Jeff Bezos chose Medium for possibly the most important blog post of his life

Billionaires: they blog just like us.
Billionaires: they blog just like us.

Image: alex wong / Getty Images

2016%252f09%252f16%252f8f%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.c1888.jpg%252f90x90By Karissa Bell

When Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos dropped a bombshell blog post saying the National Enquirer was attempting to blackmail him with nude photos, it immediately set the internet ablaze.

The lengthy post is full of scandalous details: not only does the National Enquirer have Bezos’ nudes (which are described in excruciatingly vivid detail), but the company allegedly used said photos to blackmail him into ending a Washington Post investigation into the tabloid. Bezos’ post also notes the connections between Enquirer-publisher David Pecker, Donald Trump, and the Saudi government.

It’s enough to make anyone’s head explode.

But nearly as surprising is the fact that Bezos, a billionaire who owns The Washington Post, opted to self-publish on Medium

Though Medium has hosted a number of famous authors, including Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, it’s not exactly the place you’d expect the richest man in the world to air his blackmail-fueled dirty laundry. 

Billionaire tech moguls tend to favor the op-ed pages of prestigious papers or their own websites, where they can ramble on as long as they like, without the nuisance of an outside editor. Yet Bezos turned to the free platform whose goal is to “fix” the media industry. 

Medium is the Players Tribune for famous people who need to publicly announce they aren’t capitulating to sextortion plots.

— Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) February 7, 2019

Others observers joked that the post would soon become one of the most important things to happen to Medium. 

The post, which has already racked up nearly 40,000 claps (that’s Medium’s version of the like button) is a huge get for the platform, and not just because it could end up being one of Medium’s most noteworthy posts. 

The fallout from Bezos’ decision to make his Enquirer emails public is potentially huge. Legal experts are already speculating it could trigger a new round of investigations into parent company AMI. And while we don’t know what the consequences of Bezos’ disclosures will be yet, the fact is, whatever ends up happening: it all started on Medium.

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How NBA’s Eastern Conference Shakes out After Trade Deadline Arms Race

CAMDEN, NJ - FEBRUARY 7: Tobias Harris #33 of the Philadelphia 76ers poses for a portrait on February 7, 2019 at the Philadelphia 76ers Training Complex in Camden, New Jersey. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images

Hey, remember that time when the Eastern Conference didn’t look like it was particularly competitive, boasting a handful of squads that might look great during the first few playoff rounds before serving as Finals fodder for the Golden State Warriors? 

Me neither. Not anymore, at least. 

That’s not to say any East squad should emerge as the favorites to end Golden State’s reign of terror. But after the passage of the 2019 NBA trade deadline Thursday, the four teams in the competition for top billing in this half of the league all look poised to, at the very least, make some major noise.

The Philadelphia 76ers and Toronto Raptors both engaged in blockbuster deals to add significant new pieces. The Milwaukee Bucks landed a key role player who fits perfectly with their five-out schemes and desires to space out driving lanes for Giannis Antetokounmpo. The Boston Celtics…stood pat with a roster that’s already talented enough to earn the No. 1 seed. 

This frenzy of movement—an arms race that began with the Sixers’ middle-of-the-night decision to add Tobias Harris—obviously reshapes the top of the postseason picture for the remainder of 2018-19. It also has long-term ramifications as these burgeoning juggernauts jockey for position. We’ll cover both the short- and long-term pecking order, but let’s first do some housekeeping to show just how drastically these rosters changed (full analysis and grades of each move is available here): 

  • Boston Celtics
    • Outgoing: None
    • Incoming: None
  • Milwaukee Bucks
    • Outgoing: Thon Maker, Jason Smith, four second-round picks
    • Incoming: Nikola Mirotic
  • Philadelphia 76ers
    • Outgoing: Wilson Chandler, Markelle Fultz, Mike Muscala, Landry Shamet, two first-round picks, two second-round picks, second-round swap rights
    • Incoming: James Ennis III, Tobias Harris, Boban Marjanovic, Mike Scott, Jonathon Simmons, first-round pick, second-round pick
  • Toronto Raptors
    • Outgoing: CJ Miles, Jonas Valanciunas, Delon Wright, second-round pick
    • Incoming: Marc Gasol

That’s a lot of change. So let’s break down the new-look picture, keeping in mind that the actual title odds aren’t going to be of much use here.

Everyone at the top of the East is now tied:

Jeff Sherman @golfodds

NBA Championship updated

Warriors 2/5
Celtics 10/1
Raptors 10/1
76ers 10/1
Bucks 10/1
Rockets 12/1
Thunder 16/1
Nuggets 30/1
Jazz 40/1
Lakers 40/1
Spurs 60/1
Trail Blazers 200/1
Pacers 300/1
Heat 500/1
Timberwolves 500/1
Pelicans 500/1
Hornets 500/1
Nets 500/1
Kings 1000/1

The Short-Term Rankings for 2018-19

1. Milwaukee Bucks

Somewhat quietly, perhaps overshadowed by perpetual Anthony Davis rumors, Los Angeles Lakers drama and the recent explosions of the sharp-shooting Warriors, the Bucks entered the trade deadline as the Association’s premier outfit.

Maybe that doesn’t translate to the league’s top title odds, but the facts are the facts. Nobody has a better record than Milwaukee’s 40-13 mark (a 62-win pace), and the advanced metrics back that up.

Brewtown’s 9.9 net rating leads everyone, and the gap between them and the No. 2 Warriors (7.4) is nearly as large as the one between the Dubs and the No. 7 Indiana Pacers (4.8). FiveThirtyEight’s CARMELO model forecasts the Bucks with a 62-20 record that paces the entire league. Basketball Reference’s simple rating system, which is based solely on strength of schedule and margin of victory, gives the Bucks (9.44) the No. 1 spot with room to spare—easily toppling the Warriors (7.63) and Celtics (5.83). 

We don’t have to stop there for a team that boasts a legitimate MVP front-runner in Antetokounmpo, who’s averaging a scorching 27.0 points, 12.4 rebounds, 5.9 assists, 1.5 steals and 1.4 blocks per game this deep into the season. Per Tankathon, the Bucks have the fifth-easiest remaining schedule. Seriously.

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - JANUARY 09:  Nikola Mirotic #3 of the New Orleans Pelicans looks on against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Smoothie King Center on January 09, 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that,

Chris Graythen/Getty Images

Now, the best team in basketball is getting better. 

Thon Maker (traded for Stanley Johnson, who was then swapped in the Nikola Mirotic acquisition) and Jason Smith were playing a combined 18.4 minutes per game, and that’s a misleadingly high number. The former had only appeared in 35 games, while the latter suited up just six times. Neither factored into the rotation, which won’t be true of the new stretch 4 who comes in with season averages of 16.7 points and 8.3 rebounds on a 44.7/36.8/84.2 slash line. 

Mirotic is a potent offensive weapon who fits in perfectly with the schemes employed by head coach Mike Budenholzer. As Bleacher Report’s Dan Favale wrote in the immediate aftermath of the addition, “Nikola Mirotic diversifies an already unfairly weaponized offensive attack. He can dribble into his own looks when Giannis Antetokounmpo isn’t on the floor, and he won’t disrupt the flow of the offense when he’s playing alongside the Bucks’ main pieces.”

This transition should be seamless for a team already on pace to win more than 60 games. 

2. Toronto Raptors

So the Raptors are going to be pretty good on defense. 

They already sat at No. 8 in the pecking order for points allowed per 100 possessions, and they’re now getting even better with a pivot who can legitimately anchor entire schemes. Even if Gasol isn’t the world-beating stopper he was during his prime days, he’s still earned a score of 2.35 in ESPN.com’s defensive real plus/minus, placing him at No. 15 among the 66 players qualified as centers. 

Just imagine the potency of lineups featuring Gasol alongside Pascal Siakam, Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green and Kyle Lowry. The four incumbents have already earned a 104.4 defensive rating in their 587 minutes together, and they’re now getting an upgrade at the 5 to ensure the opposition can’t find even the most minuscule cracks in the facade. 

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - JANUARY 30: Marc Gasol #33 of the Memphis Grizzlies looks on in the first quarter during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Target Center on January 30, 2019 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledge

David Berding/Getty Images

As if that’s not enough, Gasol’s passing from the high post and at the top of the key should also unlock new sources of offense for a team that isn’t quite as egalitarian as it was during the end of the Lowry-DeMar DeRozan era. This team has the personnel necessary to keep defenders rapt with attention in off-ball situations, but it hasn’t A) had the big-man passing to pull it off or B) a desire to emphasize this approach while Leonard shows his takeover skills. 

Of course, not all the changes are good. 

Losing Maker and Smith leaves Milwaukee nonplussed. Getting rid of CJ Miles and Delon Wright does actually hamper Toronto’s useful depth, taking away a reliable ball-handler and floor-spacer to place more responsibility on the shoulders of OG Anunboy, Norman Powell and Fred VanVleet. The good outweighs the bad, but this isn’t as simple as just calculating the sizable upgrade from Jonas Valanciunas to Gasol. 

3. Boston Celtics

Nothing changed at the deadline, but that doesn’t mean nothing changes for the Celtics. 

They already have the league’s No. 3 score in SRS and net rating, and that’s despite a campaign filled with hurdles.

Gordon Hayward hasn’t been the player they expected to this point, struggling to reassert himself as a star following his devastating injury and subsequent departure from Salt Lake City. Jaylen Brown and Terry Rozier have declined—at times, dramatically so. Jayson Tatum went through an early-season stupor in which he channeled too much Kobe Bryant and started taking ill-advised mid-range jumpers he hadn’t yet perfected. Kyrie Irving and Al Horford have missed a combined 21 games. 

Should all that normalize, the Celtics will already be an improved squad during the second half of the season. Even if none of it does, this is a team playing at a high enough level to earn 54-win expectations from FiveThirtyEight.com’s CARMELO model

We won’t spend any more time here, if only because these rankings are sparked by changes at a trade deadline that saw no engagement from the Beantown representatives. Just know that the Celtics remain a legitimate threat to earn the No. 1 seed without any alterations. 

4. Philadelphia 76ers 

Important note: Please keep in mind that despite the negative slant here, the Sixers are another bona fide contender for the Eastern crown. We’re splitting hairs between teams, and their placement at No. 4 isn’t an indication they won’t be competitive, even if it forces more pessimistic language and choices of covered topics. 

Someone must finish last in every set of rankings.

CAMDEN, NJ - FEBRUARY 7: Boban Marjanovic #51 and Tobias Harris #33 of the Philadelphia 76ers pose for a portrait on February 7, 2019 at the Philadelphia 76ers Training Complex in Camden, New Jersey. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees th

Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images

Tobias Harris is a phenomenal get for the Sixers. He immediately profiles as a nice stylistic fit alongside Ben Simmons, Jimmy Butler and Joel Embiid, if only because he’s hitting 40.8 percent of his 3.4 catch-and-shoot attempts per game from beyond the rainbow. 

But this is still a transition that will require a sizable learning curve. Harris is now an ancillary piece for the Sixers, no longer operating with autonomy and the near-constant green light he’d earned during his brief stay with the Los Angeles Clippers. Just take a gander at the touch numbers for each member of the new-look Philadelphia Phour*:

  1. Ben Simmons: 86.5 touches per game (No. 6 in the NBA)
  2. Joel Embiid: 86.1 touches per game (No. 7 in the NBA)
  3. Tobias Harris: 62.5 touches per game (No. 49 in the NBA)
  4. Jimmy Butler: 52.7 touches per game (No. 94 in the NBA)

Harris’ preexisting ability to operate off the ball helps, but even his seemingly diminished number still paced the entire Clippers roster. Just for the sake of comparison, the Sixers’ primary wings weren’t nearly as involved in the offensive flow. Wilson Chandler, for example, received just 34.2 touches per contest before he was jettisoned from the roster. 

That’s not something to which Harris can adjust overnight. Ditto for his teammates, who will need to sacrifice some of their own involvement for the sake of harmonious interactions with the new addition.

Similarly, the team must now learn to rely on a potentially shallower rotation, as Chandler (26.4 minutes per game), Mike Muscala (22.1) and Landry Shamet (20.5) were all playing sizable roles. Markelle Fultz…not so much. 

James Ennis III, Boban Marjanovic, Mike Scott and Jonathon Simmons should help offset this, but the lack of reliable backcourt and wing threats could become problematic in the event of injuries or foul trouble. Ennis, who has spent just 6 percent of his minutes at the 2, and the incoming Simmons could very well have to feature at the guard positions behind the incumbent Simmons, T.J. McConnell and JJ Redick. 

*Somehow, I doubt that nickname sticks.

The Long-Term Rankings

1. Boston Celtics

You’re still allowed to get excited about the untapped potential of Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Terry Rozier, Robert Williams and the other youngsters on this roster. The Celtics are swimming in useful depth, and it’s not like their leading veterans are getting too long in the tooth. Al Horford is the only one for whom we can expect an imminent decline. 

Oh, and that’s not it. 

The Celtics have access to their own first-round pick in 2019, and they’ll have more via the Sacramento Kings/76ers (the more favorable one in 2019, protected at No. 1), Memphis Grizzlies (protected 1-8 in 2019 and 1-6 in 2020) and Los Angeles Clippers (lottery protected in 2019 and 2020). Those assets mean a lot, whether they’re used to reload and fill in rotational cracks or as sweeteners in pursuit of superstars.

Cough, Anthony Davis, cough. 

BOSTON, MA - DECEMBER 10: Kyrie Irving #11 of the Boston Celtics and Anthony Davis #23 of the New Orleans Pelicans talk after the game between the Celtics and Pelicans at TD Garden on December 10, 2018 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Gett

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Irving choosing to leave in free agency could cripple the Celtics, leaving them as a competitive squad set adrift without a reliable floor general. But that’s merely hypothetical at this stage, as we won’t know his true intentions until he actually hits the open market this summer. Just the fact that the C’s could have both him and Davis on the roster without gutting the entire franchise means quite a bit. 

Even if they strike out on one pursuit, they’re in great shape. 

2. Philadelphia 76ers

The Sixers sure seem to be going all-in on this four-man core. 

Good news: Butler, Embiid, Harris and Simmons are all All-Star-caliber talents—yes, two of them were notable omissions this year—who can carry the team to extreme heights. They’re all in their primes or still moving toward them. They have skill sets that, in theory, should mesh together nicely. 

Moderate news: By committing to this quartet (and losing a number of draft picks along the way), Philadelphia may be limiting its own ceiling. While the floor rises to rather lofty levels, it also prevents the organization from acquiring another A-list superstar like Anthony Davis, Kawhi Leonard, Giannis Antetokounmpo, etc.—the perennial MVP candidates, basically.

Realistically, Embiid and Simmons give Philly its only shots at rostering top-10 talents, whereas Boston has more paths through trades, the draft, free agency and internal growth. 

Bad news: This team is about to get Expensive. Yes, in italics and with a capital “E.” 

OAKLAND, CA - JANUARY 31: Ben Simmons #25 of the Philadelphia 76ers handles the ball while Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers runs down the court during a game against the Golden State Warriors on January 31, 2019 at ORACLE Arena in Oakland, Califo

Noah Graham/Getty Images

Embiid is already on the books with a five-year maximum rookie extension. Simmons is still playing out his first contract, but he’ll be in line for a max deal (maybe even a super-max) when it expires after the 2019-20 season. Butler can either opt into a $19.8 million pact next go-round or seek a long-term contract that would likely rise to even more astronomical figures. Harris is an unrestricted free agent this summer and could realistically pursue recognition as a max player.

This is one helluva core, but Sixers fans have to hope the front office doesn’t balk at the price tag. 

3. Milwaukee Bucks

Though the Bucks are rolling right now, giving us no reason to suspect a decline at any point in the near future, they’re also running out of draft picks and working with an aging roster—a statement that’s only negated by the utter ridiculousness of a 24-year-old Antetokounmpo.

After the Mirotic acquisition, Milwaukee, with no other picks incoming from other organizations, owes the following draft-day selections: 

  • 2019 first-round pick to the Phoenix Suns (protected 1-3 and 17-30 in 2019; 1-7 in 2020)
  • 2019 second-round pick to either the Philadelphia 76ers or Sacramento Kings
  • 2020 second-round pick to the New Orleans Pelicans
  • 2021 first-round pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers (complicated protections)
  • 2021 second-round pick to the Houston Rockets

That doesn’t leave the team with many paths toward further improvement, and finances could complicate the picture. A Khris Middleton extension (necessary to keep the core in place) will inevitably be a pricy proposition, and that won’t give the Bucks much cap space for free-agency additions until we’re a few years down the road. 

By that time, everything could look different. 

Eric Bledsoe is 29 years old with a lengthy injury history. Brook Lopez is already in his 30s. And while Middleton, Malcolm Brogdon and other key pieces are all in their primes, they’re not exactly in the first halves of their 20s like so many crucial contributors on the squads ranked ahead of Milwaukee. 

Installing the right schemes under Budenholzer helps a lot, and the Bucks boast the best player in the Eastern Conference, a megastar who just might keep getting better as he develops a consistent jumper (necessary to reach his ceiling, but so obviously unnecessary to play at an MVP level). That’s still not quite enough in this competition. 

4. Toronto Raptors

TORONTO, CANADA - FEBRUARY 4: Kyle Lowry #7 of the Toronto Raptors and Marc Gasol #33 of the Memphis Grizzlies pose with a young fan before the game on February 4, 2018 at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly ac

Ron Turenne/Getty Images

Even if Kawhi Leonard doesn’t leave for the Los Angeles Clippers or another location in free agency this summer, Father Time alone keeps the Raptors a tier below the other three contenders for the Eastern Conference crown. Take a gander at the ages of the six leading rotation players north of the border:

  • Marc Gasol: 34 years old
  • Kyle Lowry: 32 years old
  • Danny Green: 31 years old
  • Serge Ibaka: 29 years old
  • Kawhi Leonard: 27 years old
  • Pascal Siakam: 24 years old

It also doesn’t help that the Raptors haven’t had much free-agency success in prior seasons and owe a top-20-protected first-rounder to the San Antonio Spurs during this coming draft. But again, age alone is the reason for the bottom-of-the-barrel placement. 

Many franchises might still do unspeakable things to have a future this bright, but it’s downright shadowy in comparison to the sunny outlooks of the other three contenders. Fortunately, they have the pieces in place to win right away, and no one should doubt them in the playoffs now that they have three experienced veterans—Gasol, Leonard and Lowry—in charge of the outcome. 

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And the Jeff Bezos dick pic commentary has begun

2018%252f04%252f02%252f74%252fheadshot.edeb7.jpg%252f90x90By Morgan Sung

It’s probably best that you’re sitting down for this.

The National Enquirer threatened to publish Jeff Bezos’ dick pics if he didn’t rein in his personal investigator, and in response the Amazon CEO posted about it on Medium

Taking a page out of Alexander Hamilton’s revenge book, he published a lengthy post about the incident and owned up to the nudes he sent, “rather than capitulate to extortion and blackmail.” 

Once Bezos tweeted a link to the post, it was only a matter of time before the dick pic commentary began.

SEE ALSO: Jeff Bezos says National Enquirer threatened to reveal his nude photos

Some couldn’t get over the bizarre scenario.  

Bezos Hamilton’d himself. Truly, 2019 is off to a hell of a start.

— Aaron Mehta (@AaronMehta) February 7, 2019

I can’t decide what the world deserves more: presidential pee tape or Amazon CEO dick pic. 🤷‍♀️

— Annalee Newitz (@Annaleen) February 7, 2019

Twitter users also applauded Bezos — shrugging off nudes because you have the money to is truly a baller move. 

What’s the point of having fuck you money if you never say fuck you to people blackmailing you over your dick pics.

Good for Bezos.

— Brian Koppelman (@briankoppelman) February 7, 2019

the real fuck-you move would have been to publish the dick pics himself imo

— Ashley Feinberg (@ashleyfeinberg) February 7, 2019

Jeff Bezos is the angel of death in so many ways but god I fucken love this move so hard

— your friend Helen (@hels) February 7, 2019

Others just … really didn’t want to think about a horny billionaire’s genitals. 

Gonna be so bummed when the Jeff Bezos dick pics come out and he’s hung like a donkey. Real morale killer for the rest of us guys.

— Clue Heywood (@ClueHeywood) February 7, 2019

Covering my bases by working up some draft tweets that can be used if Jeff Bezos’s penis is either good or bad

— who pixelates the boatmen? (@pixelatedboat) February 7, 2019

in retrospect, it is possible the invention of photography was a mistake

— Ariel Edwards-Levy (@aedwardslevy) February 7, 2019

There was an abundance of puns and references to Amazon’s somewhat terrifying marketing practices. 

People who liked this dick pic also bought…

— David Teicher (@Aerocles) February 7, 2019

Because Mr. Bezos refused to reimburse me for the late shipping on my beef jerky 30 pack I am hereby publishing this photo of his manhood pic.twitter.com/oJNODfaeXt

— Samuel Hammond 🌐🏛 (@hamandcheese) February 7, 2019

There were also reactions to Bezos’ use of “complexifier,” which probably isn’t the word he was trying to use. 

“Source of complications” > “complexifier”

— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) February 7, 2019

I like that he used the word “complexifier,” bc it means that he definitely wrote it himself and is an actual person who would get into a petty argument with a copy editor.

— Emily Nussbaum (@emilynussbaum) February 7, 2019

Jeff Bezos calls his dick “the complexifier”

— Noah Hurowitz (@NoahHurowitz) February 7, 2019

I am a complexifier of my own life

— Tom Tomorrow (@tomtomorrow) February 8, 2019

I would be less ashamed of the dick pics than of using the word “complexifier”

— Daniel Radosh (@danielradosh) February 7, 2019

Dibs on The Complexifier, a Jason Statham action thriller about a billionaire who goes rogue to destroy an evil tabloid who violated the rules of Journalism

— kang👎 (@jaycaspiankang) February 7, 2019

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Senators demand answers from Facebook, Google, and Apple over now-banned ‘research’ monitoring apps

A bipartisan group of U.S. senators have sent three separate letters to Facebook, Google, and Apple over now-banned user monitoring apps.
A bipartisan group of U.S. senators have sent three separate letters to Facebook, Google, and Apple over now-banned user monitoring apps.

Image: LIONEL BONAVENTURE/AFP/Getty Images

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

Republican and democratic senators are reaching across the aisle to demand answers from three U.S. tech behemoths.

U.S. senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Edward J. Markey (D-MA), and Josh Hawley (R-MO) have sent three separate letters to Facebook, Google, and Apple looking for answers to their questions regarding the now-banned “research” apps.

In the letter to Facebook, the bipartisan group of senators demand information regarding the Project Atlas market research program. The program reportedly paid $20 a month to users as young as 13 to install the app. The app gave Facebook complete access to a user’s iOS or Android device in order to monitor their phone and internet usage.

“We write concerned about reports that Facebook is collecting highly-sensitive data on teenagers, including their web browsing, phone use, communications, and locations – all to profile their behavior without adequate disclosure, consent, or oversight,” begins the letter to Facebook. “Facebook’s monitoring under Project Atlas is particularly concerning because the data collection performed by the research app was deeply invasive.”

SEE ALSO: Facebook isn’t sorry about its shady ‘research’ app

The letter requests Facebook answer 12 questions posed by the senators about the program. These questions consist of inquiries into how many users were involved in the program to whether Facebook would support legislation that would create new online privacy safeguards for teens and children.

“Given the sensitivity and seriousness of any intrusions into the privacy of teens, we respectfully request a written response to the following questions by March 1, 2019,” writes the senators.

In their letters to Google and Apple, senators Blumenthal, Markey, and Hawley seek information on the distribution of these types of app on the App Store and Google Play. The senators also inquire about install metrics of Facebook’s research app from these companies. In addition, the Senators letter also ask Apple and Google what they’re doing to protect its users from future monitoring practices.

“Platforms must be vigilant in light of threats to teen privacy posed by programs like Project Atlas,” write the senators to both Apple and Google. “Facebook is not alone in engaging in commercial monitoring of teens.”

The senators also requested information from Google regarding its own similar Screenwise Meter monitoring app.

Last week, TechCrunch published two bombshell reports that uncovered VPN apps, distributed by Facebook and Google, monitoring users mobile activity. Because Apple forbids monitoring apps on its App Store, the apps were distributed to iOS devices via Apple’s Enterprise Developer Program as a workaround.

In response to Facebook and Google distributing these apps outside of each respective company, which is against the Apple’s enterprise policy, the company removed both from the program.

The three companies have until March 1 to respond to the letters.

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NBA All-Star Game 2019 Rosters Revealed After LeBron vs. Giannis Draft

CLEVELAND, OH - MARCH 19: LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers handles the ball against Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks on March 19, 2018 at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photo by David Liam Kyle/NBAE via Getty Images)

David Liam Kyle/Getty Images

For the second straight year, LeBron James has taken Kevin Durant as the top pick in the NBA All-Star draft.

LeBron made the first selection Thursday during a special TNT telecast, with Durant’s teammate, Steph Curry, coming off the board first for Giannis Antetokounmpo’s squad 

LeBron and Giannis clearly had different drafting styles. Antetokounmpo’s roster is filled with size and athleticism, while LeBron’s roster runs small—particularly with the reserves.

The draft included an amusing moment where LeBron admitted he is “very sure” he wants Anthony Davis to be his teammate after the Laker selected him in the reserve round. Unfortunately for LeBron, he did not get his wish for a long-term partnership with Davis, as the Pelican stuck around past the trade deadline in New Orleans. 

Here is a look at how the draft played out round by round—and the one transaction that took place after the event was completed. 

Round 1

1) Team LeBron: Kevin Durant, F, Golden State Warriors

2) Team Giannis: Steph Curry, G, Golden State Warriors

3) Team LeBron: Kyrie Irving, G, Boston Celtics

4) Team Giannis: Joel Embiid, C, Philadelphia 76ers

5) Team LeBron: Kawhi Leonard, F, Toronto Raptors

6) Team Giannis: Paul George, F, Oklahoma City Thunder

7) Team LeBron: James Harden, G, Houston Rockets

8) Team Giannis: Kemba Walker, G, Charlotte Hornets


It was a given that the two Warriors would come off the board first. Their order was the only question. LeBron admitted to host Ernie Johnson he picked Durant first each of the last two years—a clear sign of mutual respect between possibly the two best players of this generation.

Giannis, as he indicated he would before the draft, went with Curry as his top pick. Curry selected Antetokounmpo with his first pick last year.

LeBron’s strategy appeared to be to take players he might want the Lakers to target this summer. Six of his first seven selections will be free agents in July or guys considered potential trade targets. 

NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

.@KingJames getting a head start on 2019 free agency at the #NBAAllStar draft … 🧐 https://t.co/XMri1FGRY7

Perhaps the biggest surprise came when the reigning MVP and repeat front-runner James Harden lasted until the seventh pick. If we’re speculating, this is probably because Harden has little chance of ever being a Laker and Giannis is Harden’s most direct competition for MVP.

Antetokounmpo has made it clear in no uncertain terms he feels he’s the (expletive) MVP. 

Round 2

1) Team Giannis: Khris Middleton, F, Milwaukee Bucks

2) Team LeBron: Anthony Davis, F, New Orleans Hornets

3) Team Giannis: Nikola Jokic, C, Denver Nuggets

4) Team LeBron: Klay Thompson, G, Golden State Warriors

5) Team Giannis*: Ben Simmons, G, Philadelphia 76ers

6) Team LeBron: Damian Lillard, G, Portland Trail Blazers

7) Team Giannis: Blake Griffin, F, Detroit Pistons

8) Team LeBron*: Russell Westbrook, G, Oklahoma City Thunder

9) Team Giannis: D’Angelo Russell, G, Brooklyn Nets

10) Team LeBron: LaMarcus Aldridge, F, San Antonio Spurs

11) Team Giannis: Nikola Vucevic, C, Orlando Magic

12) Team LeBron: Karl-Anthony Towns, C, Minnesota Timberwolves

13) Team Giannis: Kyle Lowry, G, Toronto Raptors

14) Team LeBron: Bradley Beal, G, Washington Wizards

(Note: Giannis and LeBron later traded Simmons and Westbrook.) 

To no one’s surprise, Giannis started the reserve round by selecting teammate Khris Middleton. The man not only has to play with Middleton for the remainder of this season but will be part of the contingent that pushes to retain the free-agent-to-be this summer. 

Team Tampering—er, Team LeBron—made the second-most obvious choice of the night by taking Anthony Davis with his top reserve pick. That led to the following exchange between James, Antetokounmpo and Johnson:

Johnson: You sure you want [Davis] to be your teammate?

LeBron: I…I am very sure of that

Giannis: Isn’t that tampering?

LeBron: Tampering rules does not apply during All-Star Weekend.

NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

“Isn’t that tampering?” 😂

LeBron drafts AD! #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/nEA08k1WC8

I’m pretty sure the only people not laughing at that exchange were NBA Commissioner Adam Silver and those in Greater New Orleans. The draft, taped Thursday morning, came before the Lakers failed to acquire Davis in a pre-deadline trade. 

The rest of the draft played out as expected, and Bradley Beal even got his wish of being selected last among the All-Stars. Last month, Beal bristled at the fact that the All-Star draft would be televised and told reporters he did not care where he was taken.

“I think it’s dumb,” Beal said. “Why does it need to be on TV?”

“Is it [entertaining]? We’re just picking teams. [Media and fans] are going to make a big deal out of who’s last. I think they will get a kick out of who’s last. It doesn’t matter.”

Things got a little more interesting after the draft ended. LeBron, who yelled out “s–t” when Giannis took Ben Simmons, offered a deal of Westbrook straight-up for Simmons. James used his charm to wink-wink Giannis into splitting up teammates Joel Embiid and Simmons.

As a draft strategy, though, trading No. 13 overall for No. 16 overall is a curious move by Giannis. LeBron took advantage of the young man’s inexperience and came through in the Klutch (heh) for his team.

Round 3

1) Team LeBron: Dwyane Wade, G, Miami Heat

2) Team Giannis: Dirk Nowitzki, F, Dallas Mavericks

The world’s most obvious pick. LeBron and D-Wade will get to play together one more time in what should be a special moment for the friends.  

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‘In Basra, people avoid doctors. They might find they’ve cancer’

Basra, Iraq – With its beautiful canals and centuries-old buildings, Basra was once renowned as the “Venice of the Middle East”.

But the southern Iraqi city is now facing one of the region’s worst environmental crises, its rivers turned into open-air dumping sites.

In recent months, some 118,000 people have been hospitalised as a result of water-related illnesses, including high fever, nausea and diarrhoea, according to Choukri al-Hassan, an air and water pollution expert at the University of Basra.

The situation has prompted thousands of young people and environmental activists to take to the streets to protest against the lack of drinkable water and the government’s failure to fix the crisis.

A confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, Shatt al-Arab River runs through the centre of Basra. It is polluted with germs, chemicals and toxic algae, while its high levels of salinity – close to that of seawater – is believed to have reached its peak last year.

“The water in Basra is so polluted than you can’t even wash your face,” al-Hassan said. “Fishes, turtles and crabs die. The ecosystem is changing, it’s a catastrophe.”

The water crisis also affects other areas in Iraq, including the Mesopotamian Marshlands, north of Basra.

Despite Basra being one of Iraq’s wealthiest cities, thanks to its oil riches, its citizens complain they do not see any of the benefits while also suffering the results of the environmental crisis.

“People don’t want to see a doctor sometimes,” Ali Kassem, a 27-years-old activist working in a Basra hospital, said. “They are afraid they might discover they have a cancer.”

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NBA All-Star Draft 2019: Live Roster Updates, Highlights and Reaction

  1. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Milwaukee Bucks @Bucks

    In the 11th round, Giannis selects @Klow7!!

    #NBAAllStar | #Giannis | #KyleLowry https://t.co/Z84HhSHbfV

  2. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Reserves for #TeamLeBron

    -Anthony Davis
    -Klay
    -Dame
    -Westbrook
    -Aldridge
    -KAT
    -Beal https://t.co/drlGDRYioF

  3. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    PB&J are back together on #TeamLeBron!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/yiprkPLsPz

  4. Invalid Date
  5. February 8, 2019
  6. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    .@swish41 is joining #TeamGiannis!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/Bdppa92Yrq

  7. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Hoop District @HoopDistrictDC

    “Isn’t that tampering” 😂 https://t.co/GLUUEVqzVi

  8. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Milwaukee Bucks @Bucks

    In the 9th round, Giannis selects @Dloading!!

    #NBAAllStar | #Giannis | #DAngeloRussell https://t.co/rZ1NK0bJXi

  9. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    Nikola Vucevic will suit up for #TeamGiannis!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/gTywhawYdo

  10. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    Denver Nuggets @nuggets

    The Joker X The Greek Freak

    #NikolaJokić will play for Team Giannis in the #NBAAllStar Game.

    #MileHighBasketball https://t.co/P7J9bMCX2K

  11. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    Adam Zagoria @AdamZagoria

    LeBron picks KD first and Kyrie second

    Giannis picks Steph Curry first and Joel Embiid second https://t.co/XRSeCVE1bF

  12. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    Dame Time is headed to #TeamLeBron!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/Doha7CkfCq

  13. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    SB Nation @SBNation

    “tampering rules do not apply on All-Star weekend”

    – LeBron 😂😂😂 https://t.co/8IWuvADMKS

  14. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Milwaukee Bucks @Bucks

    In the seventh round, Giannis selects @BenSimmons25!!

    #NBAAllStar | #Giannis | #BenSimmons https://t.co/Dpov0Nfnq2

  15. Clock Icon6 minutes ago

    Kevin Chouinard @KLChouinard

    All-Star starters picked: https://t.co/v5re83KGGI

  16. Clock Icon6 minutes ago

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    .@Khris22m is joining #TeamGiannis!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/qf4fMrjhOV

  17. Clock Icon7 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    “I drafted you with my second pick. You owe me. Come to LA.” https://t.co/eDyKD6bKF0

  18. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    #TeamGiannis selects Joel Embiid

    #NBAAllStar https://t.co/adEEglXzfE

  19. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    #TeamLeBron selects Kawhi

    #NBAAllStar https://t.co/Bo3zCmCa3y

  20. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    With the first pick in the #NBAAllStar Draft, Team LeBron selects Kevin Durant

    #NBAAllStar https://t.co/pTjMDEiqri

  21. Clock Icon9 minutes ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    With his first pick of the #NBAAllStarDraft, Giannis selects Stephen Curry to join #TeamGiannis! https://t.co/jgTjNF0NFn

  22. Clock Icon10 minutes ago

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    LIVE updates from the #NBAAllStar Draft presented by @jumpman23. https://t.co/Z8yhWYcTgY

  23. February 7, 2019
  24. Clock Icon10:51 pm

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    Who will @Giannis_An34 and @KingJames take in the 2019 #NBAAllStarDraft? 👀

    #TeamLeBron & #TeamGiannis will be revealed tonight at 7pm ET on TNT! https://t.co/CjhqioS4oY

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NBA All-Star Draft 2019: Live Roster Updates, Highlights and Reaction

  1. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Milwaukee Bucks @Bucks

    In the 11th round, Giannis selects @Klow7!!

    #NBAAllStar | #Giannis | #KyleLowry https://t.co/Z84HhSHbfV

  2. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Reserves for #TeamLeBron

    -Anthony Davis
    -Klay
    -Dame
    -Westbrook
    -Aldridge
    -KAT
    -Beal https://t.co/drlGDRYioF

  3. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    PB&J are back together on #TeamLeBron!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/yiprkPLsPz

  4. Invalid Date
  5. February 8, 2019
  6. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    .@swish41 is joining #TeamGiannis!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/Bdppa92Yrq

  7. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Hoop District @HoopDistrictDC

    “Isn’t that tampering” 😂 https://t.co/GLUUEVqzVi

  8. Clock Icon2 minutes ago

    Milwaukee Bucks @Bucks

    In the 9th round, Giannis selects @Dloading!!

    #NBAAllStar | #Giannis | #DAngeloRussell https://t.co/rZ1NK0bJXi

  9. Clock Icon3 minutes ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    Nikola Vucevic will suit up for #TeamGiannis!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/gTywhawYdo

  10. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    Denver Nuggets @nuggets

    The Joker X The Greek Freak

    #NikolaJokić will play for Team Giannis in the #NBAAllStar Game.

    #MileHighBasketball https://t.co/P7J9bMCX2K

  11. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    Adam Zagoria @AdamZagoria

    LeBron picks KD first and Kyrie second

    Giannis picks Steph Curry first and Joel Embiid second https://t.co/XRSeCVE1bF

  12. Clock Icon4 minutes ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    Dame Time is headed to #TeamLeBron!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/Doha7CkfCq

  13. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    SB Nation @SBNation

    “tampering rules do not apply on All-Star weekend”

    – LeBron 😂😂😂 https://t.co/8IWuvADMKS

  14. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Milwaukee Bucks @Bucks

    In the seventh round, Giannis selects @BenSimmons25!!

    #NBAAllStar | #Giannis | #BenSimmons https://t.co/Dpov0Nfnq2

  15. Clock Icon6 minutes ago

    Kevin Chouinard @KLChouinard

    All-Star starters picked: https://t.co/v5re83KGGI

  16. Clock Icon6 minutes ago

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    .@Khris22m is joining #TeamGiannis!

    #NBAAllStarDraft https://t.co/qf4fMrjhOV

  17. Clock Icon7 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    “I drafted you with my second pick. You owe me. Come to LA.” https://t.co/eDyKD6bKF0

  18. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    #TeamGiannis selects Joel Embiid

    #NBAAllStar https://t.co/adEEglXzfE

  19. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    #TeamLeBron selects Kawhi

    #NBAAllStar https://t.co/Bo3zCmCa3y

  20. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    With the first pick in the #NBAAllStar Draft, Team LeBron selects Kevin Durant

    #NBAAllStar https://t.co/pTjMDEiqri

  21. Clock Icon9 minutes ago

    NBA TV @NBATV

    With his first pick of the #NBAAllStarDraft, Giannis selects Stephen Curry to join #TeamGiannis! https://t.co/jgTjNF0NFn

  22. Clock Icon10 minutes ago

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    LIVE updates from the #NBAAllStar Draft presented by @jumpman23. https://t.co/Z8yhWYcTgY

  23. February 7, 2019
  24. Clock Icon10:51 pm

    NBA on TNT @NBAonTNT

    Who will @Giannis_An34 and @KingJames take in the 2019 #NBAAllStarDraft? 👀

    #TeamLeBron & #TeamGiannis will be revealed tonight at 7pm ET on TNT! https://t.co/CjhqioS4oY

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Biggest Winners and Losers from 2019 NBA Trade Deadline

0 of 7

    Brandon Dill/Associated Press

    Anthony Davis did not get traded—to Los Angeles or anywhere else—ahead of Thursday’s deadline. He was the biggest story of trade season, following his request last week, and that saga will now drag out until the summer.

    However, there were no shortage of other moves, both big and small, in the hours and days leading up to the deadline.

    Several contenders went all-in on contending. A few luxury-tax teams made moves to cut salary. Rebuilding franchises picked up draft picks. With no Davis trade, most of the fireworks happened before Thursday.

    Now that the dust has settled, there’s plenty to sort through, and some teams came out looking better than others.

1 of 7

    Alex Gallardo/Associated Press

    Three of the four presumptive Eastern Conference contenders added significant players for their respective postseason runs. On Tuesday night, the Philadelphia 76ers acquired Tobias Harris, Boban Marjanovic and Mike Scott for Wilson Chandler, Mike Muscala, Landry Shamet and four picks. On Thursday afternoon, the Milwaukee Bucks and Toronto Raptors countered. Milwaukee acquired forward Nikola Mirotic from the New Orleans Pelicans for Jason Smith, Stanley Johnson and two second-rounders; Toronto landed Marc Gasol from the Memphis Grizzlies for Jonas Valanciunas, Delon Wright, C.J. Miles and a future second-round pick.

    The Bucks added Mirotic, picking up another shooter to play alongside Giannis Antetokounmpo. He should be a terrific fit in Mike Budenholzer’s system and make Milwaukee even more formidable come playoff time. The Bucks traded Johnson a day after acquiring him from Detroit for Thon Maker, who had been unhappy with his role in Milwaukee and was not a part of their future plans. Effectively, they turned Maker along with Smith’s dead salary into Mirotic, who had a big playoff showing for New Orleans last season and should be poised to do the same as the Bucks compete for a spot in the Finals.

    Raptors president Masai Ujiri is going all-in on this season ahead of Kawhi Leonard’s impending free agency. He didn’t exactly give up nothing for Gasol—Wright is a nice young guard with some upside who will be worth a look in Memphis. But this is exactly the kind of win-now move Toronto should be making. At 34, Gasol isn’t the player he was in 2013, when he won Defensive Player of the Year, but he makes the Raptors better and gives them another proven playmaker in the frontcourt. That they didn’t have to sacrifice any of their top young prospects (Pascal Siakam, Fred VanVleet, O.G. Anunoby) to land him makes it even better.

    Sixers GM Elton Brand is likewise pushing in all his chips for a run this year. A closing lineup of Harris, Ben Simmons, Jimmy Butler, Joel Embiid and J.J. Redick looks to be among the most dangerous in the league. A few other minor moves also give Philadelphia added depth, which was one of their chief concerns. Brand traded former No. 1 pick Markelle Fultz for guard Jonathon Simmons and added Marjanovic, Scott and former Rockets wing James Ennis in other deals. In addition to getting better at the top of the roster, Philadelphia now has more capable bodies on the bench.

2 of 7

    Todd Kirkland/Associated Press

    The only east contender who stood pat was Boston. Their reasoning is obvious and sound: They’ll have a shot at making New Orleans an offer for Anthony Davis come July 1, and burning any of their possible trade chips right now would have been shortsighted. If Danny Ainge can ultimately swing a deal for Davis and re-sign Kyrie Irving this summer, it will be worth it.

    But for the upcoming playoff race, Boston is now at clear disadvantage as their three chief competitors all got meaningfully better. The Celtics have looked better at times this season than they did earlier in the year, but they are far from the juggernaut they were expected to be at the beginning of the season. Gordon Hayward in particular has struggled to regain form after missing all of last year with a leg injury.

    Boston has won their last five games and nine of their last 10. There’s a chance they have turned things around and will be the team to beat in the playoffs. In leaving the roster as-is, Ainge stuck to his long-term plan, which was the right decision. But it’s hard to feel great about their position for this season after seeing the moves the Bucks, Raptors and Sixers made.

3 of 7

    Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

    The Clippers got a lot for Harris, who was set to become an unrestricted free agent and command a max or near-max deal. The unprotected 2021 Miami Heat first-round pick, in particular, is as good a trade chip as any team has short of the upcoming draft’s No. 1.

    In a smaller deal with Memphis, the Clippers traded guard Avery Bradley for forwards Garrett Temple and JaMychal Green, who could help keep them somewhat competitive in this year’s playoff race ahead of a summer where they will have a massive amount of cap space and are well known to be preparing for runs at Kawhi Leonard and Kevin Durant.

    With a cadre of future picks and rookie guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the Clippers have the ammo to make a competitive offer for Anthony Davis if they’re so inclined. They could also keep their powder dry for the next time a star asks for be traded. They have plenty of options.

4 of 7

    Brandon Dill/Associated Press

    In trading Marc Gasol, the Grizzlies took one step toward an inevitable rebuild. They got a nice return for Gasol, even though they’ll have to pay Delon Wright this summer. The trade with the Clippers doesn’t do much for them in the short term—Green and Temple were expiring anyway, and Bradley is guaranteed for $2 million for next season.

    However, the Grizzlies ultimately opted not to deal longtime point guard Mike Conley. Unless they shut him down for the season, they’ll probably still be slightly too good to drop into the top five of the lottery while not being nearly good enough to make the playoffs. Maybe there will be better offers for Conley this summer, but they would have been wise to sell high on him now.

    In Jaren Jackson, Jr., Memphis has a terrific cornerstone for their rebuild. But they didn’t do as much as they could have in the short term to commit to a new direction.

5 of 7

    David Zalubowski/Associated Press

    Good players on bad teams get bought out every year, but this year’s pool is especially deep.

    Marcin Gortat, Robin Lopez, Enes Kanter, Wesley Matthews, Wayne Ellington, Frank Kaminsky, Jeremy Lin and Milos Teodosic are all names that could hit the market before the March 1 deadline for playoff eligibility, in addition to Carmelo Anthony, who was waived by the Bulls last week.

    Matthews already appears set to join the Indiana Pacers, per The Athletic‘s Shams Charania, but there will be no shortage of players available as playoff teams look to bolster their rosters. The Lakers, Warriors, Rockets, Celtics, Raptors and Trail Blazers all would make plenty of logical sense as destinations for this group of proven veterans.

    The buyout market almost functions as a second trade deadline, so expect a lot of teams’ rosters to look different by April even if they didn’t do anything Thursday. The Lakers added Tyson Chandler in November after Phoenix bought him out, and he’s played meaningful minutes for them. Last season, Philadelphia got significant contributions in the playoffs from buyout signees Marco Belinelli and Ersan Ilyasova.

    Players like Matthews, Lopez and Gortat are productive enough that they could have similar impacts in the postseason this year.

6 of 7

    Gerald Herbert/Associated Press

    The biggest domino is still standing, and Davis’ future will be the biggest story of the offseason. The Lakers and Pelicans never seriously reconvened negotiations before the deadline, and now the circus will continue in July. Despite Davis’ protestations that he doesn’t want to go to Boston, the Celtics have a real shot at landing him if Ainge puts Jayson Tatum on the table. If the Knicks win the draft lottery and can offer Zion Williamson to the Pelicans, they may be able to trump all other offers.

    The Lakers may still end up with Davis, but with the bidding opening up again after the lottery, they won’t be in a position to come with anything other than their absolute best offer. If they miss out on him after letting Paul George and Kawhi Leonard pass them by in the previous two offseasons, it will be a major black mark against president Magic Johnson and general manager Rob Pelinka, both of whom have talked a big game about going superstar shopping after landing LeBron James last summer.

    The Pelicans will almost definitely trade Davis after the season is over, but in the meantime, this drama will hang over their heads for at least the next five months. Davis wants to play again this season, and the Pelicans are left with the choice of further alienating him to protect their asset or acquiescing and risking injury.

    In the long term, it may prove the best decision for New Orleans to hold onto Davis and expand the pool of bidders in the offseason. But the rest of this season is going to be uncomfortable.

7 of 7

    Jason Miller/Getty Images

    Deadline day was relatively quiet, but there was a slew of major deals in the week leading up to Thursday. The biggest, by far, was last week’s trade between the New York Knicks and Dallas Mavericks. New York sent would-be franchise player Kristaps Porzingis to Dallas along with Tim Hardaway, Jr., Courtney Lee and Trey Burke in return for Dennis Smith, Jr., Wesley Matthews, DeAndre Jordan and two future first-round picks.

    That wasn’t the only move Dallas made—on Wednesday night, they cleared some salary by sending veteran forward Harrison Barnes to the Sacramento Kings for Zach Randolph and Justin Jackson. Barnes is a solid pickup for Sacramento, a starting-caliber wing who will help them in their quest to make the playoffs for the first time in 13 years and is only under contract for one season beyond this one.

    In a similar vein, the Chicago Bulls acquired the remaining two years and $55 million remaining on Otto Porter’s contract from the Washington Wizards in exchange for the disgruntled Jabari Parker and restricted free agent-to-be Bobby Portis. Porter is expensive, but he gives Chicago a solid wing to plug in alongside their young core of Zach LaVine, Wendell Carter and Lauri Markkanen.

    The Wizards sold off Porter and Markieff Morris (to New Orleans) to get under the luxury tax after Tuesday’s news that John Wall will undergo surgery to repair a torn Achilles, sidelining him for the foreseeable future. The Miami Heat also made a cost-cutting move, sending Tyler Johnson and Wayne Ellington to the Phoenix Suns for Ryan Anderson.

    With nothing happening on the Anthony Davis front, the Porzingis trade is the headlining move of this deadline season. If the Knicks are able to land Kevin Durant this summer, as has been widely rumored, it will look like genius. But that won’t be known until July.

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Trump cornered on border wall


Donald Trump

Though the White House has worked to prepare an emergency declaration invoking President Donald Trump’s sweeping executive powers, West Wing aides have warned that it would alienate some conservatives who have otherwise been loyal to the White House. | Chris Kleponis – Pool/Getty Images

Government Shutdown

The president doesn’t have GOP support to go through another shutdown or declare a national emergency — pressuring him to back whatever deal Congress makes.

Inside the White House, the Trump team is increasingly aware that the president is trapped.

Facing a Republican Party unwilling to back another government shutdown or a national emergency declaration to build his border wall, President Donald Trump is in an unfamiliar position, according to multiple White House officials and lawmakers: prepared, potentially, to accept a compromise foisted on him by Congress.

Story Continued Below

Only a few days ago, Trump called a committee tasked with hammering out a border security deal “a waste of time.”

But he seemed warm to the idea of a bipartisan deal on Thursday after he met with Senate Appropriations Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.). Shelby later briefed Senate Republicans on their meeting at a party lunch, which left them hopeful the president was willing to support something that gives him more money for fencing — even if it wasn’t the $5.7 billion he’s been seeking, said one attendee.

“He’ll consider any kind of reasonable proposition … there’s a general openness,” said Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, a vulnerable GOP senator who stuck by Trump amid the politically debilitating 35-day shutdown. “He’s obviously going to fulfill his campaign promise and there’s got to be some earnest progress. It’s not like he’s going to acquiesce. But I do believe he’s showing good faith.”

“They intentionally have not set a firm number,” said Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), a conference committee member. “And I think that’s to show their willingness to negotiate, so that’s good.”

Though the White House has worked to prepare an emergency declaration invoking the president’s sweeping executive powers, several West Wing aides have warned that invoking it would alienate some conservatives who have otherwise been loyal to the White House. Lawmakers and activists on the right have been critical allies of the president on judicial nominations and have stressed that an emergency declaration could set a precedent for a future Democratic president to take far-reaching action on climate change or gun violence.

Trump has stopped musing as much about a national emergency, both publicly and privately. Asked if he’d been given marching orders or an ultimatum on a unilateral move by the president, Shelby said that didn’t happen.

“He didn’t say that. It was a very positive meeting,” said a beaming Shelby on Thursday. “He’s somewhat open, flexible.”

Another close ally, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), was scheduled to meet with the president on Thursday. He said the president appears to be giving negotiators the space they need to make a deal: “So far, so good.”

Republicans have warned the White House against testing the president’s emergency authority.

Utah GOP Sen. Mike Lee, who was once interviewed by Trump for a Supreme Court vacancy, approached acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney in late December with his concerns about the use of emergency executive powers to fund a border wall project, according to two sources familiar with the exchange.

“Lee said, ‘I’m really worried about this. Have you run it by the lawyers at DOJ?’” said a person familiar with the conversation.

Prominent conservative publications from National Review to the Wall Street Journal editorial board have also opposed the move, the latter warning it would “set a bad precedent that conservatives who believe in the separation of powers could live to regret.”

Trump also might lose a vote in the Senate if he followed through with an emergency declaration. Just four Republicans would have to oppose him for a resolution of disapproval to be passed — an embarrassing outcome that would force him to issue his first veto.

“I wish both of them would find a way to declare victory on each side,” said Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.). “I’m tired of talking about all of that stuff … no shutdown, that’s my position.”

Meanwhile, both the White House and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have signaled that they are opposed to signing another short-term spending bill to allow negotiations to stretch past next Friday. And due to new House rules adopted by Democrats that require a three-day review of major legislation, it’s officially crunch time for Congress.

“We really have until, basically, Sunday to file the papers. So they’re going to have to in the next 24-48 hours agree, if there’s going to be a deal,” said Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), the party whip. “I hate to raise expectations, but there’s growing optimism that there may be something there.”

That makes it all the more likely that Trump will be forced to choose between two unpalatable options: a bipartisan deal served up by lawmakers, or executive action that falls short of an emergency declaration. A more modest executive order has been under review by the White House counsel’s office for weeks, which Mulvaney has termed “legal executive authority.” Both choices are likely to provide far less money than what the president has been demanding for a border wall.

Mulvaney on Wednesday indicated that if Trump is unsatisfied with the deal reached in Congress, the president will take executive action — but avoided saying that he would declare a national emergency.

“If Congress won’t participate and won’t go along, we’ll figure out a way to do it with executive authority,” he told Fox News’ Sean Hannity.

Privately, Mulvaney and other senior officials, including White House policy adviser Jared Kushner, have been warning Trump about the drawbacks of taking executive action or employing emergency powers. The president’s chief of staff has described an emergency declaration as something he hopes to avoid due to expected legal backlash, according to six people familiar with his thinking.

Congressional Democrats have already threatened to challenge the administration in court if Trump decides to invoke executive authority, and although the White House is weighing several options that vary in their litigation risk, each would likely be opposed by the president’s critics.

Mulvaney pushed back on the notion that he has tried to warn Trump off from declaring a national emergency. “I’ve never said that to anyone in my life,” he said in an interview with POLITICO Wednesday.

And while Mulvaney, Shelby and Graham are all influential, Trump’s about-face in December on a spending bill that provoked the five-week shutdown underscored that his opinions are always subject to change.

So even as Democrats were feeling good on Thursday about avoiding a shutdown, they weren’t counting anything out just yet.

“I can’t predict what the president is going to do from tweet to tweet,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.).

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