The ‘who gon’ check me, boo?’ meme is a modern masterpiece

2019%252f02%252f04%252fdf%252fimg 58811.67a74.jpg%252f90x90By Harry Hill

Nothing like a fresh meme to revive the senses and inspire some genuine chuckles.

This week, a new meme went viral on Twitter, inspiring some very important tweets. The format is simple and allows for a myriad of possibilities, as any hearty format should. It goes like this: Twitter users come up with a protagonist to ask, “who gon’ check me, boo?” along with a villain to answer, made up by a face of emojis, depending on the answer. 

fourteenth century europeans: who gon check me boo?

rats:

🐀🐀🐀🐀🐀


🐀👁 👁🐀

🐀 👃🏻 🐀

🐀👄 🐀

🐀

— jordan (@GordanJiles) February 7, 2019

SEE ALSO: Ariana Grande’s tattoo flub continues to get roasted in hilarious internet meme — All the Memes

For context, the “who gon’ check me, boo?” question was iconically raised by Sheree Whitfield on season 2 of The Real Housewives of Atlanta. Since the initial utterance, the phrase has been a social media staple. We’re glad her party planner was annoying her that day, otherwise this trend wouldn’t exist. 

OK, check out these tweets, boo. First, we must pay homage to the tweet that seems to have started the trend:

airplanes: who gon check me boo?

the bermuda triangle:

/


/

/👁👁

/ 👃🏻

/ 👄

/______________

— uwuon musk (@T1TSOUT) February 7, 2019

Julius Caesar: who gon check me boo?

the Roman senate:

🔪🔪🔪 🔪🔪 🔪🔪🔪


🔪🔪 👁 👁 🔪🔪

🔪🔪 👃🏻 🔪🔪

🔪🔪👄 🔪🔪

🔪🔪🔪

— Ayo Edebiri (@ayoedebiri) February 8, 2019

Not all of them include a devastating outcome. Some are just the truth.

My self confidence: who gon check me boo?

Mirrors:

___________________


| 👁 👁 |

| 👃🏼 |

| 👄 |

|__________________|

— Cody Foster (@codyfoster) February 7, 2019

marie curie: who gon check me boo

radiation:

🦠🦠🦠


🦠👁 👁🦠

🦠👄 🦠

🦠

— callum (@calimadu) February 7, 2019

Everybody loves a Pompeii shoutout. 

Pompeii: who gon check me boo?

Mount Vesuvius:

🌋 🌋


🌋 👁 👁🌋

🌋 👃 🌋

🌋 👄 🌋

🌋🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🌋

— tony (@banditkabai) February 7, 2019

Of course, someone managed to drag Call Me By Your Name into this (in the best way possible.)

The peach in call me by your name: “who gon check me boo”?

Elio:

➰➰➰➰➰

➰ 👁 👁➰

👃🏼 /

👄 /

__/

— roberto- (@RobertMcmanus18) February 7, 2019

This one is insidiously accurate:

me: who gon check me boo?

the pile of stuff on my shelf that looks like a face in the dark:


👓

🧸 📘

📎👁👁✏

🧴 👃🏻 💄

⏰ 👄 ✉

📃 📚📌✂ 📏

— rebecca (@Rebecca_Lynn129) February 7, 2019

The tectonic plates tea is HOT today.

Pangea: who gon check me boo?

tectonic plates:


______

/

/ 👁👁

👃🏻 /

👄 /

/_____________

— 𝕟𝕒𝕕𝕖𝕖𝕟 🌙 (@nadeeniedagenie) February 8, 2019

This one goes out to all the people who continue to eat pizza even though they know they shouldn’t:

my stomach: who gon check me boo?

lactose: 🥛🥛🥛🥛🥛


🥛👁 👁🥛

🥛 👃🏻 🥛

🥛👄 🥛

🥛

— aunk (@kingaunk) February 7, 2019

Of course, stan Twitter contributed, too. 

lady gaga: who gon check me boo?

her hip during the Scheiße choreography:


👁|👁

| 👃🏻 |

| 👄 |

/ / /

— Con ♡ (@400papi) February 8, 2019

And last but not least, an ode to The Haunting of Hill House resident levitating scary woman:

nel: who gon check me boo?

bent neck lady:

👄

👃🏻


👁 👁

— Sarah (@thewackisland) February 8, 2019

We hope you feel seen because we certainly do.  Sometimes, just sometimes, Twitter checks out. 

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Sony President talks 8K TVs and the premium features coming to 4K models — MashTalk

Pete Pachal

In this special edition of MashTalk, Mashable sits down with Mike Fasulo, President of Sony Electronics, at CES 2019. While Sony wowed at the tech conference with their new 85″ and 98″ 8K TVs, Fasulo said the trend to watch for 2019 is the further adoption of 4K by a widespread consumer base and the integration of smart home features within those popular TVs.

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Floyd Mayweather Jr. Says He Could Get $1 Billion Paycheck to Fight for UFC

Floyd Mayweather Jr. smiles as Japanese kickboxer Tenshin Nasukawa speaks after their official weigh-in ceremony during a news conference in Saitama, north of Tokyo Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018. Mayweather is scheduled to fight in a three-round exhibition match in Japan on New Year's Eve. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Eugene Hoshiko/Associated Press

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is always looking out for his bank account, so it’s surprising he hasn’t fought in the UFC based on what the undefeated boxing superstar believes he would get paid for an MMA matchup. 

Appearing on Kevin Hart’s Cold As Balls show, Mayweather said UFC would give him a deal worth at least $1 billion to fight for them. 

“I can go get a deal right now from the UFC,” he said. “Probably three-fight, four-fight, billion-dollar deal if that’s what I wanted.”

Mayweather has been linked to UFC on multiple occasions since defeating Conor McGregor in a boxing match in August 2017. 

Khabib Nurmagomedov’s manager, Ali Abdelaziz, told TMZ Sports in December that Mayweather was “begging” to fight the UFC lightweight champion. 

While Mayweather continues to tease the mixed martial arts world, he will bask in the glow of the $275 million he made last year.    

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Negotiators close to deal as shutdown deadline approaches


Richard Shelby

Sen. Richard Shelby, shown here before a Homeland Security appropriations meeting on Jan. 30, was upbeat after briefing Trump on the status of the negotiations Thursday. | M. Scott Mahaskey/POLITICO

government shutdown

‘We’re working the best we can to find that middle ground,’ said one of the lead Democratic negotiators.

Congressional negotiators say they’re close to reaching a deal to avert a shutdown, with Democrats acknowledging that a final compromise would include funding for border barriers — a concession that could spark rebellion within their party.

Lawmakers and aides, however, said Friday that the conference committee remains several days away from a final border security deal as top spending leaders continued to trade offers back and forth.



Negotiators technically have until Feb. 15 to reach an agreement to stave off another shutdown, but lawmakers insist the practical deadline for any agreement is much earlier in the week.

Story Continued Below

The current negotiations have narrowed to the most difficult of issues, with Democrats seeking to limit the number of detention beds for undocumented immigrants while Republicans are pushing for the highest funding level for barriers they can get.

But heading into Friday afternoon, an impasse continued over the dollar amount for border fencing or other barriers. Conservative lawmakers were insisting they and President Donald Trump would accept something around $2 billion — far below their insistence on $5.7 billion that triggered the shutdown in December. But Democrats quickly rejected that amount.

Most lawmakers left town Friday with few details about the state of talks, still referring to a deal as “if,” rather than “when.” Yet both parties remained adamant that the government would not shut down next Friday, eyeing another stopgap bill as a backup plan. Lawmakers from both parties have no appetite to shutter the government again after ending the longest shutdown in history just a few weeks ago.

Rep. Chuck Fleischmann of Tennessee, one of the GOP negotiators, said he is aiming for slightly more than $1.6 billion in fencing money, and signaled that Trump had backed off his demands for $5.7 billion.

“I think the political reality is, we can’t get to that,” Fleischmann said. “I think he understands that we’re operating under a divided government scenario and we’ve got to get the best deal that we can get.”

Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) was upbeat after briefing Trump on the status of the negotiations Thursday. And Fleischmann said Friday he’s heard directly from White House officials that the administration is “much more encouraged” on the status of funding talks.

Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard of California, one of the lead Democratic negotiators, conceded on Friday that a range of $1.6 billion to $2 billion for barriers “possibly could be workable.”

“We’re working the best we can to find that middle ground,” she told reporters. “That’s what we’re going to send over to the president and hopefully he’ll accept it and be able to put this aside.”

But a spokesman for House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.), who is leading the talks, later said Democrats wouldn’t accept $2 billion or more in barrier funding.

“We will not agree to $2 billion in funding for barriers,” said Lowey spokesman Evan Hollander. “Throughout the talks, Democrats have insisted that a border security compromise not be overly reliant on physical barriers.”

Top Democratic spending leaders will remain in town this weekend while the rest of the negotiators plan to return Sunday evening or early Monday to hopefully sign off on a final deal. Democratic Rep. Pete Aguilar said he plans to attend his child’s birthday party back home in California on Saturday and other members of the panel said they too were traveling to their districts this weekend.

Conferees must be physically present to sign off on any agreement, and several members of the panel said they now see Monday as the deadline to reach a compromise in order to move it through the House on time without needing a special waiver.

Lowey wouldn’t divulge details of the talks, but said the deal could be completed “hopefully Monday.”

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said Friday he was anticipating a funding deal hitting the floor next week but had no specifics. The Maryland Democrat also deflected a question on the House floor about whether the final deal would include money for physical barriers.

“We are for border security,” Hoyer said on the floor. “I’m hopeful that the conference committee reports out a bill that all sides can support that does, in fact, try to make our borders more secure.”

But some Democrats already admit the deal will likely cost them some votes within the Democratic Caucus, particularly with liberal lawmakers who were demanding negotiators insist on zero funding for physical barriers and decrease spending for the Department of Homeland Security.

“It is unrealistic,” to assume there won’t be any barrier funding in the deal, Roybal-Allard told reporters Thursday. “If the Republicans and the White House are saying they need barriers, wall — whatever you want to call it — and that is an absolute objective, and we’re saying we want some other things. Like in everything else, it’s a trade-off.”

House Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), a top Trump ally, suggested Friday that he could support less than $5.7 billion for border security but said it depends on what the money is allocated toward. He and other leaders of the Freedom Caucus met with the president on Thursday.

“It really depends on the detail that’s there,” Meadows said. “It’s not as much about the number as it is the flexibility with what it can construct and what it will do to secure our border.”

If negotiators can’t reach a deal to his liking, Meadows said he would rather see a yearlong continuing resolution that would keep the current funding levels — which were negotiated by Republicans last year — in place.

“I would be more inclined to encourage [Trump] to do a clean CR and do the national emergency,” Meadows said. “A shutdown is not off the table,” he added, but “no one wants it.”

House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.), meanwhile, told reporters Thursday that the GOP would be open to a stopgap funding bill, but only “if we’re close, and it looks like there’s serious, honest negotiations going on.”

Democrats have said they would like to avoid a yearlong stopgap funding bill, which would continue funding levels and spending priorities approved when Republicans controlled all levers of government last year.

“Really the worst thing that can happen is if we have to go into a yearlong CR,” said Roybal-Allard. “We’re doing everything we can to avoid that.”

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5 new features Twitter is testing in its iOS app

It’s not just you: Twitter has been experimenting with a lot more features lately. 

From “original tweeter” tags, to “good morning” news briefs, the service has been testing a ton of tweaks to make it easier to keep up with conversations and news unfolding on its platform.

Now, we have a new look at a whole other set of features it appears Twitter has been quietly experimenting with, including improvements to night mode, encrypted direct messages, and new ways to use GIFs.

The features were discovered by social media consultant Matt Navarra, who tells Mashable he was able to access unreleased features by digging around in the code Twitter’s iOS app. A Twitter spokesperson declined to comment on specifics, but said the company regularly experiments with many new features, and that not all of its tests launch more broadly.

So, take the following with a grain of salt, but here are some of the most interesting features Twitter is toying with.

1. Improved night mode

Twitter is testing two big updates to its popular “night mode,” which uses a darker color scheme. The first: a night mode that’s actually black instead of the dark blue it currently is. This is something that’s irked some Twitters users and CEO Jack Dorsey said last month the company plans to “fix.”

Besides just fixing the colors, it appears Twitter is testing an automated version of the feature, which would function similarly to Night Shift in iOS. With “automatic night mode,” Twitter’s dark theme could automatically kick in at sunset and turn off at sunrise.

2. Encrypted direct messages

Encrypted messaging is something that’s been on many people’s Twitter wish list for some time, and now we have yet another sign that it might actually happen. Dorsey told Edward Snowden back in 2016 that he would “think about” encrypted direct messages, but we haven’t heard much from the CEO since, though the feature was spotted last year in Twitter’s Android app.

Despite these comments, it’s still not clear exactly how this would work, but the fact that it says “message encryption is not available” would certainly seem to imply some sort of encryption availability — eventually.

Navarra followed up in a subsequent tweet saying he had heard from a source that encryption had been planned for late 2018, but the work had now been “paused,” for reasons that aren’t clear. More waiting!

UPDATE

Source: Twitter has paused working on end-to-end encryption feature for Direct Messages.

Feature was expected to be released late 2018.

Now it’s uncertain. https://t.co/sqTl7An5NK

— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) February 8, 2019

3. GIF reactions

Twitter might make it even easier to use GIFs in replies. Navarra spotted a new “react with GIF” option. While Twitter already includes a shortcut to add GIFs to tweets, this option would apply specifically to retweets, so you could add a GIF in top of a tweet.

4. News, Friends, and Highlights

One of the more intriguing features Navarra spotted was three new additions to Twitter’s side navigation bar: news, friends, and highlights. It’s not clear what these options are for, but it could be a new way to filter your timeline. Navarra speculates that “friends” could show you tweets from people who follow you who you follow back, for example. 

In a subsequent tweet, Navarra, citing an unnamed source, said Twitter was no longer “actively working on “news”and “friends.” But he made no mention of “highlights,” so it sounds like that one could still be on the table  — perhaps as an extension of Twitter’s existing recap features.

5. New drag and drop interface

It looks like Twitter is testing some UI tweaks that would allow you to use drag and drop gestures in the app. The first is the ability to move around the tweet compose button. It’s somewhat of a small change, but could be useful if you don’t like it’s current placement.

The second is more interesting: the ability to drag and drop individual tweets. You could use it to drag and drop tweets into a new tweet for instance, in order to quote a tweet, or drag it into a message to DM it to someone. Twitter already provides shortcuts to do both of these things in its app, but this would provide a new way to do so, That said, it looks a little clunky and could easily become confusing, though perhaps it would be useful on an iPad’s larger display.

8/ Twitter is testing a drag-n-drop feature for tweets on iOS?

Let’s you select a tweet from your feed and place it into a new tweet to RT + comment OR into a DM to send on to someone privately. pic.twitter.com/vZ03bmWBIo

— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) February 7, 2019

Again, it’s not clear which of these features, if any, will eventually launch publicly. But at a time when Twitter is planning on testing more and more of its new features out in the open, it provides an interesting look into how the company experiments.

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Ariana Grande’s tattoo flub continues to get roasted in hilarious internet meme — All the Memes

Uploads%252fvideo uploaders%252fdistribution thumb%252fimage%252f90429%252f1d73d86b 3832 4d72 8bad 05ddbc08d14e.jpg%252foriginal.jpg?signature=sjw7ekt5bwv6twdq3h8qqg3au4s=&source=https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws
2018%252f09%252f14%252f2b%252fallthememes logo.3c015.png%252ffit in  300x999

Sometimes, the web’s hive mind can be a weird, wonderful place. In their best moments, memes bring us together and give us a sense of belonging. But mostly, they just make us lol. In this weekly recap, we give a quick breakdown of the newest memes flooding a timeline near you. From moon blobs to ill-advised viral dance challenges, if it’s worthy of being memed, you know the internet won’t disappoint. We round up the best of the best of their fine, fine work.

Alex Humphreys

After a week of culturally dividing moments like the Patriot’s Super Bowl win and Trump’s State of the Union Address, the internet turned to memes to help release some tension.

In this week’s episode of All The Memes, we cringe at Super Bowl “queso” recipes, praise Nancy Pelosi’s sassy SOTU clap, and admire the determination and creativity of trolls who continued to roast Ariana Grande for the “BBQ grill” tattoo mishap.

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Keeping Aztec farming traditions alive in Mexico

Xochimilco, Mexico City – Pedro Capultitla remembers when he was a child, running through his family’s black pastures, a string in hand and a kite gliding above. Canals, canoes and native flora surrounded the ancient patch of farmland. Soft beneath his feet, the fields felt like home.

Three decades later, Capultitla stood on the canal-edge of his family’s chinampa, a man-made island formed for crop growing. Chinampas date back to pre-Hispanic times in Mexico City’s Xochimilco neighbourhood.

Xochimilco sits some 25km south of the city centre today, but it was once the agricultural hub of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan.

As butterflies flitted among rows of kale, 36-year-old Capultitla pinched off a leaf of kale and flipped it to reveal a small cluster of yellow butterfly eggs. Pointing to them, he exuded pride as he explained that they indicate the farm’s abstention from pesticide use.

Following in his family’s footsteps, Capultitla has taken on the tradition of farming atop the last remaining portion of what was once the enormous Lake of Texcoco, where the Aztecs built their capital city. 

Butterfly eggs on a kale leaf [Paul Biasco/Al Jazeera]

Like a time capsule from the Aztec period, the gardens rest in the district of Xochimilco. But the tradition is gradually eroding under the weight of the market, tourism and climate change.

The introduction of new agricultural technology, excessive groundwater extraction and abandonment of lands threaten the chinampa system, according to UNESCO.

As a boy, Capultitla never imagined he would eventually return to the fields to make a living. His brother left for the city, as have the descendants of thousands of other chinampa farmers over the last 20 years.

“My dad told me, ‘Go and try to work for companies to see how they treat you there with a schedule of when to enter and when you have to leave. Here you can be your own boss and have your own schedule,’” Capultitla said.

He has been farming on his family’s chinampas for the past 25 years but took a major step this year to expand his fields.

“Our family is very well known for the chinampas,” he said, explaining that he feels “very good” about keeping the tradition alive.

Capultitla’s grandfather owned and farmed five chinampas but, in more recent years, his father scaled back the family plots to one small island owing to his diabetes. Earlier this year, Capultitla decided to bring back to life three of those plots with the help of another farmer.

Capultitla estimates that he is just one of some 100 chinampa farmers who continue to practise traditional farming methods, as compared with 15 years ago, when there were still around 2,000 farms on the islands.

Oral tradition

Completely organic, Capultitla’s farm thrives due to the nutrient-rich soil dug up from the canal and added to each chinampa, preventing erosion and fertilising the land.

The plots can produce seven harvests a year, providing traditional pre-Hispanic produce such as beans, lettuce, cilantro, quintoniles, chard, tomatoes, amaranth, flowers and radishes.

Aztec farming traditions [Paul Biasco/Al Jazeera] [Daylife]

The chinampas once provided for the 1.5 million Aztecs in Tenochtitlan. They built their capital city on an island around the year 1300 and, at the time, the only answer to providing the enormous population with sustenance was to build man-made plots of farmland atop the lake.

The chinampas can only be reached by boat, and most of the wooden boats are motorless, powered by hand with long poles stuck into the mud-bottomed canal to propel them forward.

The art of building the land masses was never codified in text or studied in school. Rather, the knowledge has been orally passed down from generation to generation. Capultitla’s constitutes the sixth generation of his family to continue the practice.

“The technique is passed from generation to generation. There is not a book that contains this information,” said Laura Villagrán Vázquez, a biologist who studies and specialises in the chinampas. “It is very important to maintain this knowledge.”

The chinampas can only be reached by boat, and most of the wooden boats are motorless [Paul Biasco/Al Jazeera]

Building chinampas starts with filling an area with mud from the bottom of the lake and organic matter until the new farmland rises above water level.

Then, the chinaperos plant huejotes or Bondpland willows along the edges of the land to create a barrier. Known for holding water and resisting rot, the trees’ roots burrow deep into the earth and anchor the chinampa to land. 

Each time Capultitla prepares to plant new seeds, he removes mud from the bottom of the channel and creates a bed of mud next to the canal. He then cuts that mud into small squares.

The following day, he makes holes in each square with his fingers and places a seed in each hole to germinate for three to four days. After that, he prepares the land further inland and transplants the crops.

In a single chinampa, he can fit between 3,000 and 10,000 plants, depending on the season and size of the plants.

Battling the stigma

Capultitla’s favourite parts of the process are harvesting and eating his own produce. “I like to compare it with the Central de Abasto,” he said, referring to the city’s enormous central market. “The flavour [of the produce] from other places is sour, and here the flavour of the products is sweet.”

In past decades, city-dwellers had thought chinampas produce was dirty and tainted by bacteria, largely owing to its origins in the muddied waters, said Villagran Vazquez, who helps farmers prepare their products for commercial use.

But Villagran Vazquez had the waters tested in a lab and found that the bacteria levels in the canal paled in comparison to drinking water in cities. “I had to explain to people that the water is not contaminated,” she said.

In recent years, new initiatives began, aiming at connecting the farmers to restaurants and consumers. One such project, Yolcan, was founded in 2011 and has since supplied produce to some of the most renowned restaurants in Mexico City, such as Pujol, Maximo Bistrot and Quintonil.

Capultitla estimates that he is just one of some 100 chinampa farmers who continue to practise the traditional farming methods [Paul Biasco/Al Jazeera]

Xochimilco accounts for nine percent of Mexico City and contains 18km of canals. Only around three percent of the remaining chinampas are used for traditional farming, while others are now used for cattle grazing and even used by football teams that travel to and from practice by boat.

The area, microscopic on a global scale, contains two percent of the world biodiversity and 11 percent of the national biodiversity, according to Villagran Vazquez.

Although this sprawling pre-Hispanic site has gained international notoriety by being named a UNESCO World Heritage Site, tourists and locals alike are more likely to know the district for its popular parties in colourful boats that cruise along the canals with mariachi bands on board.

Ninelth Sandoval runs the Mexico Underground tour company, which aims to highlight traditional Mexican cultural experiences for tourists. Along with her partner, she has shifted the focus of their tours to chinampas instead of parties.

“We are now again starting to feel proud as Mexicans,” Sandoval said. “People used to feel ashamed of our roots. It is very important to remember the ways of our ancestors.”

For his part, Capultitla hopes to pass on to his 12-year-old son a sense of pride in preserving their 1,000-year-old traditions. The boy has already shown interest in farming with his father and studies agriculture in school.

“I will let him make his decision like my father did for me,” Capultitla concluded. 

Building chinampas starts with filling an area with mud from the bottom of the lake and organic matter until the new farmland rises above water level [Paul Biasco/Al Jazeera]

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Steve Kerr on Kevin Durant Lashing Out at Media: We’re Actors in a Soap Opera

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr talks to forward Kevin Durant #35 during an NBA basketball game Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2017, in Los Angeles. Golden State Warriors won 127-123 in overtime. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

Ringo H.W. Chiu/Associated Press

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr addressed Kevin Durant‘s ongoing feud with the media while speaking with reporters Friday.

Kerr acknowledged that fans’ interest in free agency plays a significant role in the popularity of the NBA (via The Athletic’s Anthony Slater):

Anthony Slater @anthonyVslater

Steve Kerr: “We’re all actors in a soap opera. We really are. And we have to deal with that part of it.” https://t.co/VHe6wNmBIw

He called NBA players and coaches “actors in a soap opera” in reference to the drama that comes along with the sport and its coverage.

Kerr also joked that he wishes the media would just ask about “pick-and-roll coverage,” but he acknowledged that isn’t a realistic expectation.

After Wednesday’s 141-102 win over the San Antonio Spurs, Durant had a tense exchange with the media.

Anthony Slater @anthonyVslater

Kevin Durant’s press conference, forcefully pushing back against the Knicks rumor and the media’s treatment of him https://t.co/aqqbK7APh2

KD took exception with how he has been covered and the fact that he has been linked to the New York Knicks in free agency (h/t Slater):

“Now y’all piling on me because I don’t want to talk to y’all about that. I have nothing to do with the Knicks. I don’t know who traded [Kristaps] Porzingis. That got nothing to do with me. I’m trying to play basketball.

“Y’all come in here every day, ask me about free agency, ask my teammates, my coaches, rile up the fans about it. Let us play basketball. That’s all I’m saying. Now when I don’t want to talk to y’all, it’s a problem with me.

“C’mon man. Grow up. Grow up. Yeah, you, grow up. C’mon bro. I come in here and go to work every day. I don’t cause no problems. I play the right way. Well, I try to play the right way. I try to be the best player I can be every possession. What’s the problem? What am I doing to y’all?”

Durant’s comments referenced the Knicks’ trade of Kristaps Porzingis to the Dallas Mavericks, which opened the door for New York to potentially sign two superstars during the offseason.

In three seasons with the Warriors since leaving the Oklahoma City Thunder in free agency, Durant has won two championships and two NBA Finals MVP awards. He is going for a third in each category this season.

Durant can become a free agent during the offseason if he opts out as expected. That impending possibility will be a constant topic of conversation regardless of how well the first-place Warriors continue to play.

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Objecting to gag order, Roger Stone’s lawyers say he’s no Kim Kardashian


Roger Stone

Roger Stone’s lawyers argue that media coverage of his case “will subside” from the “first wave” tied to his indictment. | AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Legal

“He is hardly ubiquitous in the larger landscape of popular consciousness,” they write.

Roger Stone’s lawyers downplayed their client’s political celebrity Friday in urging a federal judge not to slap a gag order on the longtime Donald Trump associate.

The court filing is the latest maneuver by Stone’s team as the Republican operative fights back against special counsel Robert Mueller’s charges that Stone lied to Congress and obstructed lawmakers’ Russia investigation.

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“While Roger Stone may be familiar to those who closely follow American politics, he is hardly ubiquitous in the larger landscape of popular consciousness,” Stone’s attorneys wrote in an eight-page memo pushing back on U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson’s concern that Stone’s media blitz since being indicted could taint the jury pool ahead of a criminal trial later this year in Washington, D.C.

To make their point about Stone’s limited footprint in the wider world beyond politics and media, his lawyers explained that his work as a writer and speaker is restrained to topics like politics, government and men’s fashion.

“To foreclose Mr. Stone’s exercise of his First Amendment rights on any subject would serve no compelling governmental interest,” they said.

Stone’s lawyers also cited celebrity Kim Kardashian’s 59.5 million Twitter followers and her 126 million Instagram followers, contrasting the numbers with Stone’s social media footprint. Stone has no Twitter account — he was actually banned from the social media platform in October 2017 after an expletive-laden series of posts about CNN anchors. On Instagram, he has just 39,000 followers.

Jackson floated the need for a gag order last week during Stone’s first hearing since his indictment. While she acknowledged that such a restriction would limit his First Amendment right, she explained that she needed to weigh that against ensuring Stone’s constitutional right to a fair trial was also protected.

“The upshot of treating the pretrial proceedings in this case like a book tour could be that we end up with a much larger percent of the jury pool that’s been tainted by pretrial publicity than we have now, and that’s what it’s my job to balance here,” Jackson said in explaining the prospect of a gag order.

Jackson has previously hit other Mueller targets with gag orders, imposing one in November 2017 on former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, his deputy Rick Gates and their lawyers just days after their first indictment.

In Friday filing, Stone’s lawyers argued that media coverage of the case “will subside” from the “first wave” tied to his indictment.

“To be sure, the interest in this case will continue, but nothing compels the conclusion that the Court’s present expressed confidence in seating an unbiased jury will, in months hence, be compromised by the press and/or Mr. Stone as we move forward,” they added.

On a separate front, Stone’s lawyers also filed an objection Friday to the fact that their case was assigned to Jackson, given her links to the earlier Mueller indictment against a dozen Russian military officials accused of hacking into the Democratic Party’s computer systems. Mueller’s investigators have accused Stone of lying about his attempts to communicate with WikiLeaks, which U.S. intelligence agencies said received stolen Democratic emails from Russian cutouts during the 2016 campaign.

“At first blush and without the benefit of discovery, there is nothing about these cases that suggests they are suitably related, other than they are both brought by the office of special counsel,” Stone’s lawyers wrote in a 13-page notice that requests a new random assignment to a different judge.

Mueller’s case against the 12 Russian military officials, while assigned to Jackson, hasn’t moved since the indictment was unsealed last July. None of the defendants are in the U.S., and no one has entered a plea responding to the charges, which center around allegations that the members of Russia’s military intelligence agency stole and released Democratic documents after planting malicious computer codes in the networks of the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

While Stone isn’t named in the July indictment, the document does describe communications between an unnamed person and Guccifer 2.0, an online persona seen as a cover for the Russian hackers. The indictment included communications with Guccifer 2.0 that match those that Stone sent and received to the online persona.

Stone has acknowledged the chatter, but he claimed it was innocuous.

In an order issued later Friday, Jackson gave Mueller until Feb. 15 to respond to Stone’s objection on who presides over the case.

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Amazon reportedly rethinking HQ2 in New York City

At a recent New York City Council hearing, anti-Amazon protestors unfurl a banner denouncing Amazon's HQ2.
At a recent New York City Council hearing, anti-Amazon protestors unfurl a banner denouncing Amazon’s HQ2.

Image: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

2018%252f06%252f26%252fc2%252f20182f062f252f5a2fphoto.d9abc.b1c04.jpg%252f90x90By Matt Binder

Amazon’s second headquarters may not be coming to New York City after all.

According to the Washington Post, Amazon may be reconsidering its decision to open its long-touted HQ2 to the borough of Queens in New York City. Sources “familiar with the company’s thinking” told the Post that the reassessment comes following local opposition from politicians and activist groups.

Last November, Amazon announced it had chosen New York’s Long Island City and Arlington, Virginia as its locations for a second company headquarters. The Seattle-based company also announced a third location in Nashville. The selections came after a year-long competition with hundreds of cities vying for Amazon’s favor.

The announcement, however, was immediately criticized by local New York politicians. At the center of the issue is New York state’s deal offering Amazon — a trillion dollar company run by Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man — billions in tax breaks to bring HQ2 to New York City.

Local activists rallied against the tax breaks, and warned that Queens could have to deal with the same kind of rent hikes and displacement that Amazon’s home base of Seattle has experienced.

Furthering Amazon’s troubles is the recent nomination of one of its most outspoken critics, state Senator Michael Gianaris, to the Public Authorities Control Board. While he has yet to be confirmed, his position on the board would allow him to scrap Amazon’s HQ2 deal.

Amazon hasn’t made things easier for itself with the company’s outright refusal at recent community board meetings to unionize its workforce. New York is known for being a solidly pro-labor city and the e-commerce giant has been the focus of several protests. 

SEE ALSO: Dash buttons ruled illegal in Amazon’s second largest market

However, with all its critics, Amazon still has two very powerful supporters: New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. Polls have also showed that Amazon has the majority of the public’s support for the HQ2 project.

So, Amazon may be really thinking about pulling back on the New York HQ2 move. Or, it may be trying to put pressure on local politicians to support the deal.

“The question is whether it’s worth it if the politicians in New York don’t want the project, especially with how people in Virginia and Nashville have been so welcoming,” said one unnamed Washington Post source.

Basically, the whole thing could be summed up as “nice Amazon deal, New York. It would be a shame if something happened to it.”

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