NBA Rumors: Chauncey Billups Interviewing for Timberwolves President Role

Tim Daniels@TimDanielsBRTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistApril 19, 2019
FILE - In this Feb. 10, 2016, file photo, former Detroit Pistons player Chauncey Billups addresses the media in Auburn Hills, Mich. Billups has withdrawn his name from the Cleveland Cavaliers' search for a new general manager. He released a statement to ESPN on Monday, July 4, 2017, saying that

Carlos Osorio/Associated Press

The Minnesota Timberwolves are reportedly planning to interview former All-Star point guard Chauncey Billups about their president of basketball operations vacancy.

Shams Charania of Stadium and The Athletic reported the update Friday, noting the sides are expected to “meet in near future.”

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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YouTube gives Premium subscribers free Super Chat credits

YouTube is currently running a beta test that gives its Premium subscribers free Super Chat credits to use on their favorite livestream.
YouTube is currently running a beta test that gives its Premium subscribers free Super Chat credits to use on their favorite livestream.

Image: Omar Marques/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

By Matt Binder

YouTube wants its paying subscribers to share the wealth with their favorite creators.

The video giant is currently giving out free Super Chat credits to YouTube Premium subscribers, according to AndroidPolice. Super Chats allow viewers to give a monetary “tip” to YouTube creators during a livestream in exchange for a highlighted comment in the chat.

It’s a beta test we are running — glad you like it! 🙂

— Ryan Wyatt (@Fwiz) March 25, 2019

YouTube’s Head of Gaming Ryan Wyatt has confirmed that the free Super Chat credits are part of an ongoing beta test.  

Premium subscribers currently pay $11.99 per month for an ad-free experience on the YouTube platform. As part of the beta test, Premium users are being given either one $2 Super Chat credit or two 99 cent credits. The latter can be split up between two separate YouTube livestreamers. 

The Super Chat credits will refresh every month for the duration of the beta test.

SEE ALSO: Hate speech fills comments of YouTube livestream of House hearing on hate speech on YouTube

The free Super Chat credit beta test is very similar to a program instituted by one of YouTube’s biggest competitors, Twitch. The Amazon-owned video streaming platform currently provides Amazon Prime subscribers with a free Twitch Prime membership. Along with exclusive gaming perks, Twitch Prime members receive a free $4.99 monthly subscription to gift to their favorite Twitch Partner.

YouTube recently made the decision to distribute all of its once Premium-exclusive programs for free to all of the platform’s users. While the ad-free experience is certainly still a huge bonus for Premium members, it seems YouTube is currently experimenting with giving its paid-subscribers additional bonuses in order to keep them paying.

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Raiders Rumors: Jon Gruden, Mike Mayock Sent Scouts Home Ahead of NFL Draft

FILE - In this Monday, Dec. 31, 2018, file photo, Mike Mayock, left, speaks as Oakland Raiders head coach Jon Gruden listens at a news conference announcing Mayock as the general manager at the team's headquarters in Oakland, Calif. Mayock knows he will be highly scrutinized with three first-round picks thanks to Gruden's much-criticized trades. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

There is reportedly a significant schism within the Oakland Raiders‘ front office heading toward the 2019 NFL draft next week.

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Raiders general manager Mike Mayock and head coach Jon Gruden sent their scouts home for the weekend because “they don’t know who to trust and wanted to clear the room.”

Rapoport added that the scouts are not expected to return by the time the NFL draft begins on April 25.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina’s Lachlan Watson On Showing A Different Kind Of Queer Story



Amanda Edwards/WireImage

It should have been obvious, given the way Lachlan Watson views identity, that Part 1 of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina showed but one piece of their character’s gender journey.

Part 2 of the Netflix show also turned out to be Act 2 of the character’s own opera, to borrow Watson’s terminology. In the second installment’s premiere episode, after their character magically dominated basketball tryouts, he humbly came out to his friends by telling them his chosen name: “Actually guys, it’s Theo now.” And that was pretty much it.

“The character is trans, through and through,” Watson told MTV News, offering the language that was never quite verbalized, but strongly assumed. “It was interesting because I knew Theo was a trans guy … but [in the] last part, since I hadn’t come out yet, everyone assumed that Susie was non-binary just like me, and I couldn’t correct them.”

Watson was privy to Theo’s journey throughout the entirety of Part 1. They had talked to the writers and showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa not long after being cast to play a trans male character, then named Orlando, about the possibility of slowing down the transition.

“By existing and showing up and being a different person, a different identity that the writers may not have even known about before, I think in that way, I influenced Theo’s character,” they said. “I showed that it was possible to just hold off a second, and to just live in the gray area.”

Netflix

Beyond his gender, over the course of the season, we also see that the character is an athlete, a student, the glue to his friendship group, and a literal lifesaver multiple times over.

Theo’s story — an honest look at what one person might experience as they explore their gender right alongside the general balancing act that is high school in a town with a serious demon problem — is an example of what queer stories could be, if we approached them with the same thoughtfulness and care that we’ve given to straight stories forever.

Rather than Theo’s queerness being his story, his gender is used to bolster his overall character growth. In Part 2, Theo’s story is one of strength and self-acceptance. As he becomes increasingly comfortable in the way he presents himself, he experiences triumphs that range from his teammates’ acceptance all the way to saving the world.

It was a marked difference from the unassertive character we had met in Part 1. “Susie didn’t really know who they were, and … the strength got a little lost where I ended up getting saved like four times in a row,” Watson said. “What was really, really important for me with this upcoming season was to show a powerful, strong, queer character who never has to be saved. They can, in fact, save other people.”

Netflix

Part 2 begins its climax with Theo literally stopping the gates of Hell from opening, but had he not fully embraced himself earlier in the season, he may have still been stuck in his more timid state. In small but heartfelt snippets, Theo went through a series of subtle motions — things like telling his friends his name, asking his father to take him for a haircut, learning to tie a tie — to regain his confidence and, ultimately, establish his sense of self, all of which built to those more robust, adrenaline-filled scenes. Each of those smaller moments highlighted experiences many queer people can relate to and, really, show things we haven’t seen enough of on television.

One such moment was Theo coming out to his dad. The quiet scene offered an alternative to the big, dramatic idea we’ve been fed before about coming out stories, instead showing an honest, open conversation between father and son that organically came up in response to his dad asking if he’d like a new dress for the school dance.

Theo, naturally, benefits from Watson’s real-life experience exploring their own gender. The moment was infused with their belief that coming out doesn’t have to be “this crazy moment that has to be the most important of your life,” they said. “To me, that has always sort of confirmed the idea that queer people are different, are weird, are less-than … it’s almost like an apology, that you have to have this big sit-down intervention where you’re like, ‘I’m sorry for being who I am.’”

For themself, Watson has found that a simpler, more human approach is better. “It should just be a matter of letting people that matter the most to you into a new part of your life,” they said. And to continue allowing those people into your life, even if there is an adjustment period.

We saw this play out with Theo. When his friends were first getting used to his name and pronouns, every so often they’d use his deadname. They’d apologize, and Theo would understand, accept it, and they’d both move on.

There are a ton of feelings surrounding being misgendered, and being that this is TV, Theo is generously bestowed with a high level of emotional maturity that, in real life, might take longer to achieve — even Watson admitted that they “grew up so afraid to correct people on pronouns” having lacked any precedent for how to correct someone. But now, they realize that “it’s literally the thought that counts.”

Much like Theo’s cool reaction to his friends’ inevitable slip-ups, Watson’s rule of thumb is “if you’re trying and you really care about the person enough to work on it, that’s what matters. It’s not whether or not you’re perfect or you never mess up.”

And then there was Episode 4, “Doctor Cerberus’s House of Horror,” in which a tarot reader comes to town and offers damning glimpses into each character’s future. Theo’s divination saw him stealing a potion from the Spellmans that transforms his body, giving him a muscular chest, broader shoulders, and a deeper voice.

As Theo admired his new form in the mirror — a moment that at one time Watson could deeply relate to — the actor felt for their character. “It was this really emotional moment where I knew that that’s what the character wants,” they said.

Netflix

It’s a relatable fantasy, to use magic to be seen the way you want to be seen, but it’s not real life. And for many, physical changes are not realistically attainable by surgical means either. What it really comes down to is finding it within yourself to reject gender normativity or any notion that you “should” look any certain way.

That’s the realization that Theo has by the end of Part 2. In Episode 8, right before his most pronounced heroics of the season, Theo has an exchange with Sabrina — or rather, who he thinks is Sabrina, but is actually her mandrake double — that Watson called, “a rebellion against the system.”

In the scene, mandrake-Sabrina offers to change him into a boy. “I already am a boy,” Theo replied. As she persisted, he clarified twice, with increasing anger, saying, “I already see myself as a real boy,” and “I don’t need to change my body to feel like a boy.”

As Watson noted, “The world sort of puts you down and tells you that you’re not good enough and that you have to look this way and you have to be this way, and the moment that somebody says, ‘No, I am enough for myself,’ is seen as a revolutionary act.’”

That revolution is the epitome of Theo’s internal strength. It’s when he finally verbalizes the lesson we all need to reach at some point in our lives in order to move past our insecurities, love ourselves, and truly grow into the person we are going to become. That’s really what this whole story comes down to: That you are who you know you are, not who people see you as, and when you are enough for you, then you are enough for the world.

“It’s a story that just plain and simple doesn’t get told — that you can be enough for yourself,” Watson reflected. “It’s cool that even through the queer lens of Theo, we get to tell a story that affects everyone.”

And just like that, a queer story becomes, well, a story.

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Turkey arrests suspected UAE spies, probes Khashoggi link

Turkey has arrested two men suspected of spying for the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and is investigating whether the suspects were linked to the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, according to media reports. 

The state-run Anadolu news agency, citing judicial sources on Friday, described the two men as “intelligence operatives” working on behalf of the UAE, and said they were “referred to a court on charges of political and military espionage”. 

The agency also released apparent surveillance images of the pair in the streets, as well as photographs of the two men taken following their arrest on Monday.

Reuters, citing a senior Turkish official, said one of the two men had arrived in Turkey in October 2018, days after Khashoggi was murdered inside Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Istanbul. 

The other had arrived later to help his colleague with the workload, the unnamed official told the news agency. 

Khashoggi, a prominent critic of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was killed by Saudi operatives, provoking an international outcry.

The CIA and some Western countries believe the crown prince, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, ordered the killing, an allegation Saudi officials deny. 

“We are investigating whether the primary individual’s arrival in Turkey was related to the Jamal Khashoggi murder,” the Turkish official told Reuters, adding: “It is possible that there was an attempt to collect information about Arabs, including political dissidents, living in Turkey.”

The men admitted they had recruited and paid informants, the official added.

Turkish officials also seized an encrypted computer at what the official told Reuters was the spy ring’s base in Istanbul. 

The pro-government Sabah newspaper said the pair had contacted a number of people in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and Diyarbakir, adding that one suspect had been in telephone contact with a person connected to the Khashoggi case. 

A spokesperson for Turkey’s interior ministry declined to comment on the arrests. 

The UAE is a close ally of Saudi Arabia, which has indicted 11 people over Khashoggi’s killing and is seeking the death penalty against five of them. 

After first denying the murder, Riyadh eventually said Khashoggi died in a botched operation to return him to Saudi Arabia.

Turkey has been at the forefront of efforts to clear up the Khashoggi case, but has expressed frustration at an alleged lack of cooperation by Saudi officials.

Andy Wilks contributed reporting from Ankara in Turkey

Jamal Khashoggi: The Silencing of a Journalist | Al Jazeera World

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Netflix’s ‘Something Great’ is something just okay: Review

Not every Netflix movie can be great, even if you invoke greatness in the title. Someone Great, which feels like a rom-com but technically isn’t, has a crackling cast and snappy dialogue, but it lacks the x-factor of the sparkling original films among which it tries to stand.

Someone Great tells the story of Jenny (Gina Rodriguez) on the day after she breaks up with Nate (Lakeith Stanfield), her boyfriend of nine years. Jenny urges her best friends Blair (Brittany Snow) and Erin (DeWanda Wise) to bunk work and join her for a day of drinking, drugs, and a big ol’ concert.

SEE ALSO: ‘The Perfect Date’ delivers a rude entitled jerk version of Peter Kavinsky

The emotional whiplash of realizing that Jenny’s breakup was LESS THAN A DAY AGO never fully wears off. Sentimental flashbacks reveal more about her relationship with Nate, and while many of them are from years ago, the fact of the matter is that she saw this man last night. 

Not all of us have been in nine-year relationships that ended, but one can presume that that first day is literal hell. Your best friend probably would not be suggesting that someone “fuck the Nate out of you” and the classic “screw him, whatever,” mentality might still be a pipe dream.

When Jenny eventually sees Nate (at the concert, which she conspired to attend so she could see him), her breath catches in her throat, and they make loaded eye contact from afar. These people saw each other maybe 20 hours ago. Are they not texting about when to “come get my stuff from your place” or even a stream of “I love you”s and “I miss you”s?

The film romanticizes a devastating breakup as a catalyst for life change and personal growth. At one point, someone actually tells Jenny, a day after her breakup, “You’ve been blessed with a broken heart. When it doesn’t hurt anymore, that’s when it’s really over. Live in this as long as you can.”

Say what you will about pain informing art and all that, but the immediate aftermath of romantic catastrophe is not a fun place to live by any stretch.

The root problem here is that you never come to invest in Jenny and Nate as a couple. The film isn’t necessarily advocating they get back together, but you can’t even empathize with the breakup as it is constructed. All the flashbacks and the in-your-face opening montage are surface-level at best; they show Jenny and Nate sharing physical chemistry and big life moments like job updates before eventually missing each other more and more as their schedules get packed.

There’s one scene — a piece of a scene, really — that gives us a tiny glimpse of what this pair is actually like as a couple. During the college days, they decide to order food, and Jenny pulls up options online. “Lemme see, lemme see. Gimme all the food. All. The. Food,” she says (which sounds like a Rodriguez ad lib).

The little smile Nate gives her from across the room says it all. You can text anybody about getting a promotion at work, but you can only wiggle around to a made-up song while ordering takeout with someone really special. This is the relationship, the dumb little moments they alone share.

'Atlanta' star Lakeith Stanfield plays Jenny's (Gina Rodriguez) ex-boyfriend in Netflix's 'Someone Great.'

‘Atlanta’ star Lakeith Stanfield plays Jenny’s (Gina Rodriguez) ex-boyfriend in Netflix’s ‘Someone Great.’

Image: sarah shatz/netflix

Someone Great really misses out on giving us more of those moments – not just between Jenny and Nate, though they could sure as hell use it, but even with the girlfriends. Jenny, Erin and Blair have distinct personalities and storylines, but they spend an awful lot of time apart during the film. It feels like any two arcs are put on pause while the other moves forward; you forget about Jenny and Nate, or Erin and Leah, or Blair and her boyfriend, when any of them aren’t on screen – and indeed, the other characters apparently do the same.

When they are together, it’s to discuss the logistics of getting into Neon Classic or to drink loads of tequila (in an admittedly entertaining montage) and pop some molly. If you’re going to do a movie about friend-group debauchery, there has to be a larger purpose. Rough Night had a murder, Ibiza had a quest, Girls’ Trip had the kind of chemistry and comedy that could carry a film on their own. Someone Great has none of those things.

Rodriguez gives heart and soul to her performance as usual, bringing more emotion than this character or film deserves. Stanfield imbues Nate with his signature strange gravitas, while Wise and Snow play adequately off each other with limited material. Michelle Buteau’s delightfully deranged cameo arrives far too early, and though the RuPaul interlude feels like a stretch, it’s not unwelcome.

If nothing else, Someone Great is a quick film to breeze through and certainly a showcase for its stars. Though dissatisfying on the relationship front, it might prompt you to seek out the texts that explore this better, or to reflect on your own friendships and loves and what made them stand out.

Someone Great is now streaming on Netflix.

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Hulu’s ‘Ramy’ is an excellent and poignant new age dramedy

Image: Barbara Nitke / Hulu

By Saloni Gajjar

Hulu’s new original dramedy Ramy is the latest in a surge of television shows about millennials coming to terms with their identity. It’s difficult not to compare it with counterparts like  Insecure, Fleabag, Atlanta, Master of None, Dear White People, all of which are masterful in capturing the farrago of human emotions through nuanced humor and deep reflection. 

SEE ALSO: The one line in the ‘Fleabag’ finale that cut me to the core

But Ramy distinguishes itself through the revolutionary lens of its creator and star, Ramy Youssef. He brings his experiences growing up as an Egyptian-American Muslim in New Jersey to the show without holding anything back. 

The first episode opens with Ramy getting lectured by his mother about finding a “high quality” woman at the mosque. This is followed by a scene involving him, an older traditional Muslim man, and the necessity of washing toes. No words can do justice to this scene’s absurd greatness. 

It is quickly established that Ramy is religious but doesn’t fully know to what extent. He enjoys premarital sex but refrains from alcohol and drugs. He is familiar with verses of the Quran but when he tells a prospective match he reads them in English instead of Arabic, she shuts him down. Questions about commitment to his own faith linger throughout the season as he goes on a journey to figure out the answers. 

Ramy takes a couple of episode to smooth out its narrative but the wait pays off in big ways. 

I was already reeled in but it’s the fourth episode that bowled me over. “Strawberries” takes place entirely in the past with Elisha Henig playing a 12-year-old Ramy. 

When he starts the day, his biggest problem is the same as that of his white friends (and most pubescent boys): learning how to jerk off. He ends the day, which happens to be 9/11, being alienated by most of these friends and having a nightmare about Osama bin Laden. 

Yeah, this is definitely not the kind of protagonist we’re used to. It’s what makes the show special. Ramy is a doe-eyed but intelligent lead who isn’t ashamed to explore his love for his faith, despite the judgements society keeps throwing his way. 

The show also challenges some of its own ideas when it focuses on Ramy’s sister Dena, played by breakout star May Calamaway, who has to face serious sexism even from her own family. Her spotlight episode “Refugees” is a crushing, remarkable display of the inner demons she has to battle because of this. 

Ramy aces demonstrating varied Muslim perspectives in an obvious yet subdued way. If you look at them individually or even as a family — Ramy, Dena, their parents — these are just your ordinary, hard-working folks living in a suburban New Jersey home. But they’re not ordinary at all. 

Their authentic stories being shown on-screen relay a cultural shift that is needed, and one that Ramy is a huge part of. Even in a divisive political climate, this show doesn’t back down from doing an entire episode about Ramadan or letting its lead character immerse himself in religious prayer often. 

Ramy is filling a gap by adding to representation for Egyptian-Americans, Muslim immigrants, and impactful diegesis about them. The compelling arcs will stick with you even after you’re done watching the first 10 episodes, a task that should take you no time at all. 

Ramy Season 1 is now streaming on Hulu. 

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Lakers Head Coach Rumors: Rob Pelinka Meeting with Ex-Cavaliers Coach Tyronn Lue

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 15:  Head coach Tyronn Lue (L) of the Cleveland Cavaliers talks with LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers after a quarterfinal game of the 2018 NBA Summer League between the Lakers and the Detroit Pistons at the Thomas & Mack Center on July 15, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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.  (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

LeBron James and Tyronn Lue reuniting with the Los Angeles Lakers is reportedly a possibility.

On Friday, Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN reported Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka will meet with the former Cleveland Cavaliers head coach to discuss the team’s vacancy.

The job is open after the Lakers parted ways with Luke Walton at the end of the regular season.

Last Friday, Wojnarowski called Lue the “strong frontrunner” in the Los Angeles coaching search.

Lue was an assistant coach for the Boston Celtics, Los Angeles Clippers and Cavaliers before taking over as the head coach in Cleveland during the 2015-16 campaign after the organization fired David Blatt.

He went on to lead the Cavaliers to their first championship in franchise history, guiding them back from a 3-1 deficit against the 73-win Golden State Warriors in the NBA Finals.

Cleveland reached the NBA Finals in each of Lue’s next two years but lost to the Warriors on both occasions. While the Cavaliers fired him following an 0-6 start in the 2018-19 campaign and James’ departure, Lue still sported an impressive 128-83 record as the head coach of the Cavaliers.

Lue is familiar with James and found the success in Cleveland that Los Angeles is looking for, but Marc Stein of the New York Times reported people around the league believe “some in the Lakers’ organization may fear hiring Lue would be giving LeBron too much control.”

The Lakers have not reached the playoffs in any of the last six seasons and were arguably the NBA’s biggest disappointment in 2018-19 after finishing 10th in the Western Conference and 11 games out of the playoff spots.

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Sudan protest leaders to unveil interim civilian council

Sudan protest leaders on Friday announced plans to unveil a civilian body to take over from the country’s ruling military council as crowds of demonstrators kept up the pressure outside army headquarters in the capital Khartoum.

The military council, which took power after overthrowing Sudan’s longtime leader Omar al-Bashir on April 11, has so far resisted calls from protesters to quickly make way for a civilian administration.

The Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), which has been spearheading the months-long protests, said in a statement that the civilian council members would be named at a news conference at 17:00 GMT on Sunday outside the army complex to which foreign diplomats are also invited.

“We are demanding that this civilian council, which will have representatives of the army, replace the military council,” Ahmed al-Rabia, a leader of the umbrella group of unions for doctors, engineers and teachers, told the AFP news agency.

The latest announcement comes after the group on Thursday outlined the structure of the potential transitional government.

The SPA said the new transitional government should be made up of a presidential council tasked with carrying out the functions of the state, a council of ministers and a transitional civil statutory council. 

‘Reluctant to hand over power’

“The transitional military council is reluctant to hand over power. It appears that they lack solid political will to respond to the demands of the protesters on the ground,” Ahmed Adam, a Sudanese lawyer and research associate at SOAS University of London, told Al Jazeera.

“The political civilian forces are still discussing the way to respond to this complicated transitional process. The expectations of the people are very high. People are so eager to see change. The military are counting on the divisions among the people on the streets to stay in power,” Adam added.

Al Jazeera’s Hiba Morgan reporting from the Sudanese capital said there was disagreement over the length of the transitional period.

“Some political parties want one-year transitional period. The military council wants two-year period while others including the Sudanese Professional Association are saying they want a transitional period of up to four years,” Morgan said.

Four months after anti-government protests started, access roads were packed on Friday with crowds flocking to the huge square outside army headquarters.

Activists mobilised demonstrators through social media to keep up the pressure for replacing the military council, now led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.

“Power to civilians, power to civilians,” protesters chanted through Thursday night.

“I won’t leave until al-Burhan transfers power to a civilian government,” said Wali Aldeen, who has camped outside the complex since the day al-Bashir was overthrown.

Vowing to ‘uproot’ al-Bashir’s circle

Activists have called for large crowds to gather after weekly Muslim prayers, as on previous Fridays.

Protests first broke out on December 19 in response to the tripling of bread prices, swiftly turning into nationwide rallies against al-Bashir’s three-decade rule.

After his overthrow, protesters demonstrated against General Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf who took over as the first head of the military council, insisting he was a tool of the old regime.

Ibn Auf stepped down in less than 24 hours and was replaced by al-Burhan, who so far has appeased protesters by lifting a night-time curfew and vowing to “uproot” al-Bashir’s circle.

Meanwhile, the United States on Thursday praised orders by Sudan’s new military leader to free political prisoners and end the curfew as it dispatched Makila James, a deputy assistant secretary of state, on a mission to Khartoum this weekend.

The US will “calibrate our policies based on our assessment of events”, State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said, adding, however, that talks on delisting Sudan as a state sponsor of terrorism remained suspended.

“We are encouraged by the decision to release political prisoners and cancel the curfew in Khartoum,” Ortagus said in a statement.

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Lili Reinhart Makes Pole Dancing (And Everything Else) Look So Easy



Getty Images

Hustlers has an absolutely stunning cast: Cardi B making her acting debut, Jennifer Lopez, Constance Wu, Keke Palmer, Julia Stiles, and even Riverdale’s Lili Reinhart.

The movie finds the actresses taking on the roles of former strippers looking to turn the tables on the Wall Street men who frequented the establishment they worked at. And Lili Reinhart just gave us one of our first looks at the anticipated flick with a behind-the-scenes peak at her pole-dancing rehearsal.

Lili Reinhart/Instagram

Taking to her Instagram story, she shared a photo of what looks like practice for the movie, and while it does look like she knows what she’s doing, it also looks incredibly difficult. True, we already saw Lili serving some seriously sensual vibes thanks to Dark Betty’s Serpent dance, but this shot has us gasping over how easy she’s making it look — in heels!

“Really nailing this whole pole thing,” she captioned her Instagram post.

We’re not quite sure if Lili is getting her own scene where she’ll show off her skills just yet, but given the movie’s subject manner, she’ll probably be seen hitting up the poles quite often.

Hustlers, which was inspired by a 2015 New York Magazine article that followed strippers who stole from typically rich and disgusting (to them) men to give to themselves — a “modern Robin Hood story,” according to author Jessica Pressler.

The strippers in the movie form an alliance and work together to steal tens of thousands of dollars from the wealthy clients they’ve come to despise. We haven’t seen much of the movie just yet, but it already sounds like something we’ll absolutely be into — and with this quick look at Lili in practice to knock our socks off, you can count on our butts being in the seats as soon as Hustlers is out.

Speaking of, there’s hardly a wait to see it! Hustlers is hitting theaters on September 13.

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