Ariana Grande Turns Into Elphaba, Kinda, To Sing A Wicked Favorite



Eric Liebowitz/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

A few weeks ago, after ending her engagement to Saturday Night Live star (and song namesake) Pete Davidson, Ariana Grande posted a notable message to Instagram. “Can’t believe I almost let my anxiety ruin this for me today!!!” she wrote while posing in Elphaba-green makeup. “Not today Satan. Not tomorrow or the next day either not no more u can suck my big green dick. Finna sing my heart out and be a big walking vessel of love bye.”

In addition to the words being a fierce declaration of self-care, Ari was referring to her appearance on NBC’s A Very Wicked Halloween show that aired Monday night (October 29). On it, she belted “The Wizard and I” in a green dress to an audience of mini witches and Dorothys. It’s a very cute clip, especially because the singer’s smile reveals just how big of a deal it was for her to be there — and she offered further proof via a pic with the OG Elphaba herself, Idina Menzel.

It’s also just nice to see Ariana back onstage. After taking a brief break from the spotlight this fall (including a canceled appearance on SNL), she’s fully back now, preparing for her upcoming ambitious Sweetener tour in 2019. And ahead of that, she’s also sharing even more performance footage to get Arianators pumped.

For example, a full orchestra-backed “God Is a Woman” rendition that makes Ari the center of a moody storm that keeps rising and rising. It’s wonderful!

This lush, densely orchestrated “God Is a Woman” version is from Ari’s upcoming special Ariana Grande Live At the BBC, which she recorded in September and which is due to air next month. Rolling Stone reports Ari and the crew of musicians tackled ever Sweetener track at the show, as well as “Dangerous Woman,” “Love Me Harder,” and her excellent cover of Thundercat’s “Them Changes.”

If the Sweetener shows are anything like this, fans may have to make sure their feet are firmly planted on the ground so they don’t literally float away. Check out both performances above, and make sure you prepare yourself for November 1, when Sweetener tour tickets go on sale.

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Photos show the drama of the worst flood to hit Venice in 10 years

Deadly storms across Italy have brought Venice face-to-face with one of the city’s worst floods in at least a decade — leaving residents, store owners, and tourists alike fending off knee-high flood water. 

New photos of the flooding show tourists and residents in boots trudging through the ancient city.

But flooding in Venice is nothing new. 

A few times during winter, strong winds push water from the Adriatic Sea into the Venetian Lagoon, causing high tides and minor but widespread flooding across the ancient island.

Tourists gather to take pictures in knee-high water in the Piazza San Marco.

Tourists gather to take pictures in knee-high water in the Piazza San Marco.

Image: Getty Images

However, every so often, the floods surpass normal levels and become a major hazard to everyone on the island and officials will sound sirens to warn the island that something more serious is coming.

This week, the flood sirens rang loud from one of the 15 designated bell towers within the city. 

SEE ALSO: Earth’s carbon dioxide levels are likely the highest they’ve been in 15 million years

Officials estimate that the Venetian Lagoon has risen 160 cm (5 feet 3 inches), making it the worst flood since 1979, and leaving nearly 80 percent of the city under water.

Some of the parts of the the city most severely affected by the floods are the historic Piazza San Marco and Rialto Bridge which include structures that are centuries old.

City officials create lifted walkways in anticipation of the high flooding.

City officials create lifted walkways in anticipation of the high flooding.

Image: Getty Images

Floods like this used to be few and far between.

But now major floods happen around once every four years, and scientists think that human-caused climate change is at least in part to blame. 

Plus, it doesn’t help that the petrified logs holding the city afloat are sinking. Venice has reportedly sunk 6 feet since the city’s medieval heyday.  

In order to avert continuous catastrophe, back in 2003 the Italian government began working on Project Mose — Modulo Sperimentale Elettromeccanico — to help curb the effects of sea level rise on Venice. 

The three arrows point to the locations of the three barriers within the Mose project.

The three arrows point to the locations of the three barriers within the Mose project.

Image: google maps

The idea was to create three barriers to blockade the flow of water from the Adriatic into the Venetian Lagoon. The barriers would shut when scientists expected the highest tides.

So far, two of the three have been completed, with a third one approaching completion in the coming years.

The project should be finished within the next two or three years. 

In the meantime, Venice has other mechanisms in place to defend against the floods.

Climate change, sinking stilts, and strong winds are putting Venice in significant danger of facing worse and worse floods.

Climate change, sinking stilts, and strong winds are putting Venice in significant danger of facing worse and worse floods.

Image: Getty Images

Drains are in every city square. Lifted walkways are put in place. 

Homes and storefronts, especially those facing the lagoon, have 1 foot barriers on their front doors, or their doors are lifted off the ground entirely. 

The 5 foot tide is expected to lessen throughout the rest of the week so hopefully Venice will have time to recover before it has to sound the flood alarms again. 

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‘Diablo 3’ brings delightful despair to the Nintendo Switch

Diablo 3 is one of the most enrapturing games of all time.

With the third installment of its gothic dungeon crawling series, Blizzard Entertainment created a masterpiece that continues to completely engross the brain six years into its life. The release of Diablo 3 and its expansions on Nintendo Switch is the perfect excuse to revisit one of the greatest games of all time.

SEE ALSO: Top 10 ‘Overwatch’ skins I’ve been killed by

I jumped into the Nintendo Switch version of Diablo 3 and sunk more than a dozen hours into the game within just a couple of days. Despite having played through the story and beyond a handful of times since its PC release in 2012, Diablo 3 pulled me in again, except this time I could play it anywhere I wanted.

Running through demons like a hot knife through butter.

Running through demons like a hot knife through butter.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

A world worth visiting

Diablo 3 is set in the fantasy world of Sanctuary, standing on the precipice of a demonic invasion. A star has fallen near the bleak town of New Tristram and the dead are rising. A hero has been sent to investigate the situation.

The despair of Diablo 3 is unceasing

A tale unfolds, with twists and turns and rising stakes that ends with an all-out war between the forces of heaven and hell as Diablo, the Prime Evil, seeks to destroy the home of the angels.

Diablo 3 weaves through setting after dire setting, delving into torture dungeons devised by a mad king, a city beset by death with bodies choking buildings and streets, and even the streets of the High Heavens itself where angels, hopeless against the onslaught of hell, stand impaled by knotted black spikes.

The settings are stunningly macabre.

The settings are stunningly macabre.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

The despair of Diablo 3 is unceasing, only mitigated in fleeting moments by the hero’s accomplishments against seemingly insurmountable evils.

In any other context, the content might be too much, too overwhelming, but the backbone of Diablo 3 turns the dismal setting into a beautiful, cathartic orchestra of progression that is unmatched by almost every game that has come before or after.

The evils of hell are relentless.

The evils of hell are relentless.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

The magic of Diablo

Playing Diablo 3 is like sitting at the edge of the ocean’s tide, with its cool, calm waves of salt water lapping over your legs to relieve the sun’s skin-sizzling heat. 

The heat is wave after wave of demon, cultist, and crazed beast in Diablo, and the relieving water is the game’s steady stream of new abilities and item upgrades.

While the story of Diablo 3 is entertaining on its own, the magic of Diablo lies in this progression that continues long after the story wraps.

There's nothing more satisfying than a powerful Corpse Explosion.

There’s nothing more satisfying than a powerful Corpse Explosion.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

As the hero of Diablo 3 levels up, the difficulty of enemies scales up right alongside them. New levels bring new abilities and passive upgrades that allow players to sculpt their hero to their own personal playstyle. Trying out new combos of moves to find the perfect balance keeps the game interesting even after dozens of hours of playing as the same character.

It’s an intensely gratifying feeling

The secret sauce is the random loot that drops from elite enemies, treasure chests, and giant bosses. Sure, new abilities are fun, but the joy of Diablo bubbles up from the feeling of power that comes from earning a legendary item that gives you such a large stat boost that previously difficult hordes of enemies suddenly turn into walking cannon fodder.

Enemies drop like flies when you get a good legendary item.

Enemies drop like flies when you get a good legendary item.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

In the lead up to a boss fight, it may take a handful of powerful attacks to take down an elite enemy, but if a legendary weapon drops, all of a sudden those enemies that used to give you pause go down within a second.

It’s an intensely gratifying feeling. Happening upon an especially powerful item is akin to being used to cutting grass with scissors and all of a sudden being handed a lawnmower.

At times Diablo 3 is difficult, but persistence and patience will always reward players with that sweet nectar of power, allowing players to dig deeper into the game and its endlessly satisfying endgame content. The challenge never really ends with 17 levels of difficulty and new seasons that introduce new challenges.

Diablo on Nintendo Switch

Just as Diablo succeeds on other platforms, it succeeds on Nintendo Switch with a few added bonuses.

The most obvious bonus is the fact that Diablo 3 can be played in both home console mode and handheld mode, which is a first for any Blizzard game. In fact, Diablo 3‘s arrival on the Switch is the first time a Blizzard game has hit a Nintendo console since the Nintendo 64 version of StarCraft in 2000. 

I did this on the train to work.

I did this on the train to work.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

If you don’t have Nintendo’s online service, you still have access to Diablo 3 leaderboards and can still play local co-op (either using the same console or a couple of consoles near each other. That means LAN parties just got a whole lot easier.

The Switch version of Diablo 3 also comes with some console-exclusive cosmetics, including a dark purple pair of ethereal wings inspired by The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask, a pet cucco (chicken) from Zelda, and the option to transmogrify all of your gear to look like the primary Zelda villain Ganondorf.

You know I put on those wings and had that cucco follow me around all game and watch me destroy the most evil and powerful demons from hell.

Check out my wings and cucco. My flair is unrivaled.

Check out my wings and cucco. My flair is unrivaled.

Image: mashable / blizzard entertainment

Having played the game on PC on and off for so many years, it took a couple hours to get used to playing a hack and slash dungeon crawler with a controller, but I sunk right into the game just like I’ve done half a dozen times before.

It continues to be one of the best games I’ve ever played, no matter what system it’s on.

Diablo 3 invades the Nintendo Switch on Nov. 2. 

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Report: Seahawks’ Mychal Kendricks Retroactively Suspended 8 Games

Seattle Seahawks linebacker Mychal Kendricks (56) during an NFL football game against the Arizona Cardinals, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2018, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Rick Scuteri/Associated Press

Seattle Seahawks linebacker Mychal Kendricks is reportedly serving a retroactive eight-game NFL suspension.

According to Pro Football Talk, he is eligible to return to the team and begin practicing Nov. 12. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport confirmed the report.

Since Kendricks has only missed three games thus far, Bob Condotta of the Seattle Times speculated that while Kendricks may be allowed to practice with the Seahawks on Nov. 12, he won’t be eligible to play until Seattle faces the Minnesota Vikings on Dec. 10.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter confirmed Condotta’s thoughts.

According to Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio, Kendricks can appeal the suspension, but he hasn’t decided whether he will.

NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo reported Oct. 2 that the NFL suspended Kendricks indefinitely after he pleaded guilty to insider trading charges.

Per Rapoport, Kendricks released the following statement in August regarding the charges against him:

Ian Rapoport @RapSheet

A statement from #Browns LB Mychal Kendrick, who has just been charged by the feds for insider trading. Wow. https://t.co/0IEsV6lPTh

According to Tommy Rowan of the Philadelphia Inquirer, Kendricks is facing up to 25 years in prison.

The Cleveland Browns signed Kendricks to a one-year deal during the offseason after he spent the first six years of his career with the Philadelphia Eagles.

After the charges became public, Cleveland released Kendricks. The 28-year-old veteran signed with the Seahawks shortly thereafter.

In three games with the Seahawks this season, Kendricks has registered 15 tackles, four tackles for loss and two sacks.

Seattle is in the thick of the NFC wild-card race at 4-3, and Kendricks’ return for the final month of the season figures to provide the Seahawks with a major boost during their playoff push.

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Tunis suicide attack, a wake-up call on tense politics

Tunis, Tunisia – On Monday afternoon, a suicide bomb blast struck Habib Bourguiba Avenue, one of the most iconic and heavily protected places in the heart of the Tunisian capital, Tunis.

A female attacker reportedly used a hand-made grenade device to target a police van, wounding at least nine people.

This was the first such incident to first to hit the country since 2015, when the much larger attacks at the Bardo Museum in Tunis and Sousse beach left at least 60 people dead,

Though much more limited in its scope and nature, Monday’s explosion shook Tunisians and served as a reminder that the country’s security threats are far from gone.

“It’s really regrettable,” said Messaoud Romdhani, president of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights.

“It should make us think why we haven’t got rid of terrorism? Why we’re witnessing such acts of terror?”

Tunisia has maintained a state of emergency since 2015 [Zoubeir Souissi/Reuters]

The attack came weeks after President Beji Caid Essebsi announced the extension for one more month of Tunisia’s state of emergency, amid growing political tensions ahead of next year’s legislative and presidential elections.

This year, Tunisia has been rocked by months of political turmoil which saw last month the end to the four-year alliance between the secular Nidaa Tounes party and the Islamist party Ennahda.

“This attack is an expected result of the current political situation with the ongoing fierce debate between the ruling parties,” argued Sami Brahem, political scientist and researcher at the government-run Centre for Economic and Social Studies.

“The strategy of terrorism is to capitalise on the tense climate in political life and make its way in.”

Disadvantaged status

In light of the latest violence, Brahem urged all stakeholders – including all ministries – to put differences aside and join forces for the full implementation of the national counter-terrorism strategy.

But in a country struggling with high unemployment and inflation, the focus should not just be on strengthening security but also on improving the socio-economic standards of those living on the margins, added Brahem, referring to the disadvantaged status of the suicide bomber, identified as 30-year-old Mouna Kebla.

Originally from Sidi Alouane, a town in eastern Tunisia, Kebla held a university degree in English but did not have a job. According to local media, she had occasionally worked as a shepherd to help her family.

She had no criminal record, nor was she previously suspected of links to violent ideologies.

“The problem today is not about people who are already implicated in terrorist activities, but those who are potentially exposed to involvement in such actions,” said Brahem.

“If we had to map terrorism in Tunisia, we would find that the regions where [prospective] terrorists come from are the same economically and socially marginalised regions.”

 

For Romdhani, Monday’s bomb explosion gives politicians a chance to come together and strategise about the country’s direction.

“It’s a political mess right now, there aren’t people who care about the future,” he said. “This event tells us that we should get together in solidarity and change politics to be able to confront terrorism.”

Romdhani stressed that heavy-handed security should not be the focus in that fight.

“We need to reinforce democracy, we also need more social justice, and we need more a type of politics that is concerned about Tunisia’s future and its interest only,” he said.

“We have no other choice, violence is not an option,” he added, urging the civil society to play its part in making people aware of the need to change politics.

Vital sector

The state of emergency, which has been in place since the 2015 attacks, is now very likely to stay in place and be renewed again in the aftermath of Monday’s incident, according to observers.

With improved security, tourists have started to return to the country’s resorts that were abandoned and deserted in the wake of the 2015 attacks, dealing a big blow to the vital tourism sector.

Tunisia hoped it had turned the corner – until Monday’s attack. However, given the small scale of the explosion, concerns about a potential impact on its tourism industry are not as big.

In addition, the makeshift nature of the attack showed that the violent groups in the country had weakened as security forces dismantled several cells and disrupted a number of plots over the past couple of years.

“I think terrorism today does not pose a threat to Tunisians nor tourists in Tunisia,” said Brahem.

Still, Hassine Dimassi, political analyst and former economics professor at Sousse University, said that Monday’s attack made it clear that authorities should not be complacent.

“One lesson to gather is that we need to strengthen the intelligence apparatus,” said Dimassi, encouraging an alert mode from the state.

“Extremists seem to have lost momentum recently, and that’s when they resort to this kind of action to mark their presence taking advantage of a loosening of grip on security forces.”

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Pence rejects any link between Trump’s rhetoric and attacks


Mike Pence

Vice President Mike Pence dismissed the notion that President Donald Trump has been stepping up immigration actions and rhetoric as a political ploy before the midterms. | Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday rejected any link between President Donald Trump’s rhetoric and recent hate crimes and political violence, saying “it’s important that we don’t connect those acts to the public debate.”

At a POLITICO Playbook interview in Washington, Pence said this weekend’s Pittsburgh synagogue massacre and a spate of bombs sent to prominent Democrats and CNN were “evil,” but that the country needs to hold the perpetrators accountable without choking off free speech.

Story Continued Below

“We will not let violence or anti-Semitism take hold in the United States of America. We will condemn it wherever it rears its ugly head, and the president and I have done that forcefully,” Pence said.

Trump has come under heavy criticism for his long history of inflammatory comments and a spike in hate crimes in America during his tenure. He has also received widespread attention for attacking unspecified media outlets as the “enemy of the people.”

Pence, who as a member of Congress strongly supported a federal shield law to protect journalists, told Playbook that he and Trump believe “the only check on government power in real time is a free and independent press.”

But the vice president slammed what he sees as sensationalist coverage connecting Trump to violence, echoing comments the president made on Monday to Fox News’ Laura Ingraham.

“The headline in one major newspaper didn’t read, ‘Bomb threat, perpetrator captured,’ it actually made reference to President Trump in the headline, because this individual in some respect associated himself or was allegedly a supporter of ours,” Pence said. “Now, the president’s no more responsible for this person’s criminal behavior than Bernie Sanders was responsible for the man who opened fire on a Republican baseball team.”

Pence also amplified the administration’s controversial remarks about the caravan of Central American migrants gradually making its way toward the U.S. southern border to seek asylum.

Without providing specific evidence, Pence said the caravan had been organized by “left-wing groups, political organizations within Honduras. It was likely financed in part by Venezuela.” And he said law enforcement had told him the caravan includes Middle Easterners.

Pence cast heavier deployments of the military to the border — as well as the idea floated by Trump this week of trying to undo the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship — as necessary responses to the “crisis on our southern border” and “a broken immigration system that’s being used by people who literally are exploiting vulnerable people.”

And the vice president argued that people seeking to enter the country should do so legally, as his grandfather did at Ellis Island. (Seeking asylum at a port of entry is a legal method of entering the United States.)

In fact, border arrests this year are on par with numbers during the Obama administration and far below figures in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Pence dismissed the notion that Trump was stepping up immigration actions and rhetoric as a political ploy before the midterms. Asked about a fight in Congress over funding for a border wall in December, Pence said, “The two words the president most often uses are ‘We’ll see.’” But then he took a firmer stand: “We’re going to have that fight before Christmas arrives.”

He also said he expected the “blue wave” that polls predict would crash into a “red wall” in next week’s midterm elections.

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NFL Trade Deadline 2018

  • NFL Update @MySportsUpdate

    Players in trade rumors:

    Demaryius Thomas
    Bruce Irvin
    Haha Clinton-Dix
    Karl Joseph
    Jamie Collins
    Tyrod Taylor
    Janoris Jenkins
    Pierre Garcon
    Golden Tate
    Arik Armstead
    Gareon Conley
    Landon Collins
    Kelvin Benjamin
    DeSean Jackson
    Shane Ray
    Brandon Marshall (LB)
    Olivier Vernon

  • Brad Evans @YahooNoise

    Latest on Demaryius Thomas. Buckle up, folks. Have a feeling today is going to be a wild and wacky ride, possibly the most active trade deadline in NFL history. https://t.co/pRnrmgi73E

  • Ian Rapoport @RapSheet

    From @gmfb: Which defenders are involved in trade talks? #Packers S Haha Clinton-Dix, #Browns LB Jamie Collins, #Raiders pass-rusher Bruce Irvin, #Giants CB Janoris Jenkins and others… https://t.co/oNJCyhP4LC

  • Zach Goodall @zach_goodall

    .@peter_king reports the #Rams would be interested in trading for #Jaguars DE Dante Fowler Jr. should he come available before today’s NFL trade deadline.

  • via Bleacher Report

  • Ian Rapoport @RapSheet

    From @gmfb: As the trade deadline looms, who is looking for WR help, why Courtland Sutton’s talents are a factor, and what to watch for… https://t.co/u1QahJdpiI

  • via Bleacher Report

  • Bleacher Report NFL @BR_NFL

    Pats have had “conversations” about trading for a WR, are interested in Demaryius Thomas and Golden Tate, per @RapSheet https://t.co/YoLNSFgo6z

  • via Bleacher Report

  • via Bleacher Report

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    Where to get legal help if you cause your own abortion

    2016%2f06%2f29%2fe7%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzex.c3dabBy Rebecca Ruiz

    As Americans face the reality that the Supreme Court could now overturn the federally-protected right to abortion, advocates have launched a website and helpline to offer legal information and attorney referrals to people who induce their own abortion.  

    The SIA Legal Team Helpline debuted Tuesday and offers three confidential ways to contact its experts: phone, the messaging app Signal, and the form service Formstack. Communication via Signal and Formstack is encrypted. 

    “People who self-manage their abortions, and those who assist them, can risk unjust arrest, prosecution, and jail time,” said Jill E. Adams, founder and strategy director of the SIA Legal Team, an organization that works to change laws, argue cases, and provide legal information and referrals in support of people who’ve independently ended their pregnancies. “The idea is if people know their legal rights, they can understand factors that have led to arrests and prosecution, and keep themselves safe.” 

    SEE ALSO: The Trump administration has been steadily sabotaging sex ed. Here’s how.

    While it’s not clear how frequently people seek to end a pregnancy on their own, research shows that it does happen. In one 2012 survey conducted in Texas, a state with laws that restrict abortion access, 7 percent of abortion patients said they’d attempted to end their pregnancy on their own. A separate survey of internet users who Googled search terms related to self-abortion last year found that nearly three-quarters of respondents were pregnant and didn’t want to be. Forty-one percent of the participants were minors. 

    Earlier this year, a website called Aid Access launched to provide U.S. residents with abortion medication by mail, after customers complete a digital consultation with a medical professional. The service is available to women and trans men who are healthy and fewer than 9 weeks pregnant. While the founder of Aid Access, a physician who created a similar site based in Europe called Women on Web, told the Atlantic that the Food and Drug Administration allows people to import medicine for personal use, the government agency told the outlet that abortion medication is not legally available online.

    While politicians debate what a “Post-Roe” America might look like, many are already living it. States with multiple abortion restrictions place abortion out of reach, particularly for women struggling to make ends meet. Read more about our new study: https://t.co/wxzd91Fm4k pic.twitter.com/S4BUesPBEn

    — ANSIRH (@ANSIRH) October 12, 2018

    Adams says it’s impossible to tell yet whether the recent launch of Aid Access will increase outreach to the SIA Legal Team Helpline. Members of the SIA Legal Team staff have been helping women accused of illegally ending their pregnancies since 2013. Seven states have laws that explicitly make self-managed abortion illegal while others have arrested and prosecuted women based on laws against harm to a fetus or laws that criminalize abortion and are misapplied to people who independently end a pregnancy. Low-income women, immigrants, and women of color are most frequently targeted by law enforcement, says Adams. 

    Many investigations begin when a medical professional who opposes abortion suspects a patient of having induced one, or when they mistakenly think they’re required by law to report their suspicions. Adams says overzealous prosecutors often lobby for or pursue criminal charges, but may ultimately drop them due to a lack of evidence. The helpline, she says, is designed to provide support to callers who may feel terrified about what to expect next. 

    “Our hope is that helpline callers will feel respected, supported, and informed,” says Adams. 

    The line is not, however, a counseling or advice service for people trying to make a decision about whether to self-manage their abortion. 

    “Our hope is that helpline callers will feel respected, supported, and informed.”

    Abigail R.A. Aiken, assistant professor of public affairs at the University of Texas at Austin, says people choose self-managed abortions for various reasons. Her recent research, based on in-depth interviews with 32 people who sought abortion medication online, found that participants couldn’t access an abortion clinic because of logistical challenges or restrictive laws, or preferred to end their pregnancy independently for personal reasons, including feeling judged or stigmatized. 

    Aiken says obtaining medication for abortion online and using it without the assistance of a physician is as effective as receiving abortion care from a medical professional. A study published last year in BMJ looked at outcomes amongst women in Ireland and Northern Ireland who used Women on Web to obtain abortion medication. It found that 95 percent of them used the medication to complete their abortion without needing surgical intervention, a rate similar to outcomes for women who receive an abortion in a clinic. 

    Given the looming possibility that abortion will become increasingly harder to access, or even illegal, in the U.S. in the next few years, Aiken argues there’s a public health justification for making self-managed abortion as safe as possible.  

    “I think that we are right to worry about that world, the post-Roe world people are talking about,” says Aiken. “We already have a sense of what it will look like from folks in states like Texas, where the ability to fulfill the right to an abortion is out of reach … We have folks already experiencing this world. Self-management is certainly a response to that in so many ways.” 

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    Anki improves the Cozmo experience with its 3.0 update

    Anki's Cozmo is still chugging along smoothly after two years.
    Anki’s Cozmo is still chugging along smoothly after two years.

    Image: dustin drankoski/mashable

    2018%2f05%2f22%2f78%2fimg 2415.d8e2bBy Jake Krol

    After giving us a glimpse at the house of the future with home robot Vector, Anki is refocusing on Cozmo, its adorable robot companion. 

    Nearing 2 years old and still going strong, this toy robot still has quite the magnetic personality and ecosystem to support it. Now, its companion app is getting a facelift that focuses on letting you do what you want, when you want, with Cozmo.

    SEE ALSO: This might be the cutest AI-powered robot ever

    It’s a relatively small update, but should improve the experience in major ways. Anki is now emphasizing what you can actually do with Cozmo over just taking care of him. Previously, there was a chance you might have to feed him or give him a tune-up before you could take control, or more importantly, gain access to Explorer Mode and games.

    Now, the “Nurture” option has been moved to the top of the interface and won’t run dry as quickly. It should also increase the length of playtime with Cozmo and let you get to what you want to do with your robo-buddy faster.

    The menu is simple to navigate.

    The menu is simple to navigate.

    Image: Cozmo

    By moving this interface to the top, it’s now possible to easily access all the games, tricks, and activities Cozmo has to offer. Most importantly, it’s taken the occasionally annoying requirement of nurturing the little robot out of the equation.

    Additionally, a new mode called Cozmo Performs is launching later this year. It will offer an easy and expansive way to control Cozmo’s facial expressions and what he says. To some degree, it’s like the basis for a modern puppet show, since you can take total control and have your robotic companion play out various scene. 

    You can choose from an array of faces.

    You can choose from an array of faces.

    Image: anki

    You have the freedom to type in a few lines of text.

    You have the freedom to type in a few lines of text.

    Image: anki

    It’s great to see that Anki is continuing to refine the overall experience and introducing new modes. This array of new options could potentially encourage users to try the builder and dive into some light coding as well. 

    The updated user interface is rolling out as the Cozmo 3.0 update to all users today. Cozmo Performs will ship in a separate update before the end of the year in December.

    For those looking to purchase a robotic companion of their own, Cozmo’s price will remain the same at $179.99, with Anki releasing a limited edition Interstellar Blue version on Nov. 2.

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    Harry Giles Would Like to Re-Introduce Himself

    On the afternoon after making his NBA debut, Harry Giles is in line at a trendy Sacramento dessert shop called CREAM. The concept here is that ice cream alone isn’t sweet enough, and that it’s better served sandwiched between pastries such as cookies, donuts or waffles. Giles posterizes the bland snickerdoodle cookie and churro ice cream concoction I order with his choice: a waffle sandwich with strawberry ice cream dipped in fruity pebbles.

    He grabs a bottled drink from the fridge and then folds himself into a far-too-small barstool next to the store’s owner, Zayn Silmi. A few months back, Silmi—who runs a Sacramento lifestyle blog and is friends with several Kings players—offered to name a sandwich item after Giles. Since then, Giles has been munching through the menu, trying to find the combination capable of carrying his name. A few minutes pass before Silmi gets up to investigate why Giles’ order has not yet arrived.

    Silmi comes back not only with news, but with a metaphor fitting for Giles’ basketball career. His order had been delayed because Giles’ waffle had broken in the griddle not once, not twice…but three times.

    Harry Giles was the 20th pick in the 2017 NBA draft, but this will be his rookie campaign with the Kings because he is just now healthy from the lingering effects of three knee injuries he suffered in high school and college. Most teams draft players with a vision of who they will become. The hope with Giles is that he’ll be the player he once was—the one who was the clear No. 1 prospect in a class that included Jayson Tatum, Markelle Fultz and Josh Jackson. For his part, Giles is content just to be on the court. His last full season was his junior year of high school, and he’s sick of being on the sidelines. 

    “Harry has seen the highest of the high,” says Kenneth Bates, who trained Giles in high school. “Everyone has told him he’s the best player in the world. He’s also felt the lowest of the low. He’s heard people tell him his career is done and he’ll never be himself again. He experienced all that by 20. He’s always had the talent, and now he’s got the maturity, too. What he’s going to do next will amaze you.”

    At CREAM, Giles realizes the waffles aren’t going to work and decides to make due with birthday cake cookies instead. He flashes his signature bright smile for Silmi’s Instagram, then swivels off the stool and continues eating on the way out of the shop. Outside in his Porsche, he confesses that this isn’t the sandwich he’s been searching for. It’s good, but he is after something more. As in his quest to return to the basketball court, he won’t quit until he finds himself.


    Harry Giles is shooting hoops in the courtyard of his California home. He lives in a ranch-style house in a gated suburb and has plenty of space in the driveway for a hoop, but he prefers the privacy of playing back by his pool—even if that means his sliding glass doors take regular beatings from bouncing basketballs. He swishes a few short jumpers then pauses to point to a tattoo he got at the beginning of the year. It’s a lion’s head and a cursive Bible verse, 1 Peter 2:15-16: “For it is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish people. Live as free people, but do not use your freedom as a cover-up for evil; live as God’s slaves.” It’s on his right shin—just beneath the scar from his second knee surgery.

    As a high school player, Harry Giles convinced Duke assistant coach Jeff Capel III that he had seen

    As a high school player, Harry Giles convinced Duke assistant coach Jeff Capel III that he had seenBrace Hemmelgarn/Getty Images

    Giles’ first knee injury happened in the summer before his sophomore year. As a freshman, he’d paired with Theo Pinson at Wesleyan Christian Academy in North Carolina to produce a state championship. He’d also started receiving interest from powerhouse programs like Duke. At the time, Jeff Capel III was the Blue Devils’ top recruiter. As a young man, Capel had watched his father, Jeff Capel Jr., recruit high schoolers to the colleges where he coached. One of the younger Capel’s favorite memories was hearing his dad gush about a player he’d seen at Mauldin High School in South Carolina. “I just saw the future of basketball,” Capel Jr. told his son, “and his name is Kevin Garnett.”

    On the car ride home from seeing Giles play for the first time, Capel III called his father. “I just saw the future of basketball,” he said, “and his name is Harry Giles.” Then he called Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski and told him it was time to start recruiting. A few months later into his freshman year, Giles visited campus for a game against Miami and came home with a scholarship offer. 

    “There are a few players I never saw live in high school,” says Capel, who is now the head coach at Pitt. “I never recruited LeBron James or Kevin Durant. But without question, the best high school player I’ve ever seen in person was Harry Giles.”

    In June 2013, while playing for USA Basketball’s U16 team in Uruguay, Giles planted on a fast break, got pushed by an Argentinian opponent and felt the dreaded pop. He had torn his left ACL, MCL and meniscus. He was feeling sorry for himself when he returned home to North Carolina, but a few days later, he received word that a friend of his, Celeste Burgess, had died in a car accident in Alabama. The emotional pain compounded his physical pain, but the news also put what he was experiencing into perspective.

    “What I was going through was bad,” Giles says now, “but it wasn’t the worst thing in the world. She was a basketball player too, and I knew I had to come back and play for her.”

    Harry Giles III @HGiiizzle

    Surgery went great. Thanking God & everyone who prayed for me. These tough times make me a Monster😈 I’ll be back‼ https://t.co/v6LIEWPaw3

    He didn’t play at all his sophomore year in high school. Instead, he spent his mornings waking up at 5 a.m. and working in the pool with his trainer, Kenneth Bates. He spent his afternoons rebuilding the strength in his lower body and doing hot yoga with his high school coach, Keith Gatlin. By his junior year, he was back on the court with a brace. And that summer, the brace went off, and so did Giles. A power forward with a preternatural knack for rebounding, a point guard’s ability to pass and an remarkable explosiveness, Giles skyrocketed back up to No. 1 in the recruiting rankings.

    For his senior season, he transferred to a powerhouse prep school, Oak Hill Academy in Virginia. Before the first game of the year, he got some troubling news in a text message: Kedrick Flomo, a friend from home who was playing guard at Murray State, had been rushed into emergency heart surgery that afternoon. In the locker room before the game, Giles connected with Flomo on FaceTime and told him to stay strong.

    Then, two minutes into the game, it happened again: Plant, push, pop. Friends and family tried to tell Giles it might not be that bad, but he knew he had torn his ACL—only this time, it was his right knee. He knew some of what would come next—surgery and rehab—but he didn’t anticipate how his reputation would change. He would no longer be the star prospect who suffered an unpredictable injury. Instead, he’d be labeled the injury-prone prospect who may never reach his potential.

    The next week, he committed to Duke live on ESPN. It was the decision he’d dreamed of making, but it was dulled by the knowledge that he wouldn’t play again until he put on that Blue Devils uniform. Out of the spotlight, he noticed how certain people in his circle didn’t stick around. Maybe it was because they had been pulling for him to go to a different school, or maybe it was because they didn’t think he’d ever be back to the level he once reached. But either way, it left him with a little less trust but a lot more motivation.

    “When you ain’t playing, everything changes,” he says. “A lot of people turn their back on you. Even people who said they believed in you no matter what. But when you’re not on the scene, you stop being so cool to be around. Even girls ain’t popping on your phone in the same way. That’s just the truth. It keeps me humble to this day knowing how quickly that fame can fade.”

    Again, the perspective from a close friend helped to keep him grounded. “On the day that my career stopped forever, Harry’s only paused,” Flomo says. “We talked about that a lot. And when I watch him on the court now, I feel like I’m out there. I feel like I’m playing through him.”

    But Giles didn’t play much at Duke. In a preseason practice, while his teammates were playing five-on-five, Giles was working on agility drills on the sideline. He felt a flare-up of pain, and Duke’s doctors determined later that day that he’d need an arthroscopic knee surgery to clean up his left knee. After missing the first 11 games, he became a regular in Duke’s rotation—but never a dominant force. He averaged just 3.9 points and 3.8 rebounds in 11.5 minutes per game.

    “I tried to turn on the TV and watch him a few times, but I couldn’t” says Gatlin, who’s now an assistant at High Point University. “I looked at that player on the screen, and I could tell it wasn’t Harry Giles.”

    Giles has no regrets about committing to Duke, but he says he should have taken a redshirt. Watching himself fall in NBA draft boards without being able to perform like he knew he could was torture.

    “I should have sat out that year of Duke,” he says. “I wasn’t ready to play. I thought I was, but I wasn’t. I wasn’t rushing, but I was still rushing, you know? I took my time, but I still wasn’t ready. … It’s nothing like the way I feel now. Now, I’m more than ready.”


    Lined up on the shelves of Harry Giles’ living room are awards and honors he’s received throughout his basketball career. There are some silly ones, like custom peanut butter and jelly jars Smuckers sent him. And there are some serious ones like Duke’s Glenn E. “Ted” Mann Award, given annually to a backup who contributes most to team morale. But when he looks up at his collection, he can’t help but fill the spaces in his mind with the moments he’s missed, like playing in the McDonald’s All-American Game or being selected in the NBA draft lottery. So he feels compelled to stack these shelves with heftier hardware.

    “Rookie of the Year is my goal,” he says. “I’m not going to let it control me, but if I play my game, I believe it’ll come on its own.”

    Giles was limited to 11.5 minutes per game in his one season at Duke while recovering from a series of knee injuries.

    Giles was limited to 11.5 minutes per game in his one season at Duke while recovering from a series of knee injuries.Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

    Now, more than a year after being drafted, he’s finally getting the chance. The Kings suggested before they drafted him that Giles sit out a season to work on getting completely clear of his past injuries. When the coaching staff reminded him of that plan, he remembered how rushing at Duke hurt him, and he resolved to be patient this time. He used the year to transition into the lifestyle of a professional player: traveling with the team, learning the playbook and taking his training and rehab more seriously than ever. He was a constant in the cold tub and on the training table, and by midseason, there were whispers that he was dominating team practices.

    “I was down for a while because I wasn’t playing all the time or wasn’t playing as well as I wanted,” he says. “But I had to remember what it took to get as good as I was. It didn’t happen overnight. It took me so much work—so many drills, so many practices, so many games. Basketball was my life for years and years, and I had expected all that to come back right away. I had to give it time. Now I feel like I’m killin’ it again.”

    While the past few years have been a struggle, Giles knows he has little to complain about—and he reminds himself of that regularly. In his driveway sits a red dune buggy that he used to ride a lot more—before his older neighbors complained about the noise. He also has a custom-lifted red Jeep Wrangler and a four-door black Porsche. He’s been dating a woman he’s known since high school for the past two years, and his mother lives in his house to help acclimate him to the responsibilities of adulthood.

    Still, Giles’ fall off the basketball radar rankles him. As we walked out of his house, he told me about attending the Drew League in Los Angeles this summer with Jayson Tatum and Kings rookie Marvin Bagley III. He noticed how the announcer in the gym shouted out Tatum and Bagley as Duke’s alumni in the building—but left him out. It was another reminder of the fleeting nature of fame.

    “Being famous is weird to start with, and it gets weirder as time goes on,” he says. “Look at Kanye [West]. He’s just saying crazy shit right now. At a certain point, you can’t force it. You have to say to yourself, ‘If I gotta do this to stay relevant, I might not want to be relevant anymore.’”

    This preseason, Giles appeared as normal as a young, promising player could be. He averaged 13.3 points and 5.7 rebounds in 22.1 minutes per game. Early in the regular season, his numbers haven’t popped (3.7 points, 2.8 rebounds per outing), but he’s getting closer to game speed with each outing. Statistics aside, any time he feels his feet on the court, he knows it’s a positive step.

    After all he’s endured, he knows there are no guarantees, and he plays now with the kind of freedom he hasn’t had since he was a freshman in high school. Back then, people didn’t know who Harry Giles was, and he showed them. If they’ve forgotten, he doesn’t mind offering a reminder.

    Now fully healthy, Giles is anxious to remind people why he was once considered one of the most promising players in the country.

    Now fully healthy, Giles is anxious to remind people why he was once considered one of the most promising players in the country.Zach Beeker/Getty Images

    In early October, right before the preseason began, Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox found an old Ballislife mixtape of Giles on Twitter and tagged his teammate. Giles watched the entire three-minute video, entitled “16 Y/O Harry Giles is the Best NBA Prospect in High School Basketball,” in the driveway of his house with his car idling. And all he can remember thinking afterward was, That motherfucker was good.

    As he tells the story, he’s climbing back into his car to return me to my hotel. I ask if he ever thinks he’ll be the player he could have been if he hadn’t hurt his knees? He pauses for a few seconds.

    “Man…that’s tough,” he says. “The s–t I was doing back then was wild. I can see why people were gassing me. But I’m stronger now, and I’m smarter now. I sometimes wish I had had more of that back then. I don’t think I could have prevented my injuries, but I might have been more aware. I might have been able to change something—anything.

    “To be honest, I don’t know if I’ll ever be that player I was before. I’ll be different. But I won’t stop working until I’m better than I ever was going to be.”

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