Elon Musk’s billions have made it to Burning Man and beyond

Elon Musk's foundation gave $10,000 to the Burning Man Festival.
Elon Musk’s foundation gave $10,000 to the Burning Man Festival.

Image: DigitalGlobe/Getty Images

2016%252f10%252f18%252f6f%252f2016101865slbw.6b8ca.6b5d9.jpg%252f90x90By Sasha Lekach

Tesla CEO Elon Musk isn’t made of money, but he sure has a lot of it. Of the billions he’s amassed over the years from his early days at PayPal, and now as CEO of SpaceX and electric car company Tesla, a big chunk every year is siphoned through his tax-exempt Musk Foundation.

The Guardian went through Musk’s charitable foundation tax filings from 2002 to 2016 and spotted some highlights and big-ticket donations that overall added up to $54 million in the years since it started in 2001. The foundation’s website, a simple Yahoo site created back then that simply states its mission in Times font, explains that money is given to certain organizations:

– Renewable energy research and advocacy

– Human space exploration research and advocacy

– Pediatric research

– Science and engineering education

– Development of safe artificial intelligence to benefit humanity

How some of its giving fits into this list isn’t always clear. In 2012, the foundation gave $10,000 to the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, a Santa Cruz, California, nonprofit with the purpose “to fund the Temple of Whollyness at Burning Man 2013.”

Here’s some footage of the Musk-funded temple, which was burned at the end of the gathering in the Nevada desert. Musk was quoted in the New York Times in 2014 about the festival: “If you haven’t been, you just don’t get it.”

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame received $10,400 in 2012 as well. As the form states, the money is intended to “educate visitors, fans, and scholars about the history and continuing significance of rock-and-roll music.” No mention as to whether Musk sees himself as a rock star.

A Los Angeles traffic group called Angelenos Against Gridlock received three payments of $25,000. Musk has consistently said he hates traffic — so much so that he’s started another company, the Boring Company, to dig tunnels under LA.

The LA group no longer exists, but an archived version of their website, endinggridlock.org, lists Elon Musk first in big font in a section that says, “We acknowledge the generous support of our top donors.”

SEE ALSO: Elon Musk makes it more expensive to own a Tesla

Pick a random year and the corresponding 990 tax form is filled with donations ranging from $500 to more than $100,000 given to science and space organizations, disease research groups, schools like Musk’s alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania, or Arizona State University or a CalTech HIV research lab. There’s even a gift to the Clinton Foundation to support the Clinton Climate Initiative with $24,800.

In the most recent form from 2016, the foundation gave $10 million to YC for “scientific research” —the Guardian tied that to startup incubator Y Combinator and its founder Sam Altman.

Musk’s billions sure get around.

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Report: Luka Doncic Commits to 2019 NBA All-Star Skills Competition

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - JANUARY 21:  Luka Doncic #77 of the Dallas Mavericks takes a shot during a game against the Milwaukee Bucks at Fiserv Forum on January 21, 2019 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Stacy Revere/Getty Images

While we won’t know whether Dallas Mavericks star rookie Luka Doncic made the All-Star Game until Thursday, Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium revealed on Friday that the 19-year-old will take part in the 2019 All-Star Skills Challenge.

Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports revealed that Sacramento Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox will be there as well.

The Skills Challenge will be held on Saturday, February 16, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Players are asked to run through a basketball obstacle course of sorts to test their ball-handling, passing and shooting skills. It is an eight-player knockout-style tournament, which Brooklyn Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie won last year.

Doncic looks like a natural fit for the competition given his versatile skill set. He’s one of the smoothest ball-handlers and passers in the game and is hitting 35.6 percent of his threes despite a recent 5-of-27 slump from beyond the arc.

Regardless of the other Skills Challenge participants, chances are Doncic will emerge as one of the clear favorites, if not the leader of the pack.

Fox should be right up there with him thanks to his blinding speed, which should be helpful as he runs from station to station and through the ball-handling slalom.

The next question is whether Doncic will be the first rookie named to the NBA All-Star Game since Blake Griffin in 2011. He finished fifth among Western Conference frontcourt players in the final All-Star voting results, and his peers notably thought highly of him as well with an eighth-place mark. NBA coaches are the sole arbiters of the All-Star reserve pool, however, with the 10 starters having already been chosen.

The reserves will be revealed Thursday during TNT NBA Tip-Off, which begins at 7 p.m. ET.

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Groups hope renewed focus on Venezuela will bring much-needed aid

Cucuta, Colombia – William Romero queued with thousands of other Venezuelans in Colombia’s Cucuta on Friday, waiting for a free meal at a church kitchen.

He arrived at 8am, but didn’t make the cut, so he waited for lunch.

Romero has lived in the border town for man than a year, eating only at the kitchen.

He said he’s witnessed an increase of Venezuelans streaming over the border in search of a life away from food shortages and hyperinflation.

“It’s worse than ever before, there are more and more people coming every day” the 37-year-old former construction worker said.

“As more people come, each person struggles hard to find their resources,” he told Al Jazeera.

William Romero (right) waits for a free lunch among thousands of other Venezuelans [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera]

Organisations helping migrants and refugees who have fled to Colombia and beyond agree, saying the growing number continues to put a strain on resources. But they hope the attention Venezuela has gained this week may bring the much-needed aid and relief that aid groups have been demanding for years.

“It feel like we’re reaching a tipping point,” said Trisha Bury, deputy director for the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Colombia. “It feels like we’re finally getting the attention this situation has deserved for years.” 

On Wednesday, opposition leader Juan Guaido swore himself in as interim president after the opposition-controlled National Assembly declared President Nicolas Maduro illegitimate.

The United States, among other regional powers, quickly recognised Guaido as president.

Maduro accused Guaido of staging a US-backed coup. He severed ties with the United States, and order all American diplomats out of the country within 72 hours. Turkey, Russia and China came to his defence.

Thousands of anti-government protesters, as well as pro-government protesters took to the streets, with the opposition calling for more protests this weekend.

Aid groups in Cucuta hope the renewed focused on Venezuela from the international community will help shift focus on getting them the resources needed to cope with the increasing number of migrants.

Increase of migrants crossing border

Situated on the border, Cucuta is along the most-trafficked route across the 2,200-kilometre frontier dividing Colombia and Venezuela. Here, thousands of Venezuelans sleep in packed, squalid lodging for migrants, or they huddle in nooks or wooded areas to sleep hidden from police who will evict them. 

The IRC logged about a 21-percent increase in the number of Venezuelans crossing the border in Cucuta between late 2018 and the first month of 2019.

At least one checkpoint along the mountainous road into Colombia saw migrant traffic grow from about 700 people per week in November to more than 1,000 a day in January.

Last month, economists with the Brookings Institute published projections showing another five million Venezuelans could be expected to flee their country, in addition to the three million that already reside abroad.

But according to organisations operating here and along the border, funding from the international community has been lower than expected.

“Overall, it is disappointing the very low levels of funding flowing to Latin American countries hosting Venezuelan migrants and refugees,” Dany Bahar of the Brooking Institute told Al Jazeera.

The IRC logged about a 21 percent increase in the number of Venezuelans crossing the border in Cucuta between late 2018 and the first month of 2019 [Dylan Baddour/Al Jazeera] 

Jean Carlos Andrade, the coordinator of a church kitchen run by the Diocese of Cucuta, said the support of the United Nations has helped, but the kitchen still lacks enough resources to help everyone.

Early last year, it began serving 1,500 daily meals to migrants and refugees. In June, the World Food Program got involved and has since upped funding, so the kitchen now serves 7,500 daily meals, between breakfast and lunch.

The UN refugee agency also funded the construction of offices and rooms where families can consult medics or nutritionists. They built recently-opened large bathrooms to combat a significant public health threat where thousands of people live outside. 

But the operation – the largest such relief for migrants in the entire border zone – has barely made a dent in the crisis.

Cucuta is the epicentre of the world’s response to the Venezuelan crisis because most aid groups have been barred from entry into Venezuela.

International donations of medicine or food have largely been kept out of the crisis zone.

Instead, already overwhelmed groups like the UN agencies wait across the border to receive the migrant tide. 

‘The Venezuelans need help’

According to Andrade, the region still needs, daily food for thousands of people, healthcare for migrants with grave conditions like cancer or HIV, education or daycare for the innumerable children out of school or on the streets and transportation for the migrants who want to leave the overcrowded border zone but can’t raise the money for bus tickets.

Felipe Munoz, Colombia’s manager of the border zone, said that what’s needed most is support at the local level. 

“The most important thing for the government is to support the local level, the municipalities that are receiving the migrator inflow,” he said.

“The only way that this situation can go from humanitarian tension to process of development is that we can document these hundreds of thousands of people so that they can be productive.”

Back outside the church kitchen, Romero said he first left Venezuela so that he could find work and send money home to his family. But since December, he’s had nothing to send due to the increasingly grim situation in Cucuta.

He said that no matter what happens at the political level, the focus should be on getting help Venezuelans who’ve fled. 

“We left our families behind to come here and search for food,” he said. “The Venezuelans need help.”

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Fyre Festival’s CMO Grant Margolin appears to be working again … as a business tutor

Grant Margolin, the chief marketing officer of the colossal disaster that was Fyre Festival, seemed to drop off the face of the Earth after the event. 

The festival’s founder and CEO, Billy McFarland, is serving six years in prison for defrauding over 100 investors out of $27.4 million. But Margolin, who is portrayed in both recent Fyre Festival documentaries as McFarland’s right-hand man, settled out of court and has kept a low profile. 

All the documentaries managed to say about what he does now is that he volunteers as an EMT. 

But now it seems Margolin has been found — selling his services in New York City as a tutor, specializing in business and marketing, for $90 an hour. But we’ll get back to that. 

To recap: Fyre Festival became notorious as “the greatest party that never happened” — a multi-million dollar swindle that left investors with empty pockets. Tickets were sold for anywhere between $450 and $12,000. Attendees, promised the experience of a lifetime with major music acts and social media influencers, found themselves stranded at a construction site in the Bahamas. Local contractors and vendors went unpaid. 

In July 2018, Margolin faced fraud-related charges from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alongside McFarland, independent contractor Daniel Simon, Fyre Media, and McFarland’s shady credit card company, Magnises. Margolin was also Magnises’ vice president of marketing and branding. 

Without admitting to or denying the charges, Margolin agreed to a settlement offered by the SEC, which involved a $35,000 fine and a seven-year ban on being a corporate officer or director. Compared to McFarland’s sentence, it seemed like a slap on the wrist.

SEE ALSO: Internet raises $160,000 for restaurant owner from ‘Fyre’ Netflix doc

The lawsuits aren’t done for Margolin, though, with a class action lawsuit filed by festival-goers against the organisers (including Fyre Festival co-founder Ja Rule), and another class action suit against Margolin only, accusing him of deleting social media comments criticising the festival.

And then? We can’t say for certain, but someone who bears a striking resemblance to Margolin was offering their services on the the tutoring website Wyzant. The profile has recently been deleted, but the Margolin doppelganger was offering services as “experienced tutor” with a “business background,” available to anyone within 25 miles of Manhattan. 

Want to be tutored in business by Grant M.?

Want to be tutored in business by Grant M.?

Image: Mashable screenshot

Charging $90 per hour and supposedly located in New York’s Upper East Side — although the zip code he lists is actually the Upper West Side, ahem) “Grant M.” is offering tutoring in business, career development, marketing, public speaking, and project management. 

Mashable reached out to Wyzant and Grant M. for comment through the platform. Grant’s profile promised a response time of 23 minutes. That was not true in our case. The Wyzant account Mashable created was closed by the site after our request for comment was made. And Grant M.’s tutoring page was eventually taken down. 

Two words you won’t read here: Fyre Festival

Margolin’s alma mater, Syracuse University, is listed. And “Grant M.,” who uses a picture of Margolin for his profile, says that he volunteers as an EMT and firefighter in his spare time, when he isn’t playing music or exploring “the food & culture scene in New York City.”

“I am a marketer and brand strategist, consulting with clients across multiple industries to solve marketing and strategic business challenges,” the profile reads. Two words you won’t read here: Fyre Festival. 

To be approved as a tutor on Wyzant, you do not have to pass a background check — but you can pay $15.99 for one. “Wyzant does not require tutors on its website to have a background check conducted on themselves,” reads the site’s FAQ section.

Nonetheless, Grant M.’s profile says he passed a background check on March 23, 2018. The SEC complaint against Margolin was filed April 24, 2018. Wyzant’s checks include a criminal background check (felony and misdemeanor convictions within the past seven years) and Social Security number trace. 

There are seven ratings from students who have seemingly been tutored by Grant M., all of whom have left glowing remarks. None have dates attached, and all gave him five stars.

Grant M. has some glowing tutor reviews.

Grant M. has some glowing tutor reviews.

Image: wyzant/mashable screenshot

“Grant was of great help, in my school project. Patient, direct and with a comprehensive view, he guided me in all the spots where I was having trouble and stimulated the areas where I felt comfortable,” said a user going by “Fabio,” who is listed as having completed five lessons.

“I appreciated how direct Grant was in helping me prepare for an interview. He asked me questions that would be similar to what they may ask in an interview setting. He is very up to date on current marketing information and provided insight on modern marketing in today’s digital world,” said another review, this one from Rebecca, a user who has completed one lesson.

Whether these students are in fact relying on one of the key decision makers behind one of the biggest scams of the decade remains to be seen. But if it has let Margolin slip through the cracks without alerting its users, Wyzant might need to think twice about its background check system.

Mashable has reached out for comment to Grant Margolin and Wyzant through email and will update the story if we hear back.

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How the Impossible Burger is combating environmental crisis

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Alexis Sanchez, Manchester United Eliminate Arsenal from FA Cup with 3-1 Win

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 25: Muted celebrations from Alexis Sanchez of Manchester United after scoring their 1st goal during the FA Cup Fourth Round match between Arsenal and Manchester United at Emirates Stadium on January 25, 2019 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images)

Marc Atkins/Getty Images

Alexis Sanchez scored against his old club as Manchester United won their eighth match in a row in all competitions under caretaker manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer to knock Arsenal out of the 2019 FA Cup on Friday.

United sent the Gunners packing from the fourth round after leaving the Emirates Stadium with a 3-1 win, thanks to goals from Sanchez, Jesse Lingard and Anthony Martial.

Pierre Emerick-Aubameyang got on the scoresheet for the disappointing Gunners, who lost starting centre-backs Laurent Koscielny and Sokratis Papastathopoulos to injury during the game.

Alexis Sanchez Belongs in United’s Best XI

Alexis Sanchez has been close to anonymous since swapping Arsenal for United and a bumper contract last January. He couldn’t convince Jose Mourinho of his worth, and it says a lot about how far the Chilean has fallen that Solskjaer has started Marcus Rashford and Anthony Martial ahead of him for league games.

Solskjaer may want to think again, though, after Sanchez used cup duty to prove he belongs in United’s best XI. The South American forward took the opening goal brilliantly, rounding Petr Cech with typical skill before deftly finishing from a rapidly narrowing angle.

The Emirates FA Cup @EmiratesFACup

😳 | Who else but @Alexis_Sanchez? https://t.co/EliETpIppu

More than the finish, the goal highlighted the most important quality Sanchez brings to the United attack. Namely, perceptive movement.

Sanchez ghosted from out to in to receive a pass from Romelu Lukaku, the man whose place he’d taken in the middle of the forward line.

This type of run and rotation of positions makes United more fluid and less predictable in attack. Sanchez has mastered the art of such runs, thanks to excellent timing and a natural instinct for where gaps will appear.

Aside from his movement, the 30-year-old has the pace, flair and trickery to produce magic at any moment. His attempts to conjure said magic left Arsenal chasing shadows during the first half:

Squawka Football @Squawka

Alexis Sanchez completed more take-ons in the first half (2) than the whole of the Arsenal side combined (1).

Not a bad showing on his return to his former stomping ground. 🏟 https://t.co/E3Lf1xMJxz

He was substituted with less than 20 minutes left, but Sanchez had done enough to show Solskjaer he must start United’s highest-earner more often.

Alexandre Lacazette Too Inconsistent to Fire Arsenal into Top 4

While Aubameyang scored, Alexandre Lacazette toiled without end product against United. The Frenchman showed he’s too inconsistent to fire Arsenal to a top-four finish and a place in next season’s UEFA Champions League.

Emery has put his faith in Lacazette to lead the line for big matches recently. It’s even meant shifting Aubameyang, who has 17 goals in all competitions to his credit, out wide.

Lacazette simply isn’t justifying moving Arsenal’s best goalscorer out of the areas where he does the most damage. Instead, his touch, passing range and movement were all below par against the Red Devils.

Lacazette struggled to connect with team-mates or to hold the ball up whenever the Gunners connected with their main striker.

darrenbyfield @darrenbyfield

Never mind practicing dance celebrations after training , Lacazette and Aubameyang need to learn how to hold a ball up 🤦🏾‍♂️ #Breakdown #AA

His shaky performance was a far cry from the scintillating effort the former Lyon star produced during the recent 2-0 win over Chelsea in the Premier League. Lacazette scored the opener in spectacular fashion and led the line brilliantly.

Yet for every wonder strike, Lacazette has an equal number of days where he looks incapable of finding the net.

Coral @Coral

Lacazette now trying to score via every means necessary, including punching the ball into the net.

The truth is the 27-year-old is a scorer of great goals rather than a great goalscorer. Nor is he a complete striker who will make the ball stick and link the play the way Arsenal head coach Unai Emery needs him to.

Emery should stick to using Lacazette and his ability to improvise his way to sudden brilliance, as an impact substitute. In the meantime, Aubameyang must be allowed to be the focal point up top.

The latter is the only striker prolific enough to help mask the Gunners’ defensive frailties.

What’s Next?

Both clubs are in Premier League action on Tuesday night, with Arsenal hosting Cardiff City and United welcoming Burnley to Old Trafford.

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Brazil dam collapse: 200 missing, multiple deaths feared

About 200 people are missing after a dam collapsed in southeast Brazil with fears the disaster caused a number of deaths. 

A statement from the fire brigade’s headquarters in the city of Belo Horizonte, the state capital of Minas Gerais state, not far from the site of the disaster, said scores of people are trapped in areas by the river of sludge released by the dam burst.

Emergency services on Friday were still responding to the situation in and around the town of Brumadinho, which has a population 39,000, and did not yet have a toll, a local fire service official told AFP news agency.

“According to accounts that we are receiving, there were several deaths,” the official said.

President Jair Bolsonaro will visit the affected region on Saturday, a government spokesman said. Brazil’s environment minister, Ricardo Salles, was already on his way.

Bolsonaro “regrets the possible loss of life” and was closely following the situation, the spokesman, Otavio Santana do Rego Barros, told reporters.

Television images taken from the air showed a wide swath of devastation cut through vegetation and farmland. Several damaged homes could be seen, and some were destroyed with nothing but their tiled roofs left sitting on mud.

An emergency team from the Ibama environmental protection agency had been dispatched to the zone impacted by Friday’s dam collapse to determine the damage, Salles told the G1 news website.

The agency estimated the collapse had released a million tonnes of water and mud, according to the Estadao newspaper.

Five helicopters were dispatched to the area to search for people in distress and evaluate the scale of the destruction. Civil defence officials said people living in low-lying areas in the town had been evacuated from their homes.

Brumadinho’s municipality issued an alert on social media warning residents to move away from the Paraopeba river that the dam had been holding back.

The dam belonged to Brazil’s giant mining company Vale, which confirmed its collapse and said “the total priority is to protect the lives of employees and inhabitants”. It did not say what caused the collapse.

The accident comes three years after Brazil’s worst environmental disaster when a larger dam owned jointly by Vale and BHP Billiton broke in the same region, burying local homes and killing 19 people.

Friday’s incident appeared to pale in comparison with the 2015 disaster in Mariana in Minas Gerais, when the tailings dam at the Samarco iron ore mine burst.

Brumadinho is located 60km (40 miles) southwest of Belo Horizonte.

The town is best known to tourists for Inhotim, an outdoor contemporary art museum, which was evacuated as a precaution. The venue receives 35,000 visitors a month.

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Recovery from shutdown will be long and difficult


Federal Workers

Federal workers who went without pay during the shutdown will get full back pay in the next few days if Congress clears the temporary deal. | Mark Makela/Getty Images

After 35 days of mass furloughs, bureaucratic inertia and a culminating wave of airport delays, nine shuttered federal agencies began laying plans to creak back to life Friday after President Donald Trump announced a short-term deal to reopen the government.

It won’t happen overnight.

Story Continued Below

The shutdown froze court cases, curtailed drug reviews and food safety inspections and sidelined investigations into matters like Facebook’s data security practices. The IRS fell behind on preparations to handle millions of tax returns. The E-Verify system the Homeland Security Department runs to help businesses determine whether employees are eligible to work in the United States went offline. And the EPA twice scuttled a public hearing on a proposal to roll back a major climate rule for future power plants.

Federal workers who went without pay during the shutdown will get full back pay in the next few days if Congress clears the temporary deal. But if the president and congressional leaders can’t strike a deal before Feb. 15 to reopen the government for a longer period, the employees would again be furloughed or forced to work without pay.

“I will not celebrate a temporary reprieve to a politically motivated crisis that has left many federal employees in anguish over how to pay their bills, feed their families, and keep a roof over their heads,” J. David Cox, President of the American Federation of Government Employees, said in a statement.

After weeks of chaos, the thousands of air traffic controllers and baggage screeners who have been working without pay for the last month will return to a normal pay schedule. But though an immediate crisis was averted — cascading flight delays appear to have forced Friday’s resolution — the shutdown could convince these federal employees to quit in numbers that would be difficult to replace quickly.

The impact could also be particularly acute for Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who took a hit to their credit while they were working without pay. They could potentially lose eligibility for security clearances, because debt and poor credit can be disqualifying factors, based on the belief workers with financial issues are considered vulnerable to bribery and more likely to exploit their positions to make money through illegal activity.

With the tax filing season due to begin on Monday, tax preparers are hoping the IRS will quickly restore its online services, including access to taxpayer data, and ensure that workers are on the job to respond to taxpayer inquiries. Still, the effects of the shutdown are likely to ripple throughout the season, as the agency deals with backlogs.

“Without a shutdown, it often takes multiple contacts with the IRS to resolve a situation,” the American Institute of CPAs said in a letter Friday to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig. “We expect tremendous additional time to work with the IRS on correspondence once the shutdown ends.”

The group said the IRS should provide automatic extensions of notices and collections for 90 days after the shutdown ends, and stop assessing penalties and interest.

Meanwhile, the Interior Department will immediately confront one of the most vivid symbols of the shutdown: the widespread damage at national parks that were left unstaffed for more than a month. The open access led to members of the public cutting down trees at Joshua Tree National Park in southern California to make way for offroad vehicles, leaving piles of human excrement and toilet paper on trails and committing other forms of vandalism, according to complaints.

Work that continued during the shutdown could be the subject of future court battles. Interior continued to work on permits to drill for oil and gas on federal property. But Democrats and some environmental groups have said that work could be legally challenged unless the agency can prove that it was using money Congress had already appropriated, as the department said it had.

One important part of the government-wide reboot will be updating federal websites with security certificates that expired during the shutdown, making some inaccessible. The problem affected at least 130 sites with “.gov” domain names, including ones at Justice, Homeland Security and NASA. Many online services were inaccessible and communications rendered insecure.

The end of the shutdown is likely to be welcomed by those farmers and ranchers who’ve seen disruptions at local Farm Service Agency offices and may have been unable to apply for relief payments. Agriculture Department crop data reports have also been frozen, a nuisance to commodity traders and growers gearing up to make planting decisions for 2019.

It remains to be seen whether the bill to reopen the government will provide certainty to the nearly 39 million people who rely on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits to buy groceries each month. USDA already paid out $4.8 billion in February benefits to SNAP recipients early using a budgetary workaround, but March funding has been a huge uncertainty.

Some rural health programs and projects could be delayed for months, including efforts to build homeless shelters, domestic abuse victim centers, hospitals and addiction treatment facilities. The affected projects are backed by grants and loans awarded last fall by the USDA’s rural development program.

“We kind of have the perfect storm with the shutdown and the vast devastation from Hurricane Michael,” said Lori Allen, executive director of Florida’s Gulf Coast Children’s Advocacy Center, which won $340,000 for a new facility for children who are victims of rape and domestic abuse. “We’re at a standstill with any future plans.”

Federally funded university research could also be slow to recover. The National Science Foundation, for instance, canceled at least 70 grant reviews over the last month as the shutdown dragged on.

Department of Housing and Urban Development employees will be returning to a backlog of lapsed contracts and requests for maintenance and repairs in public housing. The Federal Housing Administration will have to sift through a pile of multifamily housing loan requests.

Over 1,000 HUD project-based rental assistance contracts with private landlords lapsed during the shutdown. Housing advocates worry about lasting damage to confidence in federal housing programs.

“I think this has been sort of a sobering experience for everybody — this whole concept of public-private partnerships requires that the government lives up to its expectations,” said Buzz Roberts, CEO of the National Association of Affordable Housing Lenders.

Adriel Bettelheim, Jennifer Scholtes, Ben Lefebvre, Alex Guillen, Ryan McCrimmon, Helena Bottemiller-Evich, Tanya Snyder, Brianna Ehley, Toby Eckert, Brian Faler, Ian Kullgren, Ted Hesson, Katy O’Donnell, Kyle Daly, Jordyn Hermani, Eric Geller, Benjamin Wermund, Rebecca Rainey contributed.

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Everything coming to Hulu in February 2019

Streamers, rejoice! Hulu’s content library just keeps growing and growing—and next month is no exception. Here’s what the streaming service is adding to its archives in the month of February.

If you’re looking for killer action, check out Hulu’s latest additions to its James Bond collection, like Dr. No and GoldenEye. Want some side splitting comedy? Try Caddyshack and its sequel, Caddyshack II. Classic romance? Mystic Pizza has got you covered. Fresh animation? The latest season of Archer. Just a bunch of really freakin’ cute puppies? The completely adorable guide dog documentary, Pick of the Litter

SEE ALSO: Hulu is thriving thanks to its larger content library

Check out everything coming to and going from Hulu in February 2019 below.

Top Pick: Three Identical Strangers (2018)

Considering last year was chock full of incredible cinema, no one is going to blame you for missing out on a few gems. But if Three Identical Strangers was one of them, then you need to circle back.  

Produced by CNN Films, this documentary dives into the lives of Edward Galland, David Kellman, and Robert Shafran—triplets who reconnected as young men after being separated at birth by an adoption agency. What begins as a delightful reunion soon devolves into a disconcerting look into the horror of unchecked power as the boys’ lives are revealed to have been part of a secret and wildly unethical study of human development.

Three Identical Strangers begins streaming on Hulu 2/26.

Movies

A Perfect Day (2/16)

A View to Kill
(2/1)

All Square
(2/11)

Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatre
(2/1)

Bad Santa
(2/1)

Barefoot
(2/1)

Born on the Fourth of July
(2/1)

Broadway Danny Rose
(2/1)

Cabin Fever
(2/2)

Caddyshack
(2/1)

Caddyshack II
(2/1)

Capote
(2/1)

Chaos
(2/1)

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
(2/1)

Chasing Liberty
(2/1)

Dazed and Confused
(2/1)

Death Wish
(2/23)

Deep Blue Sea
(2/1)

Delta Farce
(2/1)

Digging for Fire
(2/28)

Dog Days
(2/4)

Dr. No
(2/1)

Equilibrium
(2/1)

Escape from Alcatraz
(2/1)

Every Day
(2/25)

Experimenter
(2/4)

Field of Dreams
(2/1)

Flesh + Blood
(2/1)

Foolish
(2/1)

For Your Eyes Only
(2/1)

Four Weddings and a Funeral
(2/1)

Freedomland
(2/1)

From Russia with Love
(2/1)

Goldeneye
(2/1)

Hairspray
(2/1)

Hellboy II: The Golden Army
(2/1)

How to Deal
(2/1)

Kingpin
(2/1)

Lara Croft: Tomb Raider
(2/1)

Lars and the Real Girl
(2/1)

Licence to Kill
(2/1)

Marathon Man
(2/1)

Metro
(2/1)

Mississippi Burning
(2/1)

Moonraker
(2/1)

Moonstruck
(2/1)

Mortal Kombat
(2/1)

Mortal Kombat Annihilation
(2/1)

Mystic Pizza
(2/1)

Next
(2/15)

Next Day Air
(2/1)

Old Fashioned
(2/1)

On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
(2/1)

Paid in Full
(2/5)

Pick of the Litter
(2/2)

Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves
(2/1)

Space Jam
(2/1)

Terminator 2: Judgement Day
(2/1)

The Animal
(2/1)

The Big Lebowski
(2/1)

The Bounty
(2/1)

The Bourne Ultimatum
(2/1)

The Guilty
(2/28)

The Madness of King George
(2/1)

The Party
(2/17)

The Portrait of a Lady
(2/1)

The Preppie Connection
(2/9)

The Purple Rose of Cairo
(2/1)

The Quiet Ones
(2/1)

The Royal Tenenbaums
(2/1)

The School
(2/25)

The Secret Garden
(2/1)

The Sisters Brothers
(2/18)

The Song
(2/10)

The Thomas Crown Affair
(2/1)

The Thomas Crown Affair
(2/1)

The Toybox
(2/1)

Thelma & Louise
(2/1)

Three Identical Strangers
(2/26)

Three Kings
(2/1)

Thunderball
(2/1)

Tickled
(2/27)

Tomcats
(2/1)

Tomorrow Never Dies
(2/1)

Unforgettable
(2/1)

Universal Soldier
(2/1)

Untamed Heart
(2/1)

Wayne’s World
(2/1)

Wayne’s World 2
(2/1)

Wedding Crashers
(2/1)

Wes Craven Presents: Dracula 2000
(2/1)

While You Were Sleeping
(2/1)

TV 

Archer: Danger Island: Season 9 (2/25)

Bondi Harvest: Season 1 (2/15)

Elvis All-Star Tribute: Special (2/18)

False Flag: Season 2 (2/14)

Into The Dark: Down: Episode 5 Premiere (2/1)

Jamie’s Quick and Easy: Seasons 1-2 (2/15)

Legion: Season 2 (2/3)

PEN15: Season 1 Premiere (2/8)

Proven Innocent: Series Premiere (2/16)

Real Housewives of New York City: Season 10 (2/4)

Record of Grancrest War: Season 1 (2/1)

Saints & Sinners: Seasons 1-3 (2/4)

Stan Against Evil: Season 3 (2/20)

The Enemy Within: Series Premiere (2/26)

The Voice: Season 16 Premiere (2/26)

Whiskey Cavalier: Season 1 Mid-Season Premiere (2/28)

World of Dance: Season 3 Premiere (2/27)

Zac & Mia: Season 2 (2/14)

Expiring on 2/28

12 Dates of Christmas

A Mermaid’s TaleAll Over the GuyApollo 13Bad GirlsBad Girls from Mars

Basic Instinct

Beetlejuice

Best Seller

Beverly Hills Vamp

Blow Out

Blue Jasmine

Christmas Cupid

Deja Vu

Dr. Dolittle: Million Dollar Mutts

Dream House Nightmare

Dressed to Kill

Exposed

Hitman’s Run

It’s Us

Joey

King of the Mountain

Leaving Las Vegas

Lethal Weapon

Lethal Weapon 2

Lethal Weapon 3

Lethal Weapon 4

Line of Duty

Living by the Gun

Malena

Manhattan Night

Mansfield Park

Message in a Bottle

Miracle on 34th Street

Mullholland Falls

Operation Condor

Operation Condor II: The Armour of the Gods

Radio Days

Ride

Righteous Kill

Rob Roy

Silent Tongue

Snow

Snow 2: Brain Freeze

Snowglobe

Spy Game

Switchback

Teresa’s Tatoo

Ulee’s Gold

We are Marshall

Wicker Park

With a Friend like Harry

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Instagram now lets you put Story filters on existing photos and videos

This might sound like a minor feature, but it’s actually a big deal: Instagram now lets you add Story filters — think silly ears, ridiculous sunglasses, etc. — to existing photos and videos. Before this change, you were only able to apply these filters while taking a photo or video.  

According to Android Police, the changed has been rolling out on Android recently; for me it works on both iOS and Android.

SEE ALSO: Instagram’s new scrolling feature briefly inspires absolute fury

We’re not sure for how long, exactly, has this feature been there; we’ve asked Instagram about it and will update this article when we hear from them. 

To access the feature, start up a new story, add an existing photo or video, then tap on the smiley face with stars on top and you’ll get an assortment of filters you can apply. 

Well, sorry about this.

Well, sorry about this.

Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable

The number of filters available isn’t huge and it won’t work every time — doing it live is still better as sometimes you just need to tweak the photo a little bit for the filter to kick in, and since you can’t do that on existing photos, some filters may not work at all. 

It’s still a very important addition for heavy users of Instagram’s Story feature, who can now get creative not only with their own photos, but also clips from movies, TV shows and the like. 

Read More

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