Cowboys Rumors: Jason Garrett Won’t Get Contract Extension Before Next Season

Adam Wells@adamwells1985Twitter LogoFeatured ColumnistJanuary 31, 2019
EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY - DECEMBER 30:  Head coach Jason Garrett of the Dallas Cowboys looks on against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium on December 30, 2018 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Steven Ryan/Getty Images)

Steven Ryan/Getty Images

Although the Dallas Cowboys won the NFC East for the third time in the past five seasons, head coach Jason Garrett reportedly won’t receive a contract extension this offseason.

According to ESPN’s Todd Archer (h/t Adam Schefter), Garrett will start the 2019 season with only one year remaining on his contract. 

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

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Venezuela’s Guaido lays out broad vision for the country

Venezuela‘s self-proclaimed interim president Juan Guaido presented the opposition’s broad vision for the country’s future on Thursday, as the political crisis in the country deepened. 

“We have a plan, well thought out, structured,” Guaido said at the Faculty of Economic and Social Sciences in the Central University of Venezuela on Thursday, noting that “it is the sum of many sacrifices”. 

The “National Plan” focuses on the opposition’s vision for the economy and oil resources, but it also tackles public services, security, governability and society. 

Guaido said there would be something for everyone in society to do as Venezuela moves forward, including the military.

“The armed forces also have a role in the reconstruction of the country,” he said.

Last week, Guaido swore himself in as interim president before a crowd of his supporters. The proclamation came after the opposition-controlled National Assembly declared President Nicolas Maduro’s second-term “illegitimate”. 

Maduro accuses Guaido of leading a US-backed coup, and says the United States, among other countries, are waging an economic war aimed at removing him from power. 

In Thursday’s speech, Guaido divided the plan into three phases: the “cessation of the usurpation”, the establishment of a “transitional government” and free elections. 

According to Guaido, the priorities include the coordination of humanitarian assistance, the restoration of public services and an effort to tackle people’s dependency on subsidies. 

‘No dialogue with Maduro’

Guaido indicated that there would be no dialogue with Maduro or anyone in his government.

“We will never lend ourselves to false dialogues in any place,” he said, adding that protests will continue throughout the country. “The organised, systematic and sustained protests will continue until this dictatorship falls.” 

Translation: Today we present #PlanPaís. The route for the country we want to build together. We have the agreement, the will and the professionals to immediately address the problems of Venezuelans, Guaido wrote on Twitter. 

¡Respuestas concretas y planificación para Venezuela!

Hoy presentamos #PlanPaís. La ruta para el país que queremos construir entre todos. Contamos con el acuerdo, la voluntad y los profesionales para atender de inmediato los problemas de los venezolanos. #VenezuelaTenemosPlanPaís pic.twitter.com/qM3E2dxdI9

— Juan Guaidó (@jguaido) January 31, 2019

Threats and police forces 

Towards the end of his speech, Guaido said that agents of Special Action Forces (FAES) were at his home. 

“I will hold you responsible for any threat that you could make to my 20-months old daughter,” Guaido said. 

The US, which backs Guaido, has warned of “serious consequences” if Maduro’s government harms him.

Guaido later appeared at his building with his wife and daughter, saying “they will not intimidate this family.”

 Juan Guaido talks to media next to his wife Fabiana Rosales, while carrying their daughter outside their home Caracas [Carlos Garcia/Reuters]

Neighbours said men who identified themselves as belonging to the FAES arrived at the gate of his apartment building in a white SUV.

There was no obvious police presence by the time journalists arrived at Guaido’s house.

The political fight between Maduro and Guaido has drawn in foreign powers.

On one side of the tussle for control of Venezuela – an OPEC member with the world’s largest oil reserves but in dire financial straits – Guaido and Western backers led by the US are insisting on an immediate transition and fresh elections.

On the other, Maduro, with backing from Russia, China and Turkey, says he will remain for his second six-year term despite accusations of fraud in his re-election last year and the economic meltdown. 

Maduro, who first took office in 2013, has faced waves of protests in recent years as he presided over a collapsing economy, with hyperinflation and chronic food shortages. He enjoys the support of the military and some Venezuelans. 

Some three million Venezuelans have left the country since 2015, according to the UN.

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Man attempts boiling water trick during polar vortex, and it does not end well

As Katy Perry once sang, “Cause you’re hot then you’re cold, you’re yes than you’re no…”

This guy is certainly feeling that kind of brisk burn here. While attempting the viral trick of pouring boiling water in the air to make steam in below-zero temps, YouTuber Chris Kieger accidentally burned himself because he decided to do it while he was wearing almost nothing. 

Most of the water turns to steam, but some of the boiling water hit him right in the leg.

“The air was cold, my calf was scalding,” Kieger wrote on YouTube.  

We recommend this icy-hot thrill seeker sooth that burn with some aloe. 

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Will Ferrell has way too much fun for Ron Burgundy Podcast: Watch

Breaking news, San Diego. KVWN Channel 4’s most iconic serious newsman is back and he’s  kicking off his latest journalistic endeavor by asking some hard-hitting questions… to a chicken. 

Legendary comedian Will Ferrell is revitalizing his iconic Anchorman role for a new show with iHeartRadio, aptly named “The Ron Burgundy Podcast.” A first look released from the music streaming service features Ferrell running through an intense (and likely improvised) line of questioning, directed towards a person in a chicken costume. A few highlights: 

“I’d love to see you work with Lars von Trier. Any interest?”

“What do you do about the haters?” 

“Have people ever thrown batteries or pennies at you?”

Good to have ya back, Ron. The Ron Burgundy Podcast begins streaming Feb. 7 on iHeartRadio.

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Kristaps Porzingis Trade Rumors: Knicks to Start Talks on Star Amid Unrest

New York Knicks forward Kristaps Porzingis stands on the court during a time out in the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets, Friday, Oct. 19, 2018, in New York. The Nets won 107-105. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

New York Knicks star Kristaps Porzingis hasn’t played all season as he recovers from a torn ACL, but he could still be moved before the Feb. 7 NBA trade deadline, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN. 

Porzingis had a meeting with Knicks management Thursday and gave “the impression that he prefers to be traded,” per Wojnarowski.

The Brooklyn Nets, Los Angeles Clippers, Miami Heat, San Antonio Spurs and Toronto Raptors are among the interested teams, per Wojnarowski.

The meeting “discussed his frustration with the franchise’s losing, its past dysfunction and his own uncertainty over creating sustainable organizational success, sources said,” per ESPN’s Zach Lowe, Ramona Shelburne, Ian Begley and Wojnarowski.

This is the player’s fourth year with the team since being drafted No. 4 overall in 2015, and the Knicks are yet to win more than 32 games in a season. The squad is headed toward another lost year in 2018-19, currently sitting at 10-40 on the year.

Porzingis has been out since tearing his ACL last season, and the team has been conservative with his timetable to return.

According to Howie Kussoy of the New York Post, the forward won’t return until being evaluated again in mid-February, although he could miss the rest of the year.

When healthy, Porzingis is a dominant presence on both ends of the floor, finishing last season averaging 22.7 points, 6.6 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 2.4 blocks per game. He was selected to the All-Star game last season before the knee injury ended his year in February.

Despite his talent, the friction with the Knicks organization has continued throughout his career. The two sides were unable to agree on an extension before this season, making him a restricted free agent this summer.

This created more question marks about his future, which is still full of uncertainty heading into the upcoming trade deadline.

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Will the US end its involvement in the Yemen war?

Yemen has been in a state of war for the past four years.

The United States has firmly backed the SaudiUAE coalition which has been fighting Houthi rebels.

But repeated attacks on civilians by the coalition have drawn widespread international condemnation and have contributed to the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Things could be about to change now.

A group of US senators is pushing to end Washington’s support of the conflict.

The group of Democrats and Republicans, led by Senator Bernie Sanders, plans to re-submit a draft resolution the Senate passed in December but the house of representatives rejected.

Sanders has issued a warning over America’s continued role in the war.

But will President Donald Trump back the resolution?

Presenter: Richelle Carey

Guests:

Adam Baron – Visiting Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations

Scott Lucas – Professor of International Politics at the University of Birmingham

Catherine Shakdam – Researcher with Al Bayan Centre for Strategic Studies

Source: Al Jazeera News

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NBA Rumors: Kristaps Porzingis Concerned by Knicks’ Play, Wants Clarity on Role

New York Knicks forward Kristaps Porzingis (6) in the first half of an NBA basketball game Thursday, Jan. 25, 2018, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

David Zalubowski/Associated Press

Injured New York Knicks power forward Kristaps Porzingis reportedly has doubts about whether the organization is heading in the right direction.

According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, Zach Lowe and Ramona Shelburne, Porzingis met with Knicks management Thursday and expressed “concern” about the Knicks’ losing ways and whether a culture is in place that will yield success in the future.   

Wojnarowski added that while Porzingis wants to contribute to a winning culture in New York, he sought “clarity on his future role with the team and [the] Knicks direction” during the meeting.

Porzingis has yet to play this season after he tore his ACL this past February.

The Knicks are in the midst of an 11-game losing streak that has dropped them into last place in the NBA at 10-40.

After the Knicks selected Porzingis with the No. 4 overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft, he quickly developed into a star. The 7’3″ Latvian was named an All-Star for the first time in 2017-18 when he averaged 22.7 points, 6.6 rebounds and 2.4 blocks in 48 games before he tore his ACL.

During his time with the Knicks, Porzingis has witnessed sweeping changes in leadership both in the front office and on the sidelines.

In 2017, the Knicks parted ways with former team president Phil Jackson and named Scott Perry general manager. At the conclusion of last season, New York fired head coach Jeff Hornacek after he went 60-104 during his two years at the helm.

Former Memphis Grizzlies head coach David Fizdale replaced Hornacek, but he has been unable to get the Knicks on track thus far this season.

Aside from Porzingis, it is fair to question whether New York has the pieces in place to become a winning franchise in the coming years.

Guard Frank Ntilikina, who the Knicks selected eighth overall in the 2017 NBA draft, has yet to blossom as expected. Kevin Knox, the No. 9 overall pick in this past year’s draft, is averaging 12.3 points and 4.3 rebounds per game and may have some star potential. However, most of New York’s other young talent look to be strong role players at best, including Allonzo Trier, Damyean Dotson and Luke Kornet.

The Knicks’ best pitch to Porzingis may their upcoming first-round pick, which may give them a shot of landing Duke stars Zion Williamson and RJ Barrett or Murray State guard Ja Morant, among others.

If that doesn’t work, Porzingis may continue feeling uncertainty about his future in the Big Apple as he heads into restricted free agency this offseason.

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Lebanon announces government after months of deadlock

Lebanon announced the formation of a government on Thursday eight months after elections and amid heightened fears of a major economic collapse.

The Western-backed prime minister-designate Saad Hariri now faces a big challenge in delivering the reforms needed to address dire public finances and unlock billions of dollars in pledged aid and loans to boost growth.

On May 24, after parliamentary elections, President Michel Aoun quickly nominated Hariri for his third term as prime minister and tasked him with forming a cabinet, but political parties spent eight months arguing over the new government’s makeup.

“We are facing economic, financial, social and administrative challenges,” Hariri said at a press conference after the announcement.

“It has been a difficult political period, especially after the elections, and we must turn the page and start working,” he said.

The new government will include most of Lebanon’s rival factions, who have been negotiating over the makeup of the cabinet since the May 6 election that saw allies of the Iran-backed Hezbollah group gain ground.

The United States regards Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation and has added sanctions on the group as part of a campaign against Iran.

The new cabinet includes 30 ministers from Lebanon’s rival political clans. The new line-up will see four women take office, including the interior and energy ministries.

Gibran Bassil is to remain as foreign minister, while a senior official said Ali Hassan Khalil will stay on as finance minister.

A source familiar with the government formation talks said Hezbollah had chosen Shia doctor Jamil Jabak, who is not a member of the group, as health minister.

By picking the health minister, the heavily armed Hezbollah will be moving beyond the marginal role it played in past governments; the ministry has the fourth-biggest budget in the state apparatus, the outgoing health minister has said.

Since the election, Hariri’s last government, appointed in late 2016, has continued in a caretaker capacity.

Hariri lost more than a third of his MPs in the election but kept his status as the leading Sunni Muslim and so returns as prime minister, a position reserved for his sect under Lebanon’s sectarian system of rule.

Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr reporting from Beirut said that forming a government isn’t an easy process when it comes to rival politicians agreeing on the distribution of seats in Lebanon’s sectarian-based power-sharing agreement.

Many observers believe France – as a former colonial power which still has influence in the country – played a significant role in forming the government, Khodr noted.

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Hala Director Minhal Baig On Making A Movie For First Generation Muslim-Americans

By Monica Castillo

Minhal Baig’s coming-of-age drama Hala is an intimate look at the experience of growing up as a Muslim-American teenaged girl in America. In addition to normal teen anxieties like worrying about college and fitting in, Hala (Geraldine Viswanathan) also has to abide by her conservative Pakistani parents’ rules. For example, Hala is not allowed to stay out late or hang out with boys, even at the skatepark she often frequents. So when she starts to develop feelings for a classmate, she has to manage this new set of emotions with her parents’ expectations.

Hala is about someone finding their voice and identity, a universal concept. But the film also captures an experience rarely told on-screen. There’s so much nuance in Hala’s story, enriching the movie with details that feel relatable to just about any first or second generation child of immigrants.

Hala earned thunderous reception at its Sundance premiere over the weekend, so much so that Apple acquired the film’s global distribution rights a few days later — marking the tech giant’s first purchase at the festival. MTV News spoke with writer and director Baig about her experience making the movie, working with Viswanathan to develop the character, and writing Hala’s story.

MTV News: At the premiere, you Facetimed your mom and said she didn’t know you had made a movie and that it played at Sundance. I have to ask, how did you keep a secret like that from your mom?

Minhal Baig: Well, it’s easy to keep a secret when your mom doesn’t have a smartphone, doesn’t use the Internet, and doesn’t watch American TV or movies. That certainly helps. In the process of writing, it was really personal for me, and I wanted to make sure that I wasn’t thinking the entire time how my family would feel about it. Because I think that would add another layer. I would always be worried, “Is this OK?”

I’m sourcing some things in this movie that are difficult to talk about. Especially inside of my own family, so much is unspoken and unsaid, and I think it would have been hard for me to tell my mom and then worry about how she’d receive the movie. What I want to do is tell Hala’s story as honestly as possible and do justice by her and do right by the movie. And then, tell my mom at some point.

MTV News: Were there any moments you decided that it would be better to differentiate it from your family?

Baig: In writing it, it was important for me to distinguish that I am not Hala. Hala’s a character. She is wrestling with many of the same issues that I was wrestling with, but the story is fictional. My mom is not the mom in the story. My dad is not the dad in the story. They are all composites of people. There are pieces of my mom in many of the characters. There are pieces of me in many of the characters. Many of the details and the texture of the story in the backdrop are lifted from my life. It’s set in Chicago, where I was born and raised.

The language they speak at home is Urdu. Eram (Hala’s mom, played by Purbi Joshi) and Zahid (Hala’s dad, played by Azad Khan) speak Urdu to each other. Eram speaks Urdu to Hala. Hala answers in English every time. Hala only speaks to her dad in English. So, that dynamic is really important for me to have in the movie because it speaks to how she feels about her parents, but her own connection to her culture.

Courtesy of Sundance Institute

Hala director Minhal Baig

MTV News: In a lot of coming-of-age stories, the girls are kept very asexual or just have a crush and nothing else happens. In Hala, it’s not just a crush but she has sexual feelings and acts on those feelings. What made you decide to include that in the story?

Baig: It was hard when I was writing it because I was feeling very vulnerable. The way I was raised, we didn’t talk about sex in our house. It was difficult to even write it. I came to realize that I needed to include it in the story because it felt honest to Hala’s journey. That is who she is and that’s a part of her life.

I wanted young women who watch the movie to feel like this is a thing that happens during your life, and you may not be able to talk about it with your family. I think if they don’t get to see that, then it’s almost like I’m skipping the hard part. When I was younger, my parents would skip through the sex scenes [in movies] because they were trying to protect us. That’s good at a certain age, but as I grew older, I felt like it was something I wanted to talk to somebody about. I want young women to be able to watch the movie and really feel like oh, that is me and I am a sexual being. And I have my own sexual agency. And masturbating and having sex, those are things that young Muslim women do.

MTV News: Is there a scene that you particularly enjoyed filming the most?

Baig: I think the sex scene was important for me in writing the story and then directing it. I’ve seen a lot of sex scenes where it’s the male gaze, so, it was really important for us to stay with her and experience it as she experiences it. And it’s uncomfortable. It’s absolutely uncomfortable. It’s tough because she’s going through. It’s hard when you have all these expectations of what that experience would be like, and it doesn’t match up. It’s devastating but also kind of funny at the same time.

I heard the audience laughing and I really appreciated that, because I do think that’s absolutely how one would react seeing this unfold. But also that, for her personally, something has changed where she recognizes that this magic which she thought was going to just come so naturally, does not.

MTV News: It does feel like Hala’s a little resentful of her culture at first, but then at the end, she’s kind of at peace with it and reconnects with it in her own way.

Baig: It was important to show that Hala is not rejecting her faith or her culture. I think it’s really complicated – especially for first generation Muslim-Americans. We’re almost living in two worlds, and we’re trying to reconcile this. Because we live in America, and but we also have our faith. It’s important to be able to also be true to ourselves. In Hala’s story, it was important for her, near the end of the film, to know that her relationship with her faith and her culture may not be the relationship that her parents have to their faith and their culture. It’s her own and on her own terms.

MTV News: There’s this beautiful love story of Hala falling for Jesse (Jack Kilmer), the scenes of them walking and talking about poetry. How did you come up with it?

Baig: That was very much pulled out of my own life. I really wanted Jesse to be someone who was meeting Hala at her level. They share interests. I wanted to show a young man who’s sensitive and a very empathetic person, but he’s also still a teenager.

I wanted that story to be very realistic. Hala has so much going on at home that he doesn’t know about, and she pushes him away at a certain point. I think there’s anticipation for that relationship to have this magic and this “We’re going to run away together” sort of feeling. The reality of many of these relationships at that age is that there’s this magic at this moment, and it’s very special, and it can be very fleeting.

MTV News: What was that like working with Geraldine Viswanathan to develop Hala?

Baig: Geraldine is an incredibly talented actress. She is known for comedic gifts, but in this film, she really demonstrates all of her dramatic chops. She has something that is very unexpected. When I was looking for Hala, I may have been looking for something that I envisioned in my head. When Geraldine came into the picture, the character became something different. I recognized that so much could be communicated without saying anything because she is so expressive. And there’s so much going on underneath the surface when you’re looking at her.

Geraldine brought levity to Hala. I think teenagers like Hala at that age are very self-serious and are worried about the grand dramatic questions of life, of what do I have to say? And is anything that I say even important? Or has it not already been written? That’s heavy existential thinking for a teenager.

Suzi Pratt/Getty Images for Turner

Hala star Geraldine Viswanathan at Sundance.

MTV News: You also used an inclusion rider (a contract clause that guarantees a certain amount of diversity on set) for Hala. What’s that like to put into practice?

Baig: I wanted women at the table because I want the female perspective at the table. This is a young woman’s coming-of-age story. It’s absolutely important to have women all over the movie. So, when we were hiring department heads, I had every intention of hiring the best candidates. They were all my first choice hires. No one passed on the film.

It was absolutely incredible because all these women came together and made this movie. I wanted women to surround the film to challenge me and make it better, and to make it more authentic. Because I do think it’s their story too. When I’m hiring people, I’m hiring them for their lived experiences and their perspective. You can be a cinematographer, but you have a point of view on a story. Every single person that was hired — Carolina Costa, our cinematographer; Sue Tebbutt, our production designer; Mandy Hoffman, the composer; Saela Davis, the editor — all of these women filled the movie with all of that life.

I have to say that it was an incredible experience working with so many women. I went to a production meeting and it’s all women, and I’ve never been on a set like that before. Everyone was listening to each other. It was incredibly collaborative, and it’s open. They are incredibly good at their jobs. Inclusion is really important because you need different voices and perspectives to make the story better. I don’t think it’s more difficult to hire women. I think you need to make an effort. You need to ask around and look outside your immediate social circles and ask for reels and resumes and recommendations. It’s well worth it because it makes the movie better.

MTV News: And one of the women who joined your production was Jada Pinkett Smith. How did she join your movie?

Baig: For Jada, it was also a really personal story. She felt like she really wanted to support an artist who would not otherwise get resources or be able to share their story. So, when Jada came on board, I pitched her the movie and she watched the short, and she felt like it resonated with her. It was kind of immediate after that. She wanted to support me in whatever way she could and pool her resources for me. She was also very much like, “I trust you. You’re the director. You know what you’re doing.”

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