The Weeknd and SZA star in ‘Game of Thrones’-inspired music video

Some of our generation’s musical greats have just proved that they will happily sacrifice their dignity for enough money.

HBO announced in April that it was releasing an album of Game of Thrones-inspired tunes from artists like A$AP Rocky and Ellie Goulding. The album dropped April 26, and now the project has cursed us with a music video of the track “Power is Power” by SZA, The Weeknd, and Travis Scott. 

The video features the artists getting their Westerosi warrior on. Dressed in furs and ribbons, The Weeknd embodies the spirit of Jon Snow while contemplating deep phrases like “heavy is the head that wears the crown.” SZA writhes around on the Iron Throne while channeling Daenerys, and Travis Scott tries to play the maniacal bad guy, overlooking some steam-filled mountains. The whole time, scenes from Thrones play in the background.

The overall effect of the over-the-top emoting and dramatic costumes and set design just doesn’t land. Instead, it just makes these stars look like big nerds, putting on misplaced sappy emotional displays while cosplaying. 

Cool song though.

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At least 13 killed after Russian plane catches fire midair

At least 13 people on board a Russian Aeroflot passenger plane were killed when it caught fire mid-air and made an emergency landing at a Moscow airport on Sunday.

Television footage showed the Sukhoi Superjet-100 making an emergency landing at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport with much of the rear part of the plane engulfed in flames. The harrowing video showed passengers leaping from the front of the burning plane onto an inflatable slide and staggering across tarmac and grass.

Medical workers told the TASS news agency at least 13 people had been killed and others remained unaccounted for. Two children were among the dead, Russian investigators said.

The cause of the fire was not immediately known.

Seventy-eight on board

News agencies said the Sukhoi aircraft, which had been flying from Moscow to the northern Russian city of Murmansk before turning back, was carrying 73 passengers and five crew members.

Russian investigators said they were looking into whether the pilots had breached air safety rules.

Interfax news agency reported a rescue team was combing through the charred wreckage of the rear of the plane looking for survivors.

The Flightradar24 tracking service showed the aircraft circled twice over Moscow before making the emergency descent and landing after about 45 minutes.

SOURCE:
News agencies

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Watch this Roomba scream in pain when it collides with things

What is life but suffering?
What is life but suffering?

Image: James Leynse/Corbis via Getty Images

By Rachel Kraus

A robot is here to remind you that life is pain.

Michael Reeves is a YouTuber with a foul mouth who builds silly and irreverent robots. His latest invention is a modded Roomba that screams horrifically when it bumps into things. 

Watching this cursed object in action is startling, disturbing, and sometimes extremely relatable.

“Why would you build me so that my sole existential purpose is to suffer for the entertainment of others?” the Roomba asks.

Reeves gives viewers a peek inside the Roomba to check out his handiwork. He explains that he gave the Roomba a voice with a touch sensor, a small computer, and a bluetooth speaker.

“When a collision gets detected from the sensors, sound gets played from this Raspberry Pi to this bluetooth speaker,” Reeves says, before swearing into the camera profusely.

SEE ALSO: Police responded to a burglary, but it turned out to just be a Roomba

Reeves undertook the project after his viewers flooded his YouTube page with requests for the screaming Roomba. He started with computer generated vocals to voice the Roomba’s pain, but decided that it needed a human voice, to add to the impression that this robot is suffering. Reeves got fellow YouTubers to record themselves screaming and swearing, which makes the robot extremely disturbing to be around!

Some Twitter users had suggestions for other voices, like a proper British accent, or Homer Simpson. Until Reeves further mods the Roomba, it seems like we’re stuck with a robot that’s constantly in mortal peril. Fun!

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Iran to sell oil in ‘grey market’ as US tightens sanctions

Iran has mobilised all its resources to sell oil in a “grey market”, a top official said, after the United States told buyers of Iranian oil – including China, India and Turkey – to stop purchases or face sanctions.

Amir Hossein Zamaninia, Iran’s deputy oil minister, told state media on Sunday that Iran will continue to export oil despite the US sanctions, which he said were neither just nor legitimate.

The US moves, announced in April, are part of a “maximum pressure campaign” aimed at halting Iran’s ballistic missile programme and curbing its regional power, including its support for conflicts in Syria and Yemen.

They come after Washington withdrew last year from a landmark nuclear pact – in which Tehran agreed to curb its nuclear programme – and reimposed sanctions on exports of Iranian oil in November.

At the time, eight of Iran’s largest oil importers were granted waivers from US sanctions to allow them time to find alternative supplies. Several countries expected those exemptions to be renewed, but the White House in a surprise move decided not to do so.

The decision is aimed at cutting Iran’s oil exports to zero and depriving the government of its lifeline of $50bn in annual oil revenues.

‘Serious decisions’

Tehran, however, remained defiant.

“We have mobilised all of the country’s resources and are selling oil in the ‘grey market’,” state news agency IRNA quoted Zamaninia as saying.

“We certainly won’t sell 2.5 million barrels per day as under the [nuclear deal],” he said. “We will need to make serious decisions about our financial and economic management, and the government is working on that.”

He gave no details about the “grey market”, but Iran is widely reported to have sold oil at steep discounts and often through private firms during sanctions earlier this decade.

“This is not smuggling. This is countering sanctions which we do not see as just or legitimate,” Zamaninia said.

Can US bring down Iranian oil production down to zero? (1:50)

Manouchehr Takin, a United Kingdom-based oil and energy consultant, said tankers loading Iranian crude could bypass US sanctions by operating under the radar and making it harder to track actual volumes of oil shipments.

“Within the sea trade, there’s hundreds of tankers moving around here and there, and these vessels go to different ports, load and unload and so on. And tankers, when they get out on the open sea, they may switch off some of their signals so they would not be tracked, and then change names or papers.”

“What the US is doing is illegal and to get out of it, Iran wants to do the best it can,” he told Al Jazeera.

‘Regret and concern’

On Saturday, the European Union, which has pledged to uphold the 2015 nuclear deal without the US, also voiced concern over the added US sanctions.

In a statement, the EU and the foreign ministers of France, Germany and Britain – the three EU powers that led the initial nuclear negotiations with Iran – said they took note “with regret and concern of the decision by the United States not to extend waivers with regards to trade in oil with Iran”.

Turkey and China are the only two countries so far to have expressed a desire to continue large purchases of Iranian crude. Other major buyers, such as India, Japan and South Korea, have signalled they would bow to US pressure. 

On Saturday, Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said Iran must counter US sanctions by continuing to export its oil as well as boosting non-oil exports.

“America is trying to decrease our foreign reserves … So we have to increase our hard currency income and cut our currency expenditures,” Rouhani said live on television.

“Last year, we had non-oil exports of $43bn. We should increase production and raise our [non-oil] exports and resist America’s plots against the sale of our oil.”

Separately, the US also acted on Friday to force Iran to stop producing low-enriched uranium and expanding its only nuclear power plant.

Washington scrapped two sanctions waivers – one that had allowed Iran to store excess heavy water produced in the uranium enrichment process in Oman, and one that allowed Iran to swap enriched uranium for mined uranium “yellowcake” with Russia.

Highly enriched uranium can be used to fuel a nuclear weapon.

However, Ali Larijani, the Iranian parliament speaker, said Tehran would continue low-level uranium enrichment to help produce electricity.

“Under the deal, we have not done anything wrong. We continue enriching,” he was quoted as saying by the semi-official news agency ISNA.

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In ‘Fortnite,’ a volcano erupted and a whole city was wiped out

Yet another new era for Fortnite has begun.

A weeks-long, community-wide scavenger hunt concluded on Saturday at roughly 3:00 p.m. ET with a giant bang. The smoking volcano situated in the northeast corner of the map erupted, and flying debris laid waste to a number of popular locations, including the city of Tilted Towers and the Retail Row shopping district.

Before the volcano rained down its destructive fire, players gathered around Loot Lake for a different event: the metal plate at the bottom of the former body of water slid open and whisked players off to another realm, a realm where Fortnite‘s banished guns apparently live out their afterlife.

The whole episode was only the latest in a long string of in-game events that have come to define both the existence and the popularity of Fortnite. This is a game that transforms on an almost monthly basis, a game that is just as at home trotting out a limited-time Avengers tie-in as it is staging an in-game concert with no competitive element whatsoever.

Players that descended into Loot Lake’s vault found themselves inside an enormous, largely empty room ringed by pillars. At the top of each pillar, a glass enclosure containing one of the many weapons that have been removed from the game over time, for any number of reasons (usually relating to competitive balance).

The pillars turned out to be a voting mechanism. Players inside the vault could use their pickaxe to hack away at the pillar of their choice. Breaking one entirely required a group effort, and the first one to be struck down effectively decided which old weapon would return to Fortnite.

The Drum Gun won. It’s basically a Tommy Gun, and it was removed from the game — or “vaulted,” to use the official terminology — in Sept. 2018. 

Once the “vote” concluded, players were deposited back into the game world and the volcano did its eruption thing. That map-transforming event sets up the end of Fortnite‘s Season 8, which began at the end of February, and lays the groundwork for the start of Season 9.

There was just one small wrinkle. As important and significant as the in-game event was, not all players got to experience it for themselves.

Fortnite developer Epic Games confirmed as much. It’s not clear exactly what happened, but enough players were apparently impacted by the issue for the studio to deliver a make-good gift for everyone who tried to participate.

We apologize that some players were unable to view the Unvaulting event. Anyone who jumped into the Unvaulting playlist will be granted the Arcana Glider in the coming days. Players who purchased the Arcana Glider previously will be refunded their V-Bucks.

— Fortnite (@FortniteGame) May 5, 2019

And that’s another game-changing Fortnite event in the books. Stay tuned for the inevitable parade of teases as Epic eases us all into Season 9.

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NASA fits 265,000 galaxies into a single ‘Hubble Legacy Field’ image

The image, called the Hubble Legacy Field, contains 16 years worth of data from the Hubble Space Telescope and contains around 265,000 galaxies.
The image, called the Hubble Legacy Field, contains 16 years worth of data from the Hubble Space Telescope and contains around 265,000 galaxies.

Image: NASA, ESA, G. Illingworth and D. Magee (University of California, Santa Cruz), K. Whitaker (University of Connecticut), R. Bouwens (Leiden University), P. Oesch (University of Geneva) and the Hubble Legacy Field team

By Matt Binder

Astronomers have assembled the most all-encompassing image of space ever created.

It puts together 16 years of data captured from the Hubble Space Telescope, according to a statement from NASA. All together, the composite is made up of nearly 7,500 individual exposures. 

Dubbed the “Hubble Legacy Field,” this wide view image shows around 265,000 galaxies. These galaxies go back 13.3 billion years to 500 million years after the big bang, showcasing how they have changed over time.

This latest Hubble mosaic consists of around 30 times as many galaxies as previous deep fields did. For example, the eXtreme Deep Field (XDF) which was put together in 2012 and is included in the Hubble Legacy Field, contains 5,500 galaxies.

“The faintest and farthest galaxies are just one ten-billionth the brightness of what the human eye can see,” NASA said in its statement.

SEE ALSO: Feast your eyes on this spectacular Hubble photo of a spiral galaxy

The findings from 31 different Hubble programs came together in order to assemble this image. According to NASA, no image will surpass the Hubble Legacy Field until the next generation of space telescopes are launched. 

“Now that we have gone wider than in previous surveys, we are harvesting many more distant galaxies in the largest such dataset ever produced by Hubble,” said Garth Illingworth, who led the Hubble Legacy Field image team. “This one image contains the full history of the growth of galaxies in the universe, from their time as ‘infants’ to when they grew into fully fledged ‘adults.’” 

“The expectation is that this survey will lead to an even more coherent, in-depth and greater understanding of the universe’s evolution in the coming years,” he added.

The James Webb Space Telescope, which will give astronomers an even deeper look into the legacy field, is expected to launch in 2021.

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Warriors’ DeMarcus Cousins Progressing, Could Return from Injury This Playoffs

Golden State Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins reacts after falling to the floor during the first half of Game 2 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Los Angeles Clippers in Oakland, Calif., Monday, April 15, 2019. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr told reporters DeMarcus Cousins could return at some point during the 2019 postseason if the team continues advancing.

“He’s coming along pretty well, so we’ll wait and see,” Kerr said of Cousins.

Connor Letourneau @Con_Chron

Steve Kerr said it’s possible DeMarcus Cousins (quad) and Damian Jones (pectoral muscle) could return in the playoffs. Jones will be cleated for contact work I’m coming days: https://t.co/aNt5aV9O9B

Kerr described Cousins’ progress as “normal progression,” meaning he is not ahead or behind schedule from the torn quad he suffered against the Los Angeles Clippers. The expectation is Cousins will miss the remainder of the playoffs, but the Warriors are keeping the door open.

Kerr also said center Damian Jones is expected to be cleared for contact next week, meaning it’s possible he could also return during the postseason. Jones has not played since suffering a torn pectoral in December.

Cousins averaged 16.3 points, 8.2 rebounds and 3.6 assists on 48.0 percent shooting during the regular season. He was limited to 30 games while recovering from a torn Achilles he suffered in the 2017-18 season with the New Orleans Pelicans.

The Warriors signed Cousins last summer for their mid-level exception, with the All-Star coming aboard seemingly for a one-year rejuvenation of his value before hitting the market again. While Cousins flashed some of his former ability, he struggled at times to acclimate with the Warriors and then went down with a second serious leg injury.

If Cousins does not return during the playoffs, he’ll re-enter free agency as a soon-to-be 29-year-old big man with a huge frame coming off two serious leg injuries. Cousins’ appeal in Sacramento and New Orleans was his combination of size and surprising athleticism; though never a big dunker, Cousins was always more fleet of foot side-to-side than he was given credit.

The NBA Finals stage may provide Cousins a chance to show perspective suitors what he can do, but it’d be hard to justify returning when it comes to preserving his long-term health. 

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Weekend rallies mark final push before crucial South Africa vote

Soweto, South Africa – At a packed Orlando Stadium, the far-left Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) wrapped up a weekend of mass rallies by the three main political parties ahead of crucial general elections on Wednesday.

The EFF’s firebrand leader, Julius Malema, reeled off a list of the ruling African National Congress‘ (ANC) perceived failures on Sunday – on everything from education to land redistribution – to a rapt audience, encouraging his party’s followers to “vote for the hope of the hopeless masses” at the polls.

Malema also repeated his previous controversial campaign promises to nationalise South Africa‘s mines and banks.

Other EFF leaders who joined Malema on stage repeated the party’s familiar refrain of “Our land, our jobs”, a slogan that highlights two of the most prominent challenges faced by the  country voted the most unequal in the world by the World Bank in 2018.

South Africa’s unemployment rate currently sits at about 27 percent, while private land ownership is skewed to 72 percent in the hands of whites, who comprise less than 10 percent of the population.

Malema also condemned xenophobia after a spate of attacks, predominantly on African and Asian foreign nationals, in recent months against a backdrop of rising anti-immigrant rhetoric by leaders within both the Democratic Alliance (DA) and the ANC.

Following weeks of protests and shutdowns in under-served townships and informal settlements across South Africa, Mandisa Mashego, the EFF’s provincial chairperson in Gauteng, which incorporates Johannesburg, alleged there is “massive disillusionment with the ANC”.

EFF leaders say people are disillusioned with the late Nelson Mandela’s ruling ANC [Christopher Clark/Al Jazeera]

Earlier in the day, less than 20km away from Soweto at Ellis Park stadium, President Cyril Ramaphosa promised ANC supporters that his cabinet would root out the rampant corruption that has plagued the feted liberation party of Nelson Mandela in recent years, particularly under the ruinous nine-year tenure of Jacob Zuma.

The controversy-laden former president was ousted in February 2018.

“The era of impunity is over. We are now entering the era of accountability. We are now entering the era of consequence,” Ramaphosa told a crowd in excess of 60,000.

Three recent polls suggest the ANC will retain more than 50 percent of the overall vote at the polls, with the EFF and liberal DA predicted to garner 11-14 percent and 20-24  percent, respectively.

‘Free from divisions’

On Saturday, at Dobsonville Stadium also in Soweto, which has traditionally been an ANC stronghold, DA leader Mmusi Maimane promised to put an end to corruption and grow South Africa’s stuttering economy.

The DA has also positioned itself in stark opposition to the EFF and the ANC on the latter’s divisive plans to expropriate private land from white farmers without compensation.

In local elections in 2016, the ANC lost three key metros to DA-led coalitions, and Maimane reiterated to a crowd of about 5,000 his party would remain “at the heart of coalition governments in this country as we build a strong centre for South Africa, free from the divisions of the past”.

Forty-eight parties will appear on South Africa’s national ballot this year, 19 more than registered in 2014.

EFF leaders repeated the party’s familiar refrain of ‘Our land, our jobs’ [Christopher Clark/Al Jazeera]

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Lakers’ Lonzo Ball ‘Hurt’ by LaVar’s Friend Alan Foster; Talks Covering BBB Tat

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK- APRIL 2: LeBron James #23 and Lonzo Ball #2 of the Los Angeles Lakers talk during a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on April 2, 2019 at Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images)

Jeff Haynes/Getty Images

Lonzo Ball appeared on HBO’s The Shop and spoke about Alan Foster, a family friend and a co-founder of Big Baller Brand who Ball is suing for fraud, claiming that Foster stole $1.5 million from him.

“I’ve known him since I was 12,” Ball said, describing how betrayed he felt by Foster. “… He was like my second dad.”

He continued:

“I bought my mom and dad a house, like, he had a room. … The way I feel about it is different, that’s why I covered the BBB [tattoo] up on my arm. When I saw that, I saw him, and that s–t just made me so, like, I was tight. When we looked at those transactions, the s–t didn’t start happening until my mom got sick. She took care of all the money s–t. So that’s what really hurt me; that s–t hurt me. I don’t even know what I would do if I seen him right now. I ain’t seen him. When that happened, everything just went off.”

Per TMZ Sports, “Ball alleges Foster orchestrated a ‘fraudulent scheme’ to take money from BBB and divert the money to his personal accounts.”

Foster, 52, previously spent 87 months in prison for running a “fraudulent stock scheme that bilked nearly $4 million from 75 investors,” according to Tania Ganguli and Richard Winton of the Los Angeles Times, a past the Ball family has said they weren’t aware of before going into business with him.

Foster owns 16.3 percent of Big Baller Brand, though he is under investigation by the FBI for defrauding the company. He served as the company’s manager before being removed from that position amid Lonzo Ball’s lawsuit. 

Alongside the lawsuit, Ball responded by inking over his BBB tattoo, while his manager Darren Moore showed a video dumping Big Baller Brand shoes down a trash chute in late March.

Andrew Joseph @AndyJ0seph

And let’s check in on Lonzo Ball’s manager https://t.co/pxVUKkVMGj

Foster was also dropped from the Ball in the Family reality show:

Ramona Shelburne @ramonashelburne

“Ball in the Family” will minimize Alan Foster’s role in previously shot footage after Lonzo Ball cut ties with the former BBB co-founder last week. A Facebook spokesman tells ESPN, “We support the family. Alan Foster will not be a member of the cast moving forward.”

“Obviously, it hurt me just because of a lot of stuff I’ve been through with him,” Ball said on April 10, per Ganguli and Winton. “A lot of decisions he made on my behalf and stuff. So it hurt. It hurt a lot.”

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FTC split on punishing Mark Zuckerberg in settlement with Facebook

The FTC's five commissioners are split over how to punish Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg as part of the agency's settlement over data privacy mishandling.
The FTC’s five commissioners are split over how to punish Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg as part of the agency’s settlement over data privacy mishandling.

Image: Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

By Matt Binder

Federal regulators are split on whether to hold Facebook chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg personally responsible for data privacy issues at the social network.

According to the New York Times, the Federal Trade Commission’s negotiations with the social network are coming to a close yet the agency’s five commissioners are still unable to agree on how to deal with the Facebook founder.

Sources familiar with the talks tell the Times that along with the dissent over Zuckerberg, the FTC is also wrestling with the exact financial penalty to be levied against the company. Facebook is expecting to pay a record-breaking fine of somewhere between $3 billion and $5 billion.

SEE ALSO: Mark Zuckerberg could become Facebook’s ‘designated compliance officer’

Facebook has already agreed to additional proposals included in the settlement which will increase oversight on the company. The social network would be tasked with hiring privacy officials at the leadership level and setting up a committee on the board focused on its data issues. 

The FTC would also appoint an independent watchdog to oversee Facebook’s data practices.

One proposal Facebook would not agree to, which is also a major point of debate among FTC commissioners, is holding CEO Mark Zuckerberg “personally responsible” for the company’s data mishandling.

FTC chairman Joseph J. Simons likely has the votes necessary to approve a deal without stronger punishments for the social network, according to the Times’ sources. However, the Republican chairman is looking for a bipartisan agreement on the deal and is still seeking the vote of at least one of the agency’s two Democratic commissioners.

The stakes could not be higher. The previous largest fine levied against a tech company was $22.5 million in 2012 when Google was found to be misrepresenting how certain tools were tracking people.

The FTC opened the investigation into Facebook following the Cambridge Analytica scandal, which broke in 2018. 

The Facebook settlement is expected to send a strong message to other Silicon Valley tech companies when it comes to policies that abuse users’ privacy.

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