Ariana Grande And Victoria Monét’s ‘Monopoly’ Video Is One Big, Memeable Flex



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Ariana Grande may be in the midst of a massive arena tour, but that doesn’t mean she’s given up on that goal of releasing new music whenever she wants, however she wants.

On Monday (April 1), Ari and Victoria Monét dropped “Monopoly,” a song they’d been relentlessly teasing for a few days prior. And because these BFFs are nothing if not workhorses, they also blessed fans with a video, directed by Grande’s go-to videographer Alfredo Flores and her ex and former dancer Ricky Alvarez. In it, the Sweetener singer serves Cruella De Vil vibes as she and Monét dance and goof around on a rooftop. The vid also stars Donté Colley, aka the “motivational dancing guy” who scored viral victory last year for his encouraging, emoji-heavy visuals. In “Monopoly,” Grande and Monét use Colley’s style to surround themselves with animated cash, hearts, and confetti, and to dismiss haters, negativity, fuckery, and Trump. It’s basically a stan Twitter account come to life.

As for the song itself, it’s produced by Social House and Tim Suby, and references Clicquot champagne, Grande’s vocal coach Eric Vetro, and even a character from The Nutty Professor. There’s also a notable line about liking “women and men” (Monét came out as bisexual last year), and, in one hell of a flex, a reference to the controversy surrounding “7 Rings.” The New York Times recently reported that Republic Records forfeited 90 percent of the songwriting royalties to the estate of Rodgers and Hammerstein in order to clear the interpolation of “My Favorite Things” from The Sound of Music. But that clearly doesn’t bother Ari and Vic: “You’d be straight for life if I gave you my PIN,” they sing, “Even though we gave up that 90 percent for the win.”

“Monopoly” is billed as “a thank u to them fans,” and that’s because Grande and Monét have a lot to celebrate right now. Hours before the song’s release, Billboard reported that “7 Rings” is now Grande’s longest-running No. 1 single of her career — it tops the Hot 100 for an eighth week, besting the seven-week run enjoyed by “thank u, next.” And the wins just keep coming!

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Second woman accuses Biden of inappropriate touching


Joe Biden

Amy Lappos’ allegation came three days after Lucy Flores, a former Nevada state lawmaker, accused former Vice President Joe Biden of an “awkward kiss” at a campaign rally in 2014. | Frank Franklin II/AP Photo

A Connecticut woman accused Joe Biden of touching her inappropriately while she was volunteering at a political fundraiser in 2009, adding to the scrutiny the former vice president is facing for overly familiar physical contact with women as he mulls a run for the White House.

Amy Lappos, 43, told the Hartford Courant on Monday that Biden pulled her close to him to rub noses while she was working at a fundraiser for U.S. Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.).

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“It wasn’t sexual, but he did grab me by the head,” Lappos said. “He put his hand around my neck and pulled me in to rub noses with me. When he was pulling me in, I thought he was going to kiss me on the mouth.”

Lappos’ allegation came three days after Lucy Flores, a former Nevada state lawmaker, accused Biden of an “awkward kiss” at a campaign rally when she was the state’s Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in 2014.

In an essay in The Cut, Flores said that news of Biden’s potential candidacy compelled her to speak out in the hopes of spurring conversations “about his troubling past as it relates to women.” She criticized photos of Biden for his “uncomfortably close” public interactions with females, referencing his contact with the families of senators and cabinet members during their swearing-in ceremonies.

A Biden spokesman issued a blistering statement Monday morning calling interpretations of these resurfacing photos “ugly urban legends,” pointing to statements made by those with knowledge of two of the interactions pictured.

Stephanie Carter, the wife of former Defense Secretary Ash Carter, in a blog post Sunday sought to “reclaim” a “misleadingly extracted” picture of Biden with his hands on her shoulders in a show of support at her husband’s swearing-in ceremony.

A day prior, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) told the Washington Post that his children view Biden as a grandfather figure as 2015 photos of Biden and his 13-year-old daughter — who appears to react with discomfort as the vice president whispers in her ear — recirculated.

“The familiar characterizations of these two photos that have been uncritically perpetuated, turn out to be very false,” Biden spokesman Bill Russo said Monday, adding that some “even more insidious” examples of false claims exist online, citing photoshopped images of the vice president.

“These smears and forgeries have existed in the dark recesses of the internet for a while,” Russo said. “And to this day, right wing trolls and others continue to exploit them for their own gain.”

Biden in a statement Sunday pledged to listen respectfully to suggestions that he acted inappropriately, though he stressed that he never intended to cause discomfort or believed he did during his four decades of public service.

“We have arrived at an important time when women feel they can and should relate their experiences, and men should pay attention. And I will,” Biden said.

Russo on Monday said discussions of the rights of women are threatened by “the continued misrepresentation” of the president’s past interactions.

“The important conversation about these issues are not advanced, nor are any criticisms of Vice President Biden validated, by the continued misrepresentation of the Carter and Coons moments, or a failure to be vigilant about a cottage industry of lies,” he said.

Both Flores and Lappos claimed they did not speak out about their discomfort earlier for fear of being dismissed.

“I never filed a complaint, to be honest, because he was the vice president. I was a nobody,” Lappos told the Courant. “There’s absolutely a line of decency. There’s a line of respect. Crossing that line is not grandfatherly. It’s not cultural. It’s not affection. It’s sexism or misogyny.”

It’s unclear what impact the two allegations will have on Biden’s decision on whether to join the already crowded 2020 Democratic field. The former vice president has said he’s “very close” to making a choice, possibly as soon as early April.

A slew of Biden’s would-be primary competitors expressed sympathy for Flores, while some Biden allies have tried to discredit her.

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh on Monday said Joe Biden is a “very emotional person” in defense of the former vice president.

“I think the vice president is pretty clear on his statement that he respects everybody and he respects women,” Walsh said at a groundbreaking event, MassLive.com reported. “First and foremost I think it’s important that we respect women and respect women’s rights.”

Walsh, a friend of Biden who was sworn into his second term by the former vice president, said though he didn’t know the specifics of Flores’ accusation, he’d seen Biden express emotions when he came to Boston for the one-year anniversary of the marathon bombing.

“He is a very emotional person,” Walsh said, adding, “We live in a tough world right now, to be honest with you.”

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Watch How They Move: ATEEZ Are Making Their Mark On K-pop



KQ Entertainment

“Who’s playing tonight?” is not an unusual question to ask when you see a line of people standing outside of a venue. But for the diverse young crowd that amassed outside of Warsaw — a Polish community center by day, punk-adjacent scene by night — on a Sunday evening in Brooklyn late last month, many of whom were armed with light sticks and homemade merch, the answer was obvious: ATEEZ.

For the uneducated, ATEEZ are an eight-member group from South Korea’s KQ Entertainment whose sound can best be described as “turn up in Ibiza” — their own distinct blend of hip-hop and slick EDM, with charismatic rap verses and hooks that hit hard. And people are paying attention.

Courtesy of KQ Entertainment

A concept photo for their latest album, Treasure EP.2 : Zero To One

In the five months since their dynamic debut, ATEEZ have already had an unprecedented amount of success for a rookie K-pop group: Their second mini album bowed at No. 5 on Billboard‘s World Albums chart, and they sold out their first-ever U.S. and European tour after overwhelming demand on concert crowdfunding site MyMusicTaste — with only 10 songs, a few energetic dance videos, and one extremely dramatic intro track under their belts.

“We’ve only ever promoted in Korea after our debut,” leader and rapper Hongjoong told MTV News the day after their Brooklyn show, the last stop on the U.S. leg of their Expedition tour before heading to London. “So we didn’t know we had so many international ATINYs [their fandom name]. It’s amazing.” And aside from the obvious language barrier, dancer Wooyoung said that there’s not really any difference between their Korean fans and their fans abroad. “The love that they give is still the same.”

Though, when asked why they think they’ve had such success internationally, the response isn’t as definitive. In fact, they have no idea. “We are lucky,” Hongjoong said. But even ATEEZ have to admit that it’s more than luck that got them here, to a Tribeca hotel for a full day of press with Western media outlets and to numerous headlines deeming them the Next Big Thing. In their pre-debut days, the group (then known as KQ Fellaz) spent time in Los Angeles training at hip-hop dance studios like Millennium Dance Complex. They also uploaded magnetic dance videos choreographed to Desiigner’s “Outlet,”  Cardi B’s “Lick,” and Famous Dex’s “Pick It Up” (a fan-favorite they also performed at Warsaw to deafening cries of “a bad bitch, Puerto Rican“). “We like hip-hop, and we like American dance styles,” Hongjoong said.

But watching them perform and interact with one another on that stage, it’s easy to see why this group is resonating with fans across oceans and timezones.

Their performances are powerful, not only in the way that every movement is sharp and precise but also in their expressions. They’re extremely charismatic, and their live stages are theatrical without any production value; it’s just them and the stage, and yet, they deliver the drama with smoky eyes, coiffed hair, and crimson red fits. Take, for example, “HALA HALA,” a sinister showstopper in the group’s setlist with high-intensity choreography that borders on unhinged. Vocalist San, who arguably commands the most attention during that particular performance, said he’s often inspired by film and pop culture when determining his expressions. His inspiration for “HALA HALA” was Heath Ledger’s Joker in The Dark Knight.

Each member has their own performance style that they bring to the group. San feels things deeply, so his movements match his intense emotions. Yunho thinks about the theme of the song first, and then he’ll pull images and gestures to fit the overall mood of the performance. For main dancer Wooyoung, it’s more intuitive; he tries not to think too much. “I just go on stage and bring out whatever is inside,” he said. Meanwhile, for main vocalist Jongho, it’s about powerful moves to match his powerhouse vocals. “It comes more from the inside,” he said, adding that power isn’t just about physicality. “It’s about finding the emotion.”

Rapper Mingi thinks of his persona. “I think about how audiences view me and I’ll put that into my choreography.” When asked how he thinks fans view him, he replies confidently: “Cool.” And although Hongjoong likes to tease Mingi and call him the “cutest boy in the world,” he would like to go on record and say that “all of the members are cuter than me.”

Of course, powerful expressions are only part of the equation. After all, K-pop is known for precision and prismatic performance. But ATEEZ have also spent time establishing their individual identities both on and off stage thanks to their various social media channels and streaming platforms like Korea’s V Live, where fans get to know them more intimately via post-performance live streams and variety content. “Of course our dancing and our music is very important,” San said. “But showing our individual aspect is very important too.”

That was extremely apparent on stage. Since the group have a relatively small catalog of music, they spent roughly 45 minutes of their set answering fan-submitted questions. This playful Q&A portion not only highlighted the members’ individual charms — youngest member Jongho did push ups while San sat on his back; vocalist Seonghwa sang a bit of Baekhyun and Suzy’s “Dream”; each member had to dance sexily to Ariana Grande’s “7 Rings” — but it also underscored their chemistry as a group. They are (mostly) controlled chaos when all together; eight individuals who seem to genuinely enjoy making one another laugh, even when self-proclaimed best friends San and Wooyoung are fake-fighting and Hongjoong is forcing Mingi to do aegyo (or, make cute expressions).

“If I could describe my members, I would say we’re a rainbow,” soft-spoken Yeosang said. “Because each member has their own talents.” Hongjoong is quick to add, “A rainbow is seven colors, but we are eight. So one is white.”

When it comes to their music, this concept of a rainbow — or, “eight makes one team” — is especially important. According to Hongjoong, their music speaks to young people today because as a group in their late teens and early 20s, they’re part of that generation, too. (ATEEZ stands for “A TEENager Z.”) “We produce music that they can relate to,” he said. Hongjoong and Mingi are credited as lyricists in all but one of their tracks, and Hongjoong is working on his producing skills with the help of his labelmate/teacher/producer EDEN, who was watching the group from the balcony at Warsaw.

For Hongjoong — who wrote his first song at 16 about wanting to be a good person to honor his late grandmother — it’s important to make music with a message. For their current era, the concept is simple enough: “We want people to know they have their own treasure — dreams, family, friends. We have ATINY [their fans]. So they can find that [treasure] and do something amazing together.” It’s a theme they’ve been exploring since their debut single, aptly-titled “Treasure.”

As ATEEZ look ahead to the rest of 2019 and beyond, they know that they have momentum on their side, so there’s no slowing down. When asked to reveal their personal goals for the year, the members are strictly business. San wants a performance award at one of the end of the year award shows in Korea; Yunho wants a performance award and a Rookie of the Year award; Yeosang wants to grow as a performer; Mingi hopes that when people think of the letter “A,” they’ll think of “ATEEZ”; Wooyoung wants everyone to be healthy and injury-free; and Jongho wants one of their songs on the Billboard charts.

And for Seonghwa, it’s all about perspective. “I’m thankful for all of the attention. We’ll help each other and practice our hardest to fulfill these expectations.”

Still, they do take some time for themselves to relieve stress, especially when they’re touring. There’s the usual — playing games (Yunho), watching dramas and anime (Yeosang), seeking alone time at the sauna (Mingi) — and then there’s San.

“I was searching my name on Twitter,” San said. “I like to read what fans are saying. So I search #ChoiSan, and it’s like, ‘Wow!’”

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Erdogan’s AK Party ‘loses’ major Turkey cities in local elections

Istanbul, Turkey – Turkey‘s ruling party has lost mayoral elections in the country’s largest three cities – Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir – in a stunning election setback for President Recep Tayyip Erdoganaccording to unofficial results published by state-run Anadolu Agency on Monday.

The official results will be released after the country’s election board looks into objections filed by political parties, who have three days to file complaints.

Anadolu’s unofficial data shows Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) candidate Ekrem Imamoglu won the heated mayoral race in Istanbul, the country’s largest city and economic centre, with 48.8 percent of the vote, while the ruling Justice and Development (AK Party) candidate Binali Yildirim got 48.5 percent.

In the capital, Ankara, unofficial results showed that CHP candidate Mansur Yavas had garnered 50.9 percent, with the AK Party nominee Mehmet Ozhaseki trailing on 47.2 percent.

In the third-largest city, Izmir, the CHP candidate, Mustafa Tunc Soyer, was leading with 58 percent votes while AK Party’s Nihat Zeybekci stood at 38.5 percent.

All of the votes have been counted in the three largest cities.

The ruling AK Party, which ran as part of the People’s Alliance, lost both Ankara and Istanbul in Sunday’s local elections, which were held against the backdrop of Turkey’s first recession in a decade while its lira currency lost as much as 40 percent of its value against the US dollar last year.

The race in Istanbul was particularly tight, with both AK Party and the CHP claiming victory in Istanbul’s mayoral election.

Yildirim claimed early on Monday that he had won the race by around 4,000 votes, but later admitted he was 25,000 votes behind Imamoglu from CHP, which is part of the Nation Alliance.

Yildirim’s statement

Yildirim, however, said that his party had objections to the results over invalid votes.

“There are 31,136 ballot boxes [in Istanbul]. If there is one invalid vote in each ballot box, it makes 31,136 votes in total, which is more than the difference [between the two sides],” he said, adding that there are some 315,500 invalid votes in the polls.

Sezgin Tanrikulu, a CHP MP from Istanbul, said that although Imamoglu won the race in Istanbul, the election board was waiting for the objection period to end for legal reasons to declare the official winner.

“There have been complaints about certain ballot boxes. Legally, the party objecting should show a valid reason in doing so over each particular ballot box. Therefore, the number of boxes votes will be recounted in is limited,” he told Al Jazeera.

“The government should respect the results.”

According to Galip Dalay, a visiting fellow at the University of Oxford, the results are not a mathematical loss for the AK Party, but they still would not be taken lightly by Erdogan’s bloc.

“However, it is a psychological loss as it lost several major cities including the biggest three,” Dalay, who is also a non-resident fellow at Brookings Institution in Doha, told Al Jazeera.

“Early elections are out of the picture due to the fact that it did not suffer major losses in terms of vote numbers, but the result might set a context for wider discussions within the party and the conservative camp in Turkey about policy choices.”

Speaking at a news conference in Istanbul on Sunday, Erdogan acknowledged that his party had lost control in a number of cities and pledged that he would focus on carrying out economic reforms.

Erdogan, who was elected last year as the country’s first executive president, said the next polls would be held in June 2023, adding that Turkey would carefully implement a “strong economic programme” without compromising on free-market rules.

Ozgur Dilber, a CHP volunteer, said the results showed that the AK Party’s popularity was waning.

“To me, the results are proof that the number of voters who want change is increasing,” he told Al Jazeera speaking on the election results on Sunday.

Focus on economy, security

The polls posed a major challenge for Erdogan, given a backdrop of high inflation and rising unemployment sparked by a major currency crisis last year.

Earlier this month, official statistics showed that in the last two quarters of 2018, the Turkish economy slipped into its first recession in a decade, as inflation and interest rates soared due to the currency meltdown.

In February, inflation stood at just under 20 percent, while the Central Bank’s main interest rate is currently 24 percent.

In the lead-up to Sunday’s vote, the People’s Alliance sought to link the local polls to internal and external risks threatening the country’s security.

Erdogan has often blamed foreign powers and “speculators” for the currency fluctuations and other economic woes faced by Turkey – a message he repeated this week.

For its part, the main opposition alliance has focused its campaign on the economic situation and its effect on citizens.

It also used Turkish flags in their campaigns, rather than party banners, in an apparent bid to attract voters from different backgrounds.

Follow Umut Uras on Twitter @Um_Uras

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Trump budget cut turns out to be a godsend for the Special Olympics


Special Olympics medals

President Donald Trump on Thursday backpedaled on his budget proposal to eliminate the program after two days of intense criticism on social media. | AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File

The Trump administration’s now-abandoned plan to eliminate $17.6 million in federal funding for the Special Olympics is looking like a boon for the nonprofit.

Rather than cutting off the Special Olympics from all federal money, lawmakers are weighing a possible increase for the fifth year in a row as high-profile advocates rally behind the organization and its programs in thousands of schools. The social media outcry over the threat to its funding stream is boosting the Special Olympics’ message — and private donations are expected to surge. It also shows the political risk for the Trump administration when it targets an educational program beloved by Democrats and Republicans alike.

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“It’s a little bit overwhelming in the best way possible,” said Andrea Cahn, senior director of the organization’s Unified Champion Schools program, through which the federal money is distributed.

“In some ways the most powerless, vulnerable, forgotten people in the country brought to their knees the most powerful people in the country,” said Tim Shriver, chairman of Special Olympics International, speaking on Monday to advocates gathered at the Save the Children and Save the Children Action Network Advocacy Summit in Washington, D.C.

“Probably in my 39 years of professional life, I’ve never had more attention than we got last week on anything I’ve ever worked on, honestly,” he said.

President Donald Trump last week backpedaled on his proposal to eliminate funding for the program after two days of intense criticism on social media. The uproar followed Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’ defense of the proposed cut in a House hearing amid strong objections from Democrats.

“I have overridden my people,” Trump told reporters, announcing the reversal, without citing which people. All of Trump’s budget requests since he took office have proposed doing away with federal support for Special Olympics, and they’ve all been rejected by Congress. Instead, the funding has risen sharply from $7.6 million in fiscal 2015 to $17.6 million in fiscal 2019. Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), who heads up the Appropriations panel that funds education, is a Special Olympics champion.

Acting White House chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney on Sunday defended the budget process that led to the decision to cut funding, saying on CNN’s “State of the Union” that “debates take place all the time” and that “when the president realized that the public wanted this money, he made the change.”

DeVos stuck up for the proposed cut before a Senate subcommittee but also pointed out that she didn’t “personally get involved” in the decision to slash funding. After Trump said the funding would be restored, she lauded the decision, saying she had fought for the money “behind the scenes over the last several years.” DeVos last year announced she would donate nearly $50,000, a fourth of her salary, to the Special Olympics.

Maria Shriver, who is Tim’s sister, and former Gov. John Kasich (R-Ohio) penned a CNN column on Friday, attributing Trump’s reversal to the “loud and bipartisan outcry.”

“His swift response is a lesson for all Americans about what can be achieved when we come together, rise above our partisan concerns and use our voices to champion a cause that unites us all,” they wrote. Tim and Maria Shriver are the children of Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the program’s founder.

Vice President Mike Pence’s wife, Karen Pence, who led a U.S. delegation in March to the Special Olympics World Games in the United Arab Emirates, tweeted after Trump’s announcement: “Thank you, Mr. President! Love the @SpecialOlympics!”

Neither the House nor the Senate Appropriations committees have received any formal notifications of a budget revision from the Trump administration following the president’s comments. The Department of Education deferred comments on the next step to the OMB, which did not respond to an email requesting how much in funding the administration would request for the program.

But after Trump’s announcement, Rep. Mark Pocan, (D-Wis.), said in a statement, “Congress was already planning to ignore the administration’s disgraceful budget request, so this is only an attempt to save face.”

Pocan and Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), who chairs the House subcommittee that oversees education spending, have already agreed to try to increase the funding for Special Olympics in appropriations legislation, given “how strong the public support for this program is,” Pocan told POLITICO on Friday. That bill is still being written and no specific figures for the Special Olympics were available yet.

“The willingness for all the members of Congress from both sides of the aisle to step up and speak out on our behalf in a time when there doesn’t seem to be a lot of speaking up and taking a stand was also really gratifying,” Cahn said.

The federal funding supports “unified” programs, including children with and without disabilities in the same activities, that are now in 6,500 schools. The organization says it’s on track to reach 7,500 schools by the end of this school year and 8,500 next year.

The money represents a portion of the overall revenue from all sources for the Special Olympics, which reported $124 million in unrestricted revenues, gains and other support for the year ending Dec. 31, 2017, in a financial statement posted on its website.

In response to the attention, Cahn said the organization pushed out positive stories about the program, changing their timeline for release “to take advantage of the attention that we were getting just to get our messaging out there.” Many media outlets picked up on the story and its local impact and the overall importance of Special Olympics programs.

“You can’t do that to these kids,” said Anna Quinn, whose sons are on a Special Olympics New Jersey basketball team, to the Press of Atlantic City. “What kind of person takes away from a special needs kid?”

The Austin American-Statesman’s editorial board opined: “If there is anything that should be considered untouchable, it seems Special Olympics would fall under that heading.”

Since March 26, the normal volume of social media posts referencing Special Olympics had tripled and the organization saw a 200 percent increase in visitors to its website, according to a spokesperson.

Once the data is gathered, Cahn expects to see a boost in donations. That’s good news for an organization with a goal of funding programs in every public and private school in the nation.

“We have at least a hundred thousand more schools to go,” Cahn said. “We’re thinking that, ‘Wow, maybe it’s not going to take as long as we thought to be in every school.’”

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John Calipari Rumors: Kentucky Offers ‘Lifetime Contract’ amid UCLA Interest

Rob Goldberg@TheRobGoldbergTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistApril 1, 2019
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MARCH 29: Head coach John Calipari of the Kentucky Wildcats reacts against the Houston Cougars during the 2019 NCAA Basketball Tournament Midwest Regional at Sprint Center on March 29, 2019 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Kentucky has reportedly offered head coach John Calipari the equivalent of a lifetime contract in response to UCLA’s offer of a six-year, $48 million deal, according to Seth Davis of The Athletic.

The new contract would include a 10-year deal as Kentucky’s head coach plus the opportunity to serve as a “paid ambassador” after his retirement.

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

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US hackers helped UAE spy on Al Jazeera chairman: Reuters

A group of American hackers who once worked for United States intelligence agencies helped the United Arab Emirates (UAE) spy on a BBC host, the chairman of Al Jazeera and other prominent Arab media figures during a tense 2017 confrontation pitting the UAE and its allies against Qatar, a Reuters investigation found. 

The American operatives worked for Project Raven, a secret Emirati intelligence programme that spied on dissidents, fighters and political opponents of the UAE monarchy. A Reuters investigation in January revealed Project Raven’s existence and inner workings, including the fact that it surveilled a British activist and several unnamed US journalists.

The Raven operatives – who included at least nine former employees of the US National Security Agency and the US military – found themselves thrust into the thick of a high-stakes dispute among US’s Gulf allies. The Americans’ role in the UAE-Qatar imbroglio highlights how former US intelligence officials have become key players in the cyber wars of other nations, with little oversight from Washington.

The crisis erupted in the spring of 2017, when the UAE and allies – including Saudi Arabia and Egypt – accused Qatar of sowing unrest in the Middle East through its support of media outlets and political groups.

The UAE camp demanded Qatar take a series of actions, including shuttering the Qatar-funded Al Jazeera satellite television network, withdrawing funding from other media outlets Doha supports, and cracking down on the Muslim Brotherhood.

In June 2017, the UAE camp severed diplomatic ties with Doha and imposed an air, land and sea blockade against Qatar. It was an unprecedented confrontation among Arab countries that had historically prized consensus.

That week, Project Raven operatives sprang into action, launching operations to break into the Apple iPhones of at least 10 journalists and media executives they believed had connections to the Qatari government or the Muslim Brotherhood, according to programme documents reviewed by Reuters and four people involved in the activities.

Targets

Raven targeted Arab media figures who spanned a range of political thought – from a Beirut-based BBC host to the chairman of Al Jazeera and a producer from a London satellite channel founded by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood. 

The goal, the former Raven operatives said, was to find material showing that Qatar’s royal family had influenced the coverage of Al Jazeera and other media outlets, and uncover any ties between the influential TV network and the Muslim Brotherhood. Reuters couldn’t determine what data Raven obtained.

Al Jazeera has long maintained it is independent from Qatar’s government. Jassim Bin Mansour Al-Thani, a media attache for Qatar’s embassy in Washington, said “the government of Qatar does not request, ask, or enforce on Al Jazeera any agenda whatsoever”. Al Jazeera “is treated like any other respected media outlet”.

The UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its embassy in Washington did not respond to requests for comment. The NSA declined to comment. A Department of Defense spokeswoman declined to comment.

Dana Shell Smith, the former US ambassador to Qatar, said she found it alarming that US intelligence veterans were able to work for another government in targeting an US ally. She said Washington should better supervise US government-trained hackers after they leave the intelligence community.

“Folks with these skill sets should not be able to knowingly or unknowingly undermine US interests or contradict US values,” Smith told Reuters.

Among the Arab journalists hacked, Raven project documents show, was Giselle Khoury, Beirut-based host of BBC Arabic’s “The Scene”, a programme that interviews Middle Eastern leaders on current events.

Three days after the blockade began, Raven operatives hacked her iPhone. Raven programme documents show she was targeted because of her contact with Azmi Bishara, a Doha-based writer who has been critical of the UAE and founded the news outlet Al-Araby Al-Jadeed.

“They need to spend their time on making better their country, their economy,” Khoury said in an interview after Reuters informed her of the hack. “Not on having Giselle Khoury as a hacking target.”

On June 19, 2017, Americans working for Raven targeted Faisal al-Qassem, host of a popular Al Jazeera show called “The Opposite Direction”, interviews and documents show. 

The show features guests who heatedly debate controversial topics such as corruption in Middle Eastern governments. Informed by Reuters about his hacking, al-Qassem said he was not surprised he was targeted by the UAE, which he accuses of being “a symbol of corruption and dirty politics”. “In a word, they are afraid of the truth,” he said.

That same day, Raven operatives targeted the iPhone of Al Jazeera’s chairman, Hamad bin Thamer bin Mohammed Al Thani. Through an Al Jazeera spokesman, Al Thani declined to comment.

The attacks utilised a cyber weapon called Karma. As Reuters reported in January, Karma allowed Raven operatives to remotely hack into iPhones by inputting a target’s phone number or associated email address into the attack software. Unlike many exploits, Karma did not require a target to click on a link sent to an iPhone, they said. Apple declined to comment.

Karma provided Raven operatives access to the contacts, messages, photos and other data stored on iPhones. It did not allow them to monitor phone calls.

While Raven operatives broke into the devices, they did not have full access to the data they collected; they passed the material on to UAE intelligence officials overseeing the operation. It’s unclear what they found.

In January, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash was asked by reporters in New York about Project Raven after the initial Reuters report. Gargash acknowledged his country has a “cyber capability” but didn’t specifically address the programme. He denied targeting US citizens or countries with which the UAE has good relations.

Spying effort’s US links

The UAE created Project Raven in 2009 with the help of American intelligence contractors and former senior White House officials from the George W Bush administration. The US National Security Council declined to comment on Project Raven. 

At first, the goal was to crack down on terrorism by helping the UAE monitor fighters around the region. But Raven’s mission quickly expanded to include monitoring and suppressing a range of UAE political opponents, the documents show.

Among its targets was Qatar, which the UAE and Saudi Arabia had long accused of fueling political opposition across the region, in part through the Qatari government’s funding of Al Jazeera.

During the Arab Spring protests of 2011, Gulf countries viewed Al Jazeera’s expansive coverage of street demonstrations as a deliberate attempt by Qatar to fuel opposition to their monarchs. “It was seen as a tool to foment popular unrest,” said Elisa Catalano Ewers, a former adviser on the region for President Obama’s National Security Council.

Al Jazeera’s protest coverage “had a huge psychological impact” for demonstrators, said Moncef Marzouki, the former president of Tunisia, who was elected in 2011 after Arab Spring demonstrations ousted long-time ruler Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. The broadcasts sent a message to protesters that “this battle is happening everywhere, you are not alone”.

Al-Qassem, the host hacked by Raven, said Al Jazeera presents all sides, without censorship. “The street and the Arab people can decide what’s right,” he said.

Wary of the Muslim Brotherhood’s growing influence in the region after the 2011 protests, UAE authorities launched a crackdown on dozens of individuals who have been convicted of planning to overthrow the government. In 2014, the UAE formally designated the Muslim Brotherhood and local affiliates as terrorist groups. 

The Emiratis also tapped Raven in the effort to contain dissent at home, according to former Raven operatives and project documents. In the years after the Arab Spring, the operatives were increasingly tasked with targeting human rights activists and journalists who questioned the government.

Targeting journalists

In June 2017, after Gulf nations began their blockade of Qatar, the UAE ramped up efforts to spy on journalists seen as tied to Qatar. That month, Project Raven’s Qatar mission expanded from two full-time operatives assigned to the country to seven. 

On June 20, Raven operatives hacked into the iPhone of Abdullah Al-Athba, chief editor of Qatar’s oldest newspaper, Al-Arab, programme documents show.

In an interview with Reuters, Al-Athba said he believed he was targeted “because I am a supporter of the Arab Spring since the beginning,” who repeatedly criticised the Emiratis for their opposition to the movement.

The Raven effort went beyond the Middle East. Operatives used Karma to target the mobile phones of other media figures the UAE believed were being supported by Qatar, including journalists for London-based Arabic media outlets Al-Araby TV and Al-Hiwar. Both networks televise Arabic language channels popular in the Middle East.

Al-Thani, the Qatari spokesman, said the government does not support Al-Araby TV, Al-Hiwar or Al Arab.

The satellite channel Al-Araby TV and its namesake website are units of London-based Fadaat Media Ltd, owned and supported by Qatari businessmen. The outlet sees itself as the voice of “secular, liberal, pro-democracy” Arabs, said Abdulrahman Elshayyal, director of Al-Araby TV. He and two other Araby employees were hacked in the weeks following the start of the blockade, Raven documents show.

“It’s a very worrying trend that a state is using all these things to spy on people critical of them,” Elshayyal said in a phone interview. “I’m not a terrorist or a money launderer.”

Bishara, the founder of Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, was also targeted by Raven. He told Reuters he regards his outlet as “relatively independent” in the context of the Arab world. “Nobody tells us what to say,” said Bishara, a Palestinian Christian who lives in Qatar, though “sometimes the newspaper might be sensitive about what not to say, because you are not there to provoke the people that finance you.” 

Al-Hiwar, another London-based Arabic satellite channel, was targeted by Raven on the day the blockade began. Al-Hiwar founder Azzam Tamimi said he believes the UAE was fearful of his channel’s support for political reform and democratisation in the Arab world.

Unlike others caught in the crosshairs of Project Raven, though, Al-Hiwar doesn’t deny being sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood, which the outlet supports “because they are the victims”, he said. Tamimi told Reuters he is a longtime Muslim Brotherhood member and a supporter of Hamas.

Tamimi declined to say whether the channel received money from the Qatari government but said he’ll accept any support, provided there’s no strings attached. He said the channel gives voice to a range of opinions and encourages dialogue, but there are limitations.

“The majority of our viewers are Muslim,” he said in a phone interview. “We are not going to market ideas that are alien to our culture. That’s what makes us popular.”

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LeBron James Says Playing for Team USA in 2020 Olympics Is ‘A Possibility’

Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James talks to his teammate during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Washington Wizards, Tuesday, March 26, 2019, in Los Angeles. The Lakers won 124-106. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

LeBron James won’t compete for Team USA in 2019, but he might make his return to the men’s basketball team for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

“Yeah, that’s a possibility,” James said, per Joe Vardon of The Athletic. “It depends on how I feel. I love the Olympics.”

The Los Angeles Lakers star competed in the Olympics in 2004, 2008 and 2012 but chose not to compete in the 2016 Games.

The 2004 squad was a disappointment after finishing with just a bronze medal, although James was only 19 years old at the time. His teams went on to win gold medals in the next two Olympics alongside Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony, Kobe Bryant and Kevin Durant.

In 2016, however, James decided to rest during the offseason after winning the NBA title with the Cleveland Cavaliers in a seven-game series against the Golden State Warriors.

There might be more time for rest now with the Los Angeles Lakers, considering he is missing the postseason for the first time 2005.

With San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich now coaching Team USA, there was even a chance James could play this summer in the FIBA World Cup in China. However, there are scheduling conflicts with his role in Space Jam 2.

“I love everything about Pop, obviously, but this is not a good summer for me,” James said.

Still, his respect for Popovich could allow him to make time in his schedule come 2020.

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Julio Jones on Falcons Contract Talks: ‘There’s No Pressure…We’ll Get It Done’

Atlanta Falcons' Julio Jones (11) gives a thumbs up as he warms up before an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers in Charlotte, N.C., Sunday, Dec. 23, 2018. (AP Photo/Jason E. Miczek)

Jason E. Miczek/Associated Press

Julio Jones and the Atlanta Falcons have yet to agree on a long-term contract extension, but the superstar wide receiver isn’t sweating it.

My agent [Jimmy Sexton] is in the process of them talking about it. It hasn’t came to me. I’m good. I’m comfortable with how everybody’s doing it,” he told Vaughn McClure of ESPN.com. “There’s no pressure on my end and none on their end. If they’re going to get it done, we’ll get it done.”

Jones has two years and $21 million remaining on his contract, though as McClure noted, “Falcons general manager Thomas Dimitroff vowed to revisit Jones’ contract this offseason after the team adjusted Jones’ deal before last season.”

His total five-year deal has Jones at 11th among wide receivers in average yearly salary, though he isn’t concerned with those comparisons.

“Me, personally, I don’t really care about as far as being the highest-paid receiver, man,” he said. “It’s a number. We’ve got some other guys on the team. If we can do it in a way to get all the other guys to stay on the team… it’s a lot of ways you can do money.”

Nobody would bat an eye if Jones was the highest paid receiver in the NFL, however. The 30-year-old star is a six-time Pro Bowler and two-time first-team All-Pro who has recorded at least 1,100 yards in six of the past seven seasons and hasn’t dipped below 1,400 receiving yards since 2013.

He’s a dynamic playmaker for the Falcons, and he’ll be paid as such. It’s a matter of when, not if, though Jones may stay away from the team’s voluntary workouts this offseason while a new agreement is being negotiated.

“I’m just working on me right now,” he said. “I’ve got a great relationship with the organization. I’m just working on me. That’s it. It’s no set time where I need to be in-house. Mandatory stuff, I’ll be there. As long as I’m training, they understand it.”

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Ukraine election: Poroshenko attacks Zelensky before runoff

Kiev, Ukraine – Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko has accused comic Volodymyr Zelensky, his opponent and the frontrunner in an upcoming presidential vote runoff, of being an oligarch’s puppet.

In a Facebook post published on Monday, Poroshenko linked Zelensky’s success in the polls on Sunday to the work of the “Kremlin agents” and oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky, who owns the TV channel that airs Zelensky’s sitcom series.

“I begin the struggle for winning in the second round,” he declared.

According to the official vote count published by Ukraine’s Central Election Commission (CEC), Zelensky secured about 30 percent of the votes, Poroshenko – about 16 percent.

Voter turnout was above 63 percent, CEC said. The second round runoff is scheduled for April 21.

Many of the Ukrainians who took to social media to react to the election results blamed Poroshenko for his poor showing in the first round.

Ukrainian voters speak ahead of key presidential poll

Yurii Kasyanov, wrote on Facebook: “All the five years of his presidency, [Poroshenko] did everything possible and impossible, did his utmost, worked to the point of disgust, so that the people would vote for anyone, but not for politicians.”

Kasyanov accused the president of “destroying the achievements of Maidan [the anti-government protests that brought him to power].

“It was he who flushed the unprecedented patriotic rise of the first months of the war into the toilet. It was he who built an unprecedented corruption system, earning blood,” he said.

Zelensky is better known for playing a president in a TV sitcom [Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters]

But to many Poroshenko supporters, he seems to be the only guarantor of security.

“Of course, I cannot call Poroshenko an ideal candidate, but if we want to save the sovereignty of our country and guarantee our basic physical security, the choice is clear [in his favour],” Evgeniy Podroiko, 34-year-old IT specialist, told Al Jazeera.

Poroshenko’s chances

Despite his poor showing in the first round, the incumbent president could still overpower his opponent in the runoff, said Volodymyr Fesenko, director of the centre for political studies Penta.

“A large proportion of the candidates who did not make it to the second round represent the opposition and the majority of their supporters will vote for Zelensky in the runoff,” Fesenko told Al Jazeera. “But Poroshenko does still have a chance to win.”

Ukraine election: A unique village laments its historical divide

He said Poroshenko would try to trash Zelensky during the debates he had been avoiding before the first round.

“Poroshenko will try to show that he is better, more competent and prepared whereas Zelensky – weak, inexperienced and not ready for the presidency,” said Fesenko.

Poroshenko’s team will also try scare the Ukrainian voters by saying that Russia will conquer Ukraine under a weak president, he said.

According to Fesenko, Poroshenko’s team could also attempt to secure a low turnout which would help Poroshenko in the second round.

Mixed legacy

The vote on Sunday was the first since the so-called Revolution of Dignity brought Poroshenko to power five years ago.

The 53-year-old, who was elected with almost 55 percent of vote in 2014, seems to have failed to rally his electorate despite his efforts to be seen as a passionate defender of the country’s territorial unity, as well as the champion of the goal of joining the EU and NATO.

During his time in office, Poroshenko reinforced the country’s army and ratified the Association Agreement with the EU, the document that enabled Ukrainians to trade with and travel to Europe without restrictions.

Kharkiv’s pro-Russian protesters still mistrustful of Kiev

The incumbent president also secured the independence of Ukraine’s Orthodox Church from its Russian counterpart.

But he failed to rid the country of corruption, or recover money stolen from Ukraine’s coffers before he came to power.

The elections took place against a backdrop of a war that has killed more than 13,000 people in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions, with government forces fighting Russia-backed separatists.

The conflict followed Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 which in turn came after the ousting of Moscow-backed leader Viktor Yanukovich earlier that year.

Several million of the approximately 35 million eligible voters were unable or unwilling to cast their ballots in the occupied territories.

Follow Al Jazeera’s Tamila Varshalomidze on Twitter @tamila87v

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