to ask questions.”

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) on Tuesday tweeted that she’ll recommend to Grassley that counsel for Ford be allowed to question Kavanaugh, and Kavanaugh’s counsel be allowed to ask questions of Ford.

Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) also floated the idea of an independent counsel.

“It would be better to have either counsel for the majority or minority staff that might do this. It could be independent counsel. Or designate one or two senators. We don’t need 13 or however many senators continuing to pound both witnesses,” said Jones.

The high degree of uncertainty surrounding Monday’s planned hearing has left official Washington on a state of high alert about Kavanaugh.

In conversations with associates, one Judiciary Committee staffer put the odds of Ford testifying before the full committee at 50 percent and said there was just a 25 percent chance she’d appear at a public hearing.

Whether or not Ford agrees to appear, Republicans’ initial goal of getting the 53-year-old appeals court judge confirmed in time for the Oct. 1 start of the Supreme Court’s term is already in serious jeopardy.

Asked if Republicans would agree to a hearing later than Monday if Ford’s camp asks for that delay, Grassley said only that he is “taking things step by step.”

The committee’s top Democrat, California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, questioned why Grassley is limiting witnesses to the committee and argued the GOP is still rushing the nomination.

“Chairman Grassley today said there would be only two witnesses invited to testify at the Kavanaugh hearing next week on sexual assault allegations. Compare that to the 22 witnesses at the 1991 Anita Hill hearing and it’s impossible to take this process seriously,” Feinstein said. “This is another attempt by Republicans to rush this nomination and not fully vet Judge Kavanaugh.”

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Kanye’s New YANDHI Project Looks A Lot Like Yeezus 2



Gary Gershoff/WireImage

Early Monday morning (September 17), Kanye West‘s Twitter contained two very puzzling items: the word “YANDHI” (written on a Post-It note under Adam Driver’s name, suggesting the two would pair up for an upcoming Saturday Night Live episode), and an image of a bare MiniDisc without any context.

It wasn’t unlike when his 2013 album Yeezus dropped, complete with its artwork of a naked CD with a red sticker on it. Naturally, this caused people to begin speculating that Yeezus 2 was on its way. And then, the details came in — Kanye will indeed perform on SNL on September 29 (with Driver hosting), and that same day, he’ll also launch a project called YANDHI.

Kanye has also changed his social media avatars to a white screen, meaning he could be prepping the beginning of a new era. If YANDHI is indeed a full album, it would be Kanye’s third this year, after Ye, which debuted in June at Kanye’s star-studded Wyoming ranch blowout, and his Kid Cudi collaboaration, Kids See Ghosts. Two weeks ago, Kanye also dropped the new song “I Love It” with Lil Pump, complete with a music video that’s already been parodied for its ridiculousness.

But the news doesn’t stop there! Kanye also took the stage with Chance the Rapper on Monday night to confirm that yes, they are indeed making a joint album together — as they’ve been teasing for weeks now — and it’s called Good Ass Job (a title Kanye’s been teasing for years).

This is a lot to take in, so now’s might be a good time to throw on some music (maybe “Good Ass Intro” or “Ultralight Beam“) and mull it over for a while. And, you know, consider turning on notifications for Kanye’s and Chance’s tweets.

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Luke Skywalker’s last words revealed in ‘Last Jedi’ comic book adaptation

Spoiler alert: This post contains spoilers for Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

While we all saw the end of Luke Skywalker’s journey in Star Wars: The Last Jedi, we never really got to know what exactly was going on inside his head. Until now.

The final issue of Marvel’s comic book adaptation of The Last Jedi, which arrives on comic book store shelves Wednesday, reportedly gives us a glimpse inside the mind of Luke as he uses the Force to project himself onto the planet Crait, CBR reported based on an early look at the comic Monday.

SEE ALSO: Disneyland’s ‘Star Wars’ cantina will serve booze to all us lowlife smugglers

The comic shows Luke sitting on the planet Ahch-To, same as he was in the movie, but this time we get to see his final thoughts.

“And so it ends as it began,” Luke’s thought bubble reads. “By the light of two suns. Before stepping into a larger world.”

Luke Skywalker using all of his energy to project himself onto Crait.

Luke Skywalker using all of his energy to project himself onto Crait.

Image: lucasfilm

It’s a poignant detail that we didn’t get to learn in the movie, nodding back to the genesis of Luke’s journey as a Jedi that began on the planet Tatooine.

Luke Skywalker on Tatooine in the first Star Wars movie.

Luke Skywalker on Tatooine in the first Star Wars movie.

Image: lucasfilm

The comic adaptation of The Last Jedi includes other tidbits, details, and internal monologues that the movie did not provide, adding to the depth of the story and even adding a bit more meaning to scenes like the one above.

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Peter Dinklage says ‘Game of Thrones’ ending is like saying goodbye to family

Image: macall b. polay/hbo

2017%2f04%2f25%2f1f%2fpkheadshotsmallcopy.7f1bcBy Proma Khosla

Peter Dinklage won his third Emmy for Game of Thrones during Monday night’s Emmy Awards, amid a bittersweet ending for Thrones that will culminate in 2019.

Backstage at the awards, Dinklage told Variety that saying goodbye to Thrones is like saying goodbye to a whole life and family he built over the past eight years.

SEE ALSO: Peter Dinklage wins third Emmy for ‘Game of Thrones’

“It was very sad,” the actor said. “This is not only a great TV show to be a part of, but it was an enormous family to be a part of.”

Dinklage said he was initially hesitant to play Tyrion Lannister due to the lack of substantive roles for actors with dwarfism, particularly in fantasy stories.

“Many times people my size weren’t interesting enough for me to be interested in doing [those parts],” he said.

Dinklage filmed Thrones in Europe, which he said contributed to the sense of community that he’ll bid farewell to as the show closes.

“So many times I had to stay there and couldn’t go home on the weekends and really developed deep roots in the community of Ireland and some of the other countries we shot in,” he added. “It was definitely hard to say goodbye to because it wasn’t just saying goodbye to the show, I was saying goodbye to a life over there.”

h/t Variety

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