NFL Rumors: Owners to Discuss Game in China in 2020; 49ers, Rams Could Feature

Los Angeles Rams kicker Greg Zuerlein kicks a field goal against the San Francisco 49ers during the first half in an NFL football game Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press

The National Football League’s quest to expand its global reach could result in a pair of teams playing in China next year.

According to The Athletic’s Matt Barrows, NFL owners are expected to discuss the possibility of playing a regular-season game in China in 2020, with Beijing and Shanghai both being considered options as the host city.

The San Francisco 49ers would tentatively be the designated home team, with the Los Angeles Rams a possibility as the away team after having previously shown interest in the concept.

49ers general manager John Lynch said Monday, per Barrows:

“As a football guy, you’re usually pretty protective. Like, ‘Hey, let’s make sure this is good for our team.’ I think one thing we feel comfortable with is that (CEO) Jed (York) and (team president) Al (Guido) always keep that in mind, so we’re not going to do anything that’s going to put us at a disadvantage. But if we can grow the game and also have a cool experience we’ll make it work.”

San Francisco would lose a home game at Levi’s Stadium under the circumstances. The Rams are unlikely to serve as the host team, given their new L.A. venue is expected to open in 2020.

Playing abroad would be nothing new to the NFL. The league has previously held games in London, Mexico and Canada. Teams that play in London typically receive a bye week directly after in order to help recover given the lengthy trip across the Atlantic Ocean.

Bigger obstacles would be present for a potential game in China.

Barrows notes that the current plan would be for the China game to kick off the 2020 regular season. The contest could possibly be held prior to the first Sunday of Week 1, which would give the teams extra time to prepare for Week 2 as it crosses the Pacific Ocean. The time difference between China and the Pacific time zone in August and September is 15 hours.

The NFL is also concerned about air quality issues in China. According to the Telegraph, the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing had the most pollution in Olympic history. The Chinese government has since attempted to reduce the air pollution.

Indoor practice bubbles for both teams may provide a solution to some of the concerns.

The subject of a game in China is expected to be held at the NFL’s annual meetings Tuesday, although an official decision may not be made for “several months,” per Barrows.

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Algeria army chief demands Bouteflika be declared unfit to rule

Algeria’s army chief Ahmed Gaid Salah has asked for the presidency to be vacated, Ennahar TV reported, saying he considered the people’s demands are valid following a month of mass protests against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

Based on the constitution, the upper house chairman Abdelkader Bensalah will be caretaker for at least 45 days, the Algerian TV station said.

“We must adopt a solution that helps us out of this crisis … a solution that respects and adheres to the constitution so that it’s a suitable one for all sides,” Salah said in remarks carried on Algerian television.

“This solution is stipulated in article 102 of the constitution,” he said.

The powerful army chief wants to trigger the constitutional process that would declare ailing Bouteflika unfit for office. He said in a televised speech that the solution to the ongoing political crisis is to apply Article 102 of the Algerian Constitution.

Under that article, the Constitutional Council could determine that the president is too ill to fully exercise his functions, and ask the parliament to declare him unfit.

The army chief is among the top power brokers in Algeria, and his announcement could pave the way for Bouteflika’s ouster.

The move comes a day after the country’s ruling National Liberation Front (FLN) withdrew its support for Bouteflika’s proposal to hold a national dialogue conference aimed at getting the country out of the current political deadlock.

Hundreds of thousands of Algerians have been taking part in nationwide protests against Bouteflika’s re-election bid since February 22.

Amid growing pressure, Bouteflika on March 11 abandoned his plan to seek a fifth term at the helm of Algeria, a key oil producer.

But while the announcement was initially greeted with instant celebrations, the joy proved to be short-lived as the ailing 82-year-old, who suffered a debilitating stroke in 2013, stated that he would remain in office until a successor was elected.

This prompted critics to accuse the octogenarian of attempting to illegally extend his 20-year-rule.

More soon… 

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‘Let’s just get the goods’: Pelosi rallies dejected Dems post-Mueller


Nancy Pelosi

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi projected optimism Tuesday morning in the aftermath of Robert Mueller’s investigation. | Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Speaker Nancy Pelosi sought to rally House Democrats behind closed doors Tuesday morning in the aftermath of special counsel Robert Mueller’s 22-month investigation.

“Be calm. Take a deep breath. Don’t become like them. We have to handle this professionally, officially, patriotically, strategically,” Pelosi said during a closed-door meeting with House Democrats, referring to Republicans.

Story Continued Below

“Let’s just get the goods,” she said of Mueller’s report.

Pelosi’s comments came after the chairs of six key committees demanded that Attorney General William Barr hand over Mueller’s entire report by next Tuesday, a formal request that followed a four-page memo from Barr summarizing Mueller’s findings. According to Barr, Mueller was unable to establish that Trump associates conspired with Russians during the 2016 presidential campaign, and he left unresolved the key issue of whether President Donald Trump obstructed justice.

“The president was not exonerated,” Pelosi told Democrats, referring to Trump’s claim on Sunday that Mueller’s report amounted to a “total exoneration.”

Democrats are demanding that Barr turn over all of the underlying evidence that Mueller uncovered so that they can use it as part of their own wide-ranging investigations, which focus on obstruction of justice, abuse of power, corruption and foreign influence.

“If any of us have foreign governments approach us with information about our opponents, we should go straight to the FBI,” Pelosi joked, according to Rep. Annie Kuster (D-N.H.), who recounted Pelosi’s remarks to POLITICO. It was a reference to Russian outreach attempts to Trump campaign officials during the 2016 election campaign.

She also projected optimism, telling lawmakers: “Some people are viewing it as the glass half empty. I think it is half full.”

Democrats on the Judiciary Committee have suggested that the panel would move to issue a subpoena for the Mueller report if Barr refuses to turn it over by next Tuesday. Lawmakers said on Tuesday that they expect Barr to send Congress a heavily redacted version of the highly anticipated report.

They also highlighted the fact that Barr declined to recommend a criminal prosecution against Trump for obstruction of justice, noting his previously held view that a president could not obstruct justice.

“We have not seen the report. We’ve only gotten a summary that was created by a man who was appointed by the president, who clearly said before his appointment that he didn’t believe a sitting president could be charged, if you will, with obstruction of justice,” said Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.), a member of the Judiciary Committee.

Mueller’s findings on Trump-Russia collusion in particular rattled Democrats who had been claiming for the past two years that the president or his associates conspired with the Kremlin.

“There are some Democrats who are disappointed,” Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.) acknowledged. “And I’ve said to five or six of them, the fact that the president of the United States is not in a criminal conspiracy with a foreign enemy is cause for celebration, not for disappointment. And if you get your head into a place where you think it’s a bad thing that the president is not a traitor, you’ve got to reorient your head.”

Sarah Ferris and Kyle Cheney contributed to this report.

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Everything to remember from ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 5

Valar morghulis, friends. You’ve just entered Mashable’s Citadel, where we are Rewatching for the Throne, dissecting Game of Thrones season by season to prepare for the final six episodes beginning on April 14. 

SEE ALSO: Everything to remember from ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 1

Here are all the best Season 5 theories, unanswered questions, unresolved plots, and forgotten tidbits you need to remember before winter comes for the endgame in Season 8.

What does Cersei’s prophecy mean?

Lots of ink has been spilled on deciphering the prophecy that Maggy the Frog delivered to Cersei as a child. And one Season 7 development brings the validity of the whole thing into question.

First, here’s what the witch predicted in the Season 5 opening scene:

“You’ll never wed the prince, you’ll wed the king… You’ll be queen, for a time. Then comes another, younger, more beautiful, to cast you down and take all you hold dear… The king will have twenty children and you will have three… Gold will be their crowns, gold their shrouds.”

One huge, oft-debated book difference is that the show did not include the final and most vital prediction: “And when your tears have drowned you, the valonqar shall wrap his hands about your pale white throat and choke the life from you.” 

Turns out young Cersei was just as awful as adult Cersei

Turns out young Cersei was just as awful as adult Cersei

Image: hbo

Valonqar means “the little brother” in Valyrian, which most likely refers to Tyrion or Jaime (born right after his twin/lover). Another possible twist is that its referring to her unborn child, a “little brother” who will choke the life out of her during child birth. Fans speculate the exclusion of the valonqar on the show either proves it was too big a hint, or that Cersei’s destiny will differ from the books.

For a while it seemed like all of Maggy’s prediction came true, but as with all prophecies in Game of Thrones, you can rationalize that Cersei’s belief and attempt to avoid them iconically caused her to fulfill them all herself. 

The tighter she held onto her children, the more danger she put them in (especially Tommen and Joffrey). The more suspicious she became of Robert, the more she pushed him into the arms of other women. The more viciously she clung to her crown, the more opportunity she gave for a newer and more beloved queen (either Daenerys or Margaery) to rise and take her place.

Maggy the Frog is having none of your shit

Maggy the Frog is having none of your shit

Image: hbo

But the biggest red flag about this prophecy is Cersei’s claim that she is now pregnant. She was only supposed to have three kids so either she’s lying, is going to have a miscarriage in Season 8, or will prove that all prophecies are bullshit. 

Another theory is that perhaps all prophecies that require blood magic (Maggy tastes her blood before) — including the one to Dany from the witch in Season 1 — are not predictions, but curses. 

Will we go back to Valyria?

Tyrion and Jorah’s joy ride through Valyria remains an odd dangling plot point.

For one, no one could ever sail this casually through it in the book and live to tell the tale. So showing us Valyria in the series could have a larger purpose. Perhaps it was as simple as Jorah’s greyscale subplot — which went absolutely nowhere. Or maybe the showrunners wanted to give a visual to go along with an explanation of Valyria’s important history. 

Along those lines, maybe they bothered going through Valyria to set up a return to in in Season 8.

There’s plenty to be gained from a successful excavation of Valyria, particularly magic and dragon secrets but also lots of Valyrian weapons and armor. In the books, Euron claims to have adventured through the radioactively dangerous ruins.

The mysteries of Valyria and the civilization’s Doom remains one of the most tantalizing mysteries of the entire Game of Thrones universe. There are too many theories to count on what caused it, but some of the most relevant and popular include: 1) Valyrian dragon blood magic gone wrong, 2) a conspiracy by the maesters to end magic, 3) the Faceless Men in a slave uprising, 4) something due to the irregular seasons.

We may never get a real answer to that question. 

But Valyria will likely still be a point of importance because (like Dragonstone and Winterfell) it’s one of the locations tied to the fourteen flames, which is a volcanic chain spanning across all of Westeros. They’re all believed to be tied to the strange seasons and magical potency, since it’s speculated that dragons grow bigger and stronger near them.

White Walkers are impervious to fire

No theories here, just noting this for sheer fucking terror. 

Danaerys dragons will obviously be an advantage when dealing with wights — who burn immediately. But Season 5 proved that the actual White Walkers can only be killed with Valyrian steel.

Another relevant note is that, in the books, the White Walkers and wights also don’t come out during sunlight. That might sound comforting, until you consider that they also bring the winter storm with them. They get cloud cover wherever they go, so don’t expect the sun to help win the war at all.

Who is the Night King? Probably a Stark.

Season 5 offered our first glimpse at the White Walker threat in its full capacity. And we learned a lot  of hints about who the Night King might possibly be. And almost all fans agree that he’s an ancient Stark (and no, not because he’s a time-traveling Bran).

Before we go down that path though, note that  George R. R. Martin has explicitly stated the legend of the Night‘s King from the books is different than the main White Walker they call the Night King on the show. However, that doesn’t mean we can’t gleam some relevant information from the mythological figure.

In the northern legend of the Night’s King, centuries ago the 13th Lord Commander of the Night’s Watch was said to have fallen in love with what sounds like a female White Walker, described as having “skin as white as the moon and eyes like blue stars.” 

Starks always do like to brood

Starks always do like to brood

Image: hbo

This Lord Commander then declared himself king, her his Night Queen, and reigned over the darkest period of the Night’s Watch when they even sacrificed humans to the White Walkers.

After several years, the Night King was defeated by the Starks at Winterfell and a King-Beyond-the-Wall. Then his name was scrubbed from all records. The twist here is that it’s believed his name was erased from history by the Starks because they were embarrassed that the Night King was one of their own.

There’s loooots of evidence to support that the Starks share blood with the White Walkers (they don’t call ’em the Kings of Winter for nothing), and that their house words — “Winter is Coming” — began at first as a boast of their powerful magic rather than a dreary climate warning.

The reason why some fans read a lot into the twelve White Walkers in the background of the Season 4 baby transformation scene (read more on that here) is because it could be a nod to the Night King being the thirteenth Lord Commander.

Some even speculate that the Night’s King legend is covering up the real origins of the Night’s Watch  — not as a brotherhood to protect the realm from the White Walkers, but as protectors of the peace pact struck with the White Walkers during the first Long Night (again check out our Season 4 theory round up for more).

If that’s all true, then the Night’s King story would be a parallel to Jon Snow’s. Jon was also a Stark and Lord Commander of the Night’s Watch who is hated, betrayed, and portrayed as evil by his brothers for brokering peace with mortal enemies (the Wildlings). It might even foreshadow Jon as the one who will make peace with the White Walkers to end the war. Not to mention some think the Night King’s name was a Stark bastard named Jon Snow.

Jon’s connection to the White Walkers would also explain why, in the Inside the Episode for Hardhome, showrunner David Benioff note that the Night King became intrigued by Jon after seeing him kill off one of his lieutenants. “He’s kind of thinking, ‘Huh, this kid is interesting. This kid is actually possibly a threat to me.” 

Maybe the Night King even sensed Jon Snow’s secret Targaryen dragon blood.

This would also make sense with a recent EW interview from Vladimir Furdik, the Night King actor, who said, “People will see he has a target he wants to kill, and you will find out who that is. There’s also that moment [in “Hardhome”] when Jon Snow was on the boat and the Night King looked at him and raised his arms — there’s a similar and even stronger moment between Jon and the Night King this time.”

They’ve been hyping up undead pale spiders

The Hardome episode marks the third time the show mentions legends claiming that White Walkers ride pale white spiders as big as hounds. Old Nan said it first, and we all know everything Old Nan says eventually proves to be 100% real.

For this and other reasons, we’re banking on giant undead spiders making an appearance in the big White Walker battle in Season 8.

Daenerys shares a telepathic connection with her dragons

In the fighting pit scene where Danaerys flies Drogon for the first time, there’s a moment where it looks like the end for our khaleesi. Then she closes her eyes and suddenly Drogon appears. And in the Inside the Episode, the showrunners confirm this is because Drogon sensed his mother was in great danger.

This deep connection was reinforced in the season finale, too, when Daenerys destroys the Masters attacking Meereen. As if answering her call, Rhaegal and Viserion break out of imprisonment to join her and big bro Drogon in the sky.

Drogon is so much more than a pet, or even a child

Drogon is so much more than a pet, or even a child

Image: hbo

This telepathic connection is a huge deal. It’s basically confirming Dany has, in essence, a warging connection with her reptile babies. Like Bran entering Summer’s mind, they share a consciousness. And perhaps like the Starks and their direwolves, only a Targaryen with dragon’s blood can share this relationship. If so, Jon will need to learn this skill before riding Rhaegal in Season 8.

But what does that mean for Viserion, though, now that he is undead? Has his telepathic connection been transferred over to the Night King, even though he presumably has no Targaryen “dragon’s blood.” Will Dany be able to fight to bring back their connection when she battles the Night King on Viserion?

How did Qyburn resurrect the Mountain, and how will it matter?

So we all know Qyburn got kicked out of Maester school for doing “unnatural” experiments. But how the hell did he raise the dead by resurrecting the Mountain? I mean, that’s usually a power reserved for magical beings like the White Walkers or gods like the Lord of Light (allegedly).

Well we don’t have any good answer for Qyburn’s “scientific” approach to resurrection. There are hints that he knows some blood magic, and other evidence that he basically reverse-engineered the poison (clever guy).

The more interesting question is what are the consequences of the Mountain being undead?

The Mountain was never much of a looker, but now...

The Mountain was never much of a looker, but now…

Image: hbo

Some believe his zombie nature might make him able to be controlled by the Night King, which won’t be great for Cersei in Season 8. But we’re not so sure about that because Qyburn confirmed that the Mountain’s undead-ness doesn’t mean he’s mindless, like the wights are. 

A more optimistic theory is that he’d be susceptible to Bran’s mind control, like when he warged into Hodor (RIP). Also bad news for Cersei, though!

How big is the White Walker army?

The Battle at Hardhome showed us exactly how dangerous the White Walker army is, with its nearly endless possibility for growth. But exactly what kind of number are we dealing with here?

The short answer is too many.

The short answer is too many.

Image: hbo

Well according to What Culture, which reportedly got access to a leaked copy of the Season 7 finale script, the stage direction from the last scene during the Wall’s destruction read:

“Emerging from the frozen coastal forest, the ARMY OF THE DEAD comes in force. All of them, 100,000 strong, with hundreds of WHITE WALKER officer corps on their dead horses.”

Oh. Boy.

How does the living army stack up? Here’s a very rough estimate of the armies left standing by the end of Season 7. The most promising number is Daenerys’ nearly 100,000 Dothraki riders. But don’t forget that the White Walkers are marching south now, and will have a lot more access to more dead people and animals as they go further down.

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EMBARGO 9:30am ET March 26: Huawei P30 Pro

How do you improve smartphone photography? By doing everything you can to fix its biggest pain points. That, at least, is what Huawei has done with its new P30 Pro smartphone. 

The Huawei P30 Pro (there’s also a slightly weaker but still quite capable P30), announced on Tuesday at an event in Paris, is designed to excel at things smartphones typically aren’t very good at: Night photography, zoom photography, and portrait photography. 

I had some hands-on time with both devices at a pre-brief in London last week, and I can tell you that P30 Pro is a very nice phone — though its photographic powers will take some time to properly review. 

SEE ALSO: Huawei to U.S. media: Don’t believe everything you hear

The differences between Huawei’s two flagship lines of products — the P series and the Mate series — were once a bit blurry, but with the release of P30 Pro, they’re finally clearly distinct. The Mate is the flagship, with every possible feature under the sun. As Huawei’s Global Senior Product Marketing Manager Peter Gauden put it during the pre-brief, the P series is all about the user experience with an emphasis on photography. 

A cameraphone with flagship specs

That isn’t to say that the P30 Pro is lagging behind modern flagships. It’s a 6.47-inch smartphone featuring an OLED display with a tiny, waterdrop-style notch on top and curvy sides, as well as in-screen fingerprint scanner. That notch may not be the trendiest thing to have — hole-punch camera cutouts are all the rage these days — but Huawei did innovate here by completely removing the top speaker and replacing it with “electro-magnetic levitation” technology that turns the screen itself into a speaker. 

There's no speaker grille up top -- the screen is the speaker.

There’s no speaker grille up top — the screen is the speaker.

Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE

The P30 Pro is powered by Huawei’s best chip, the Kirin 980, and the model I tried out had 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage memory. It has a huge, 4,200mAh battery with fast wired charging, wireless charging and reverse wireless charging. It’s resistant to dust and water up to IP68 specifications. Finally, the P30 Pro runs Android Pie and Huawei’s latest EMUI 9.1 user interface.

That’s a lot of megapixels

And then there are the cameras. The Huawei P30 Pro has a quad rear camera with a 40-megapixel, f/1.6 main lens, 20-megapixel, f/2.2 ultra-wide lens and an 8-megapixel, periscope zoom lens which provides up to 5x of optical zoom and can be combined with the main camera for a 10x lossless, hybrid zoom. 

Cms%252f2019%252f3%252f870f7b10 1d81 4804%252fthumb%252f00001.jpg%252foriginal.jpg?signature=ntzbntgj17iepb4y1u1bwfrha 4=&source=https%3a%2f%2fvdist.aws.mashable

The fourth sensor on the back is a depth sensor that should help out with bokeh (Huawei says the separation between the foreground and the blurry background will be very precise thanks to it). It also allows for some cool features like taking measurements of objects just by pointing the camera at them. Wrapping up the already pretty rad camera specs is a 32-megapixel selfie shooter on the front. 

The telephoto, 5x zoom lens is at the bottom of the camera array.

The telephoto, 5x zoom lens is at the bottom of the camera array.

Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE

Consider how much better this is than the setup on the Mate 20 Pro, which is still one of the best cameraphones you can buy. The new P30 Pro has a bigger aperture on the main lens (f/1.6 vs. f/1.8), has optical image stabilization on both the main and the telephoto lens, and the selfie camera is improved, too (32 vs 24 megapixels). 

There’s another big difference. The 20-megapixel and the 8-megapixel sensors are so-called SuperSpectrum sensors, with red, yellow, yellow and blue pixels doing the work instead of the typical red, green and blue pixels. This tech, called RYYB, will soak up more light than the traditional RGB pixel array, which should result in great low-light photography. Huawei says the main camera has 400,000 maximum ISO light sensitivity, which is pretty impressive for a smartphone camera (though the image sensor will have to work very hard to produce a usable photo at that ISO level). 

A few other points Gauden made during the pre-brief: Night mode is present, but night photos should look great even in (much faster) normal shooting mode. Videos are very bright in low light scenarios, too. HDR should be much improved with the help of AI (unfortunately, it will either work when AI chooses it too or as a separate mode; there’s no way to force it in regular shooting mode).

OMG, that zoom

This is one of the smallest notches I've seen.

This is one of the smallest notches I’ve seen.

Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE

The phone is pretty and feels great in the hand thanks to curvy sides on both front and back. The notch on top is tiny but there is a noticeable chin on the bottom. On the back, the 3+1 camera array is iPhone-like in appearance, but what sets the phone apart is Huawei’s shimmery colors, which do indeed look very fancy, especially in the blue-purple Aurora or the white-blue Breathing Crystal colors (there’s also an all-new Amber Sunrise color which we didn’t get time with during our pre-brief). Put all of that together and you get a decent successor to the Mate 20 Pro, but not something that will blow your socks off. 

Far more impressive is the phone’s 10x zoom. Again, it’s hard to say how well it performs without taking a better look at the resulting photos, but just being able to point a camera at something and see things your naked eye cannot dream of seeing is pretty great.

Both the main and the telephoto camera have optical image stabilization, coupled with software stabilization, which makes working with 10x zoom bearable. It’s still not easy to catch something that’s moving in this mode but it’s doable, and the pigeon (below) can attest to that. That photo was taken through a window; the pigeon was on a branch of a tree at least 20 feet away from me. 

The 10x zoom feature will let you see details you can't see with your eyes.

The 10x zoom feature will let you see details you can’t see with your eyes.

Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE

Night photography and portrait mode were harder to test during the pre-brief, though. The P20 Pro and the Mate 20 Pro did a pretty good job at both, though not without glitches, so I hope to see improvement in both areas. 

The P30 is pretty good, too

I’ve also had the opportunity to try out the slightly smaller and generally less powerful P30. It’s got a 6.1-inch OLED display, a triple rear camera with optical zoom that only goes to 3x, a 32-megapixel selfie camera, and roughly the same innards as the P30 Pro, save for a smaller, 3,650mAh battery. 

Generally, the P30 is a slightly less powerful version of the P30 Pro, lacking its most distinctive feature, the 10x lossless/5x optical zoom. Without the depth sensor, it probably won’t be as good at taking portrait photos, either. It does look equally nice and it’s a fair amount smaller (which some folks may appreciate), though, so the key question will be the price. 

Huawei's new FreeLace earphones are paired with the phone in an odd way -- you plug them into the phone.

Huawei’s new FreeLace earphones are paired with the phone in an odd way — you plug them into the phone.

Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE

Finally, Huawei also launched the FreeLace, a set of wireless earphones which appear to be aimed at sporty types, with IPX5 sweat and water resistance and wind noise reduction tech. Their distinctive feature is Bluetooth pairing — you pair them by simply plugging their USB-C jack into the phone. 

The irony of wireless pairing via a wire isn’t lost on me, but Huawei claims this is just so much simpler than holding a button and waiting for the phone to respond, and they might just be right on that one. You charge the earphones in the same way; Huawei claims you’ll get four hours of music playback with just 5 minutes of charging. A full charge should be enough for 18 hours of music playback. 

…But not in the U.S.

From left to right: Breathing Crystal, Aurora, and Black. I didn't get to see the new Amber Sunrise color up close.

From left to right: Breathing Crystal, Aurora, and Black. I didn’t get to see the new Amber Sunrise color up close.

Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE

With Huawei’s relationship with the U.S. government seemingly deteriorating by the day, there’s always the question of whether U.S. consumers will even see these products. I asked Gauden about U.S. availability, and while he wouldn’t directly comment on that, he did say that the U.S. consumers deserve to have access to the “best technology” and will surely “find ways to bring the device into the market,” which pretty much says it all. 

Generally, Huawei wouldn’t share the price and availability of the new devices prior to launch; we’ll update this post as soon as we get them. 

The FreeLace earbuds will cost 99 euros or $112.

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MLB Rumors: Jacob deGrom, Mets Agree to 5-Year, $137.5M Contract Extension

New York Mets pitcher Jacob deGrom delivers the ball to the Atlanta Braves during the second inning of a baseball game Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2018, in New York. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

Bill Kostroun/Associated Press

The New York Mets have reportedly locked down one of their most important players after pitcher Jacob deGrom agreed to an extension Tuesday, according to SNY’s Andy Martino.

Per Martino, the extension is for five years, each of which is guaranteed. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic outlined the terms of the deal:

Ken Rosenthal @Ken_Rosenthal

DeGrom agreed to new, five-year, $137.5M contract with #Mets, sources tell The Athletic. Covering 2019 to ‘23 with club option for ‘24. Opt-out after ‘22. Deal first reported: @MartinoNYC.

The 30-year-old is coming off the best season of his career, winning a Cy Young Award while posting a major league best 1.70 ERA. He also had a 0.912 WHIP and 269 strikeouts in 217 innings despite going just 10-9.

It was more than enough to earn a contract extension from the Mets and new general manager Brodie Van Wagenen, deGrom’s former agent.

DeGrom had previously put pressure on the organization in February by saying he wouldn’t negotiate after the start of the season, per Mike Puma of the New York Post. The Mets’ regular-season opener is Thursday against the Washington Nationals.

This is a change from when deGrom was the subject of trade speculation throughout the 2018 season. Kristie Ackert of the New York Daily News first reported in June the team would listen to offers, although no club was able to provide enough to get him away from the Mets.

Meanwhile, Van Wagenen seemingly gave the club an ultimatum at the All-Star break.

“Jacob has expressed interest in exploring a long-term partnership that would keep him in a Mets uniform for years to come,” he said in July as the pitcher’s agent, per Rosenthal. “If the Mets don’t share same interest, we believe their best course of action is to seriously consider trade opportunities now.”

Now with control over the team’s operations, Van Wagenen put his money where his mouth was.

DeGrom was the 2014 NL Rookie of the Year and earned All-Star appearances in 2015 and 2018. In 2015, he was key in helping the Mets reach the World Series while posting a 2.88 ERA in four postseason starts.

Noah Syndergaard, Zack Wheeler, Matt Harvey (now with the Los Angeles Angels) and even Steven Matz might have entered the league with more hype as highly touted prospects, but deGrom has been the most consistent of the group since reaching New York.

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Israel-Hamas ceasefire holds amid tense calm in Gaza Strip

Gaza City – A fraught quiet has settled over the Gaza Strip after a night of Israeli air raids on the besieged coastal enclave following a rocket strike on a home in central Israel. 

An Egyptian-brokered ceasefire, announced around 19:00 GMT on Monday, was confirmed by a Hamas spokesperson, but the exchange of fire between armed groups in Gaza and the Israeli military continued until just before dawn on Tuesday, residents in the strip said.

The latest flare-up took place after a long-range missile was fired from Gaza into the Israeli community of Mishmeret – 20km north of Tel Aviv – early Monday morning, wounding seven people.

No group from Gaza has claimed responsibility, but Israel blamed Hamas, the movement that rules the strip, and deployed tanks and reservists at the Israeli fence east of the Gaza Strip.

Throughout Monday night, Israeli warplanes targeted Hamas and Islamic Jihad positions with air raids. Hamas leader Ismail Haniya’s office was destroyed in the attack, as well as several residential buildings.

The Israeli army confirmed that its warplanes had carried out 15 bombardments in the Gaza Strip.

According to the Gaza Ministry of Health, seven Palestinians were injured.

Sameh al-Ghazali, a Gaza resident, lost his home in Gaza City overnight.

“We were shocked when we received a phone call from the Israeli army last night telling us to evacuate our home within seconds,” the father of one told Al Jazeera.

The residential building he lives in, which consists of three floors, is owned by four Ghazali families and also hosts the al-Multazem Insurance Company. All the families living in the area evacuated their homes as well.

An F-16 missile levelled the building in a cloud of dust.

“I have no words,” Sameh said. “I did not expect in my life that our house would be bombed. The whole family is in great shock. In one instant we lost memories and all of our hard work in life.”

At least 10 children lived in the building. Now the family members are scattered among the homes of their relatives.

“What happened is the summary of our lives in Gaza,” Sameh said. “You could lose anything or anyone in the blink of an eye.”

Ceasefire holding

The ceasefire was announced after Gaza’s armed groups launched a barrage of rockets towards Israel but, in a joint statement, the armed factions said they would stop firing rockets if Israel ceased its air raids.

“We affirm our response to the Egyptian mediation of the ceasefire and declare our commitment to calm if the Israeli occupation does as well,” the statement said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu cut a visit to the United States short, where he was due to deliver a speech at the annual AIPAC conference in Washington, DC, vowing to “respond forcefully”.

Yair Levin, a minister from Netanyahu’s Likud party told Israeli news outlet Ynet: “It is clear there is no ceasefire. We are responding to every attack.”

So far, on Tuesday, both Israel and armed factions in the Gaza Strip have stopped firing. 

Netanyahu’s rivals have accused him of being too soft on Hamas, and thus the recent wave of escalation, according to Gaza-based political analyst Mohsen Abu Ramadan, can be attributed to the upcoming Israeli elections on April 9, in which the prime minister is seeking re-election.

“[The air strikes] come within Netanyahu’s attempts to prove himself to his rival candidates,” Abu Ramadan said. “But to the Israeli public, he has not achieved that goal of delivering a blow to Gaza’s armed factions, so we can expect Netanyahu to resort to another wave of attacks.”

Another ‘surge in confrontation’ likely

Whether the Palestinian factions would stick to the ceasefire was unclear. Abu Ramadan said there was a “possibility” more rockets would be launched, given the timing of events.

On Saturday, Palestinians in Gaza will mark one year since the Great March of Return protests began. The weekly demonstrations, which kicked off in commemoration of Land Day, has witnessed Palestinians from all walks of life participating near the Israeli fence at five encampment points along the strip, demanding an end to Israel’s 12-year blockade.

In their protests, they also call for the right to return to their ancestral villages and towns, most a few kilometres away on the Israeli side, which their grandparents were ethnically cleansed from in the run-up to the establishment of the state Israel.

More than 250 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces during these protests, and tens of thousands have been wounded. Two Israeli soldiers were killed in the same time period.

Abu Ramadan said he expects another surge of confrontation between Gaza and Israel.

“There will likely be an escalation of the use of force by Israeli soldiers against the demonstrators,” he said of the upcoming protest where tens of thousands of people are expected to participate.

“This increases the prospects of armed factions firing rockets as a response.”

Al Jazeera has reached out to Hamas officials but received no response.

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A pilot Meghan Markle filmed with Max Greenfield is set to air 10 years later

By Rachel Thompson

A pilot that Meghan Markle filmed with Max Greenfield is going to be aired a decade after they made it. 

“It was called like, The Girls and Boys Guide To Getting Down, it was a pilot for Comedy Central, Adam Pally was in it,” Greenfield told James Corden. 

“Then I got some sort of email recently saying, ‘This person has bought it and they’re putting it out’ and I was like, ‘Great, good for you.’”

Sadly, it doesn’t appear that Greenfield and Markle became lifelong friends during the filming. 

“Meghan and I, we really didn’t connect after that or during that. Look, had I known, I maybe would have played my cards a little differently,” Greenfield said. 

Too little, too late. 

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James Corden’s ‘Us’ parody is mildly scary, extremely silly

James Corden loves a parody sketch almost as much as he loves a car-based singalong. He’s done it with IT, and A Star is Born, and now he’s taking on Jordan Peele’s latest horror movie Us. (Although it’s called We in the sketch above because, you know, copyright.)

The parody sees Corden and Reggie Watts wandering around The Late Late Show studio, becoming increasingly concerned that some strangers are trying to steal the show away from them.

The problem is, the imposters are — you guessed it — doppelgängers. Right down to the matching One Direction tattoos.

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The ex-offenders working towards a safer Johannesburg

Johannesburg, South Africa – Joe Slovo Drive is a gateway to Johannesburg’s inner city. It leads to an intersection into town or up to a freeway onto multiple nodes of the metropolis. For years it was plagued by crime. 

People were urged to beware of criminals who would “smash and grab” valuables from car seats, hold drivers at gunpoint to hijack their vehicles or steal from pedestrians.

Some avoided the road completely, creating a warren of alternative routes into the city.

At the intersection today, safety wardens stand at the traffic lights – two men dressed in shirts and ties, each holding a sjambok, a thin leather whip with a loaded history.

It was used to punish Malay slaves, by the Voortrekkers to drive oxen and later, became a symbol of apartheid police. More recently, the whip has been used at student rallies and in several malicious attacks.

Whether it’s the controversial weapon or the presence of the men holding them – once criminals themselves – crime at the intersection has plummeted. 

Captain Munyai of the Jeppe Police Station said it has been a long time since the local station received a report of an incident.

“Since they’ve been standing there, our smash and grabs are very low. The crime rate there now is very low,” he told Al Jazeera. 

As crime fell, officers kept asking themselves: “Who’s the owner of this company? Who do they report to?”

I can only imagine some of the threats they must get from the criminals. I think they’re very brave.

Frank Leya, local resident

Collin Khumalo is an unusual candidate to lead an initiative cleaning up what was once one of Johannesburg’s hottest crime spots. 

In 1995, he was sentenced to life plus 45 years in jail for armed robbery and murder, where he ran a notorious prison gang.

Sitting in his simple office in South Africa’s biggest city, almost five years after his release, he said: “When you’re in the gang, you become cold, you can’t love anyone, you don’t have sympathy for anyone.

“When you’re in that space, for me, fighting someone was, if I didn’t do it, I didn’t feel OK.”

In Kutama Sinthumule Correctional Centre, gangs used religious meetings as opportunities to strategise, issue orders, share weapons and get cannabis.

But in 2001, he met a pastor who “broke a wall … showed [me] that human beings can still love other human beings. I remember thinking that I wanted to change.”

His allies in prison insisted he couldn’t leave the gang, but Khumalo was sure.

“[I told them], ‘guys if you kill me you kill me, but I’m not coming back,’.”

Safety wardens Bennett Ranthoka takes pride in the difference his team have made in the area [Tshego Mmahlatji/Al Jazeera]

In his remaining years in prison, he concentrated on church and education and formed a committee called Fear Free Life, “a programme started by inmates addressing the core of rehabilitation of offenders”, he said. 

He wrote modules on moral regeneration, understanding gangsterism, how to leave gangs and adopting a positive lifestyle. 

After presenting the programme to prison management, Fear Free Life began classes. 

“In the first class, 60 students packed into a room meant for 30,” he said. “There was a hunger from people for transformation and change.”

When transferred to Johannesburg Prison, the programme travelled with Khumalo and was adopted across all four sections of the facility. 

‘It reduced crime’

In 2013 he was released on day parole and launched Fear Free Life as non-profit organisation, setting up offices near Joe Slovo Drive.

Soon, he met local property owners who wanted to reduce crime in the area.

“Propertuity, Jozi Housing, Trafalgar, Mafadi all contributed something towards the project, and then it flew,” he said, clicking a finger. “It reduced crime at that intersection, I think it was from 100 to 0.”

This branch of the project, Urban Initiatives, now works in several areas of the city.

The safety wardens take an active role to keep the busy intersection crime-free [Tshego Mmahlatji/Al Jazeera]

More than 250 people are now employed in the non-profit, most of whom are ex-offenders, “paid through the support of City Improvement Districts, property owners, business people that need our services”, Khumalo said.

Zola Dambula, chairperson of the local Community Police Forum, said: “The community around Berea are very much appreciative of their presence there.”

Despite its apparent success, the initiative raises questions about the possible threat of violence to deter criminals.

But according to Urban Initiatives finance manager Darlington Radebe, the team of safety wardens stays in close contact with a security company, the Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department and the South African Police Service in the area.

“The key to our strength is recruiting mostly reformed gang members and inmates and most of them they actually grew [up] on the streets, they know how the streets work,” said Radebe.

If criminals are armed, they use radio communication to call on security officers and a response team if criminals are armed.

“We’re not a security company,” said Khumalo. “We mainly do patrolling, cleaning, and other jobs that our clients might require us to do within the ambits of the law.”

Because it is funded by the private sector, others question if Urban Initiatives is another example how safety in the country is the reserve of people who can afford it.

South Africa’s private security industry is among the largest in the world. In 2017, a third more was spent on private security than the government’s police budget.

Regular commuters have formed a friendly relationship with the men on patrol [Tshego Mmahlatji/Al Jazeera]

“The safety wardens patrolling Joe Slovo Rd at the Abel Rd intersection are yet another plaster on the festering wound of inequality in South Africa,” said Simon Sizwe Mayson, whose doctoral research and work in the neighbourhood explores inequality and socio-economic wellbeing.

“As a short term fix, Urban Initiatives seems to do a better job than other security companies, without guns. They employ past offenders that would otherwise find it very difficult to earn an income.”

He added, however, that the project’s success is based on inequality.

“In essence, it’s the have-nots protecting the haves (the car owners) from the have-nots. The wound is still there. Violence will rise. Collective wellbeing will sink, even for the rich, until there is a collective movement towards greater equality.”

Public support

While working on the 51st floor of Ponte – the once-notorious cylindrical skyscraper of apartments overlooking the intersection – local resident Frank Leya said he used to witness the regular onslaught of “smash and grabs” happening.

“[But ever since those guys came, we see them walk through traffic to make sure there isn’t any smash and grabs,” he said. 

“Workers walking through Yeoville used to get mugged by that intersection but a lot of that is not happening any more. You can even drive with your windows down when it’s hot, you know? 

“They’ve made the biggest difference. And they’re still there late at night when community members walk to and from the taxis. The problem is we don’t have a lot of them so there’s only so much they can do.

“I can only imagine some of the threats they must get from the criminals. I think they’re very brave.”

Sometimes I think about looking for another job but I can’t leave here, I need to keep it safe.

Bennett Ranthoka, safety warden

On duty, safety warden Bennett Ranthoka’s chest puffs out as he fans his hand along Joe Slovo Drive.

“People come with toy guns, with real guns, I don’t care,” he said. “I chase them away.” 

He talks about the difference they’ve made at the intersection and then sighs. 

“Sometimes I think about looking for another job but I can’t leave here, I need to keep it safe.”

Beside him a woman carrying a baby on her back waits at the traffic light. 

He gestures towards them. 

“You see, they’re safe. I’m here so they’re safe.”

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