Mike Conley Trade Rumors: Jazz Interested in Grizzlies PG

Memphis Grizzlies guard Mike Conley, left, shoots ahead of Charlotte Hornets center Bismack Biyombo, right, and guard Kemba Walker in the second half of an NBA basketball game, Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2019, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Brandon Dill)

Brandon Dill/Associated Press

The Utah Jazz have reportedly expressed interest in trading for Mike Conley as the Memphis Grizzlies gauge interest in their longtime point guard ahead of the Feb. 7 deadline. 

Tony Jones of The Athletic reported the Jazz have spoken to Memphis but have not made a formal offer.

The Grizzlies have started listening to offers for Conley and Marc Gasol amid their slide out of the Western Conference playoff race, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Conley, 31, is averaging 20.0 points, 6.0 assists and 3.2 rebounds per game this season. He’s bounced back to potential All-Star form after being limited to 12 games in 2017-18 following an Achilles injury.

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

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US to start returning asylum seekers to Mexico on Friday: report

Central Americans and Mexicans queue to cross into the US to apply for asylum at the El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico [File: Jorge Duenes/Reuters]
Central Americans and Mexicans queue to cross into the US to apply for asylum at the El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico [File: Jorge Duenes/Reuters]

The United States will return the first group of migrants seeking asylum in the United States to the Mexican border city of Tijuana on Friday, a spokesman for Mexico’s president said on Thursday.

In a major policy change, US President Donald Trump’s administration said on December 20 it would send non-Mexican migrants who cross the US southern border back to wait in Mexico while their US asylum requests are processed.

The spokesman for President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s office did not specify the nationalities of those to be returned to Mexico, although the policy was aimed at helping cope with rising numbers of Central Americans seeking asylum in the United States.

The two countries have held two meetings to work out details of the plan to return migrants seeking US asylum across the shared border. Mexico has said it will not accept anybody facing a credible threat in Mexican territory.

Serious doubts exist over whether Mexico can keep Central American asylum seekers who are fleeing poverty and crime safe, especially in border towns that are often more violent than the cities they left.

It is unclear how Mexico plans to house what could be thousands of asylum seekers for the months – or years – it takes US immigration cases to be heard. A backlog of more than 800,000 cases is pending in immigration courts.

Trump’s escalation

The move comes as Trump escalates his efforts to severely limit the number of migrants and refugees entering and living in the US. 

On Thursday, the US government entered its 34th day of a partial shutdown, the longest of its type in history, which started over Trump’s demand for more than $5bn in funding for a wall on the US-Mexico border. 

Earlier this week, the Southern Poverty Law Center civil rights organisation and other groups filed a class action lawsuit accusing the Trump administration of using detained migrant children as “bait” to arrest undocumented people. 

Last week, the Office of Inspector General at the US Department of Health and Human Services said the US government may have separated “thousands more” migrant children from their families than previously known.

The administration of President Donald Trump implemented a “zero tolerance” policy to criminally prosecute and jail all undocumented border crossers, even those travelling with their children, leading to a wave of separations last year.

But the auditor said in a report that prior to the officially announced policy, the government had ramped up separations for other reasons related to a child’s safety and well-being, including separating parents with criminal records or lack of proper documents.

SOURCE:
News agencies

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Ted Cruz gets called out on the Senate floor over shutdown vote

Sen. Ted Cruz and his weird beard just got called out on the U.S. Senate floor by Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet over the fight to reopen the federal government. 

On Thursday, Cruz claimed that obstruction by Democrats was the only thing keeping the government from reopening and getting federal workers like Coast Guard employees their paycheck. His remarks came ahead of a vote on a bill that could have brought an end to the current government shutdown by giving President Trump his demanded $5.7 billion in border wall funding. 

That’s when Bennet stood up and took umbrage with what he called Cruz’s “crocodile tears” in an impassioned, scathing indictment of Cruz’s history with shutdowns.

SEE ALSO: The sad silence of the National Parks Instagram accounts

Here’s a snippet of what Bennet said:

These crocodile tears that the Senator from Texas is crying for first responders are too hard for me to take. Because when the Senator from Texas shut this government down in 2013, my state was flooded! It was underwater! People were killed! Peoples’ houses were destroyed! Their small businesses were ruined forever! And because of the Senator from Texas, this government was shut down for politics.

That 2013 shutdown was some chicanery led by Cruz in an attempt to take away funding of then-President Obama’s Affordable Care Act. The move is probably most remembered for two things: Cruz reading Green Eggs and Ham during a filibuster and the whole thing ending poorly for Cruz with the publicly largely blaming Republicans for the 16-day shutdown. 

The deadly floods Bennet referred to took place in early Sept. 2013, three weeks before the shutdown started on Oct. 1, 2013. But the shutdown greatly impacted funding flood recovery efforts in the wake of the disaster. Extra relief for Colorado was part of the bill that ended that 2013 shutdown but recovery efforts are still ongoing and have been impacted by this shutdown, over five years later. 

In the end, the Senate failed to pass either bill to reopen the government on Thursday, so the current shutdown continues and Ted Cruz continues to be the senator nobody likes.

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Heinz made Ketchup Caviar so Valentine’s Day dates can dine like fancy trash

Nothing says romance like small round capsules filled with tomato goo. That’s the new Heinz motto, probably.

Why? Well, for starters the condiment company is celebrating Valentine’s Day with a fancy new product called Ketchup Caviar, which is, essentially, exactly what it sounds like.

Think regular caviar, then remove the delicacy of fish eggs, replace it with balls filled with ketchup, and you have Ketchup Caviar. You OK? Alright, good.

On Thursday, the official Heinz Ketchup Twitter account shared a video of the “limited edition delicacy for true ketchup lovers,” and boy is it something.

One colleague of mine described them as “ketchup beans,” while another dubbed them “ketchup bubbles.” (Both correct, in my opinion.) And Mashable’s Executive Editor, the mom of a young child who would probably have a ~ball~ with the ketchup balls, simply referred to the “ketchup in tiny, exploding ball form” as her “nightmare.”

While the “caviar” is meant to be luxurious, it doesn’t seem to be especially practical. I mean, how are you supposed to eat fries with ketchup? Use two fries as chopsticks and pick up a caviar bit? Seems bad.

SEE ALSO: Costco is now selling a 27-pound bucket of macaroni and cheese

The lil ketchup pearls were created with the goal of helping ketchup-loving couples have an “exquisite Valentine’s Day experience,” according to the video. But as it turns out the caviar isn’t actually available for purchase.

Instead, 150 Heinz Ketchup Caviar jars will be sent free of charge to a select group of Twitter users.

If you’re interesting in winning one, all you have to do is respond to a tweet from @HeinzKetchup_US with your thoughts about the latest concoction using the hashtags #HeinzKetchupCaviar and #sweeps.

The opportunity to win is only available from Jan. 24 to Jan. 28, though. So if you’re in the mood to eat some fancy ketchup you’d better send out your tweet.

Be sure to check out Heinz’s full list of rules and promotional guidelines here, and, uh, best of luck impressing all your Valentine’s day dinner dates.

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Senate rejects Trump plan to fund border wall and end shutdown


John Thune

“I think it certainly puts everybody on record, and if nothing else I would hope at least that this would get the conversation going again,” Senate Minority Whip John Thune said of the Senate’s first move on funding since the shutdown began. | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo

Government Shutdown

Despite the failure, lawmakers expressed optimism that there’s a way out of the impasse.

The Senate blocked two proposals on Thursday to reopen the government, but amid the ongoing stalemate, there’s some hope that Washington might be inching closer toward ending a shutdown now on its 34th day.

In a 52-44 vote, the Senate rejected House-backed legislation that would fund the government through February 8. The Senate, in a 50-47 vote, blocked legislation endorsed by President Donald Trump that provided $5.7 billion for his border wall and granted temporary protection for some undocumented immigrants.

Story Continued Below

The bills were expected to fail.

Six Republicans — Susan Collins of Maine, Cory Gardner of Colorado, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Mitt Romney of Utah and Johnny Isakson of Georgia joined Democrats to vote in favor of the continuing resolution.

“I’ve said all along we should fund border security, keep the government open,” Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) said prior to the vote. “We can walk and chew gum at the same time.” He added that Coloradans “don’t understand why Congress can’t get its job done.”

When asked about the Republican defections on the continuing resolution bill, Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) said that members are “frustrated and want to do everything they can do move the process forward.”

The dueling votes marked the first time the Senate has formally moved on government funding since the shutdown began. And senators this week signaled a note of optimism, saying that even though Thursday’s bills were going to fail, they at least represented movement and possibly the start of negotiations to end the shutdown.

“I think it certainly puts everybody on record, and if nothing else I would hope at least that this would get the conversation going again,” Thune said.

About 20 dozen House Democrats marched over to the Senate during the vote in an unsuccessful effort to pressure Republicans to back to the clean spending bill.

House Democrats are also preparing a counteroffer of sorts to Trump that reportedly would provide at least $5 billion in border security, but no new funding for the wall. Democrats on Thursday, however, were tightlipped leaving a planning meeting in Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office and refused to detail what level of border funding will be in the proposal or how far-reaching it is.

The proposal, set to be made public Friday, suggests pressure is mounting to find a solution to the impasse. Earlier this week, a group of centrist House Democrats drafted a letter to Pelosi asking that she give Trump a vote on his border wall or a border security package in exchange for re-opening the government. The Democrat-controlled House has also repeatedly passed legislation to re-open the government — most recently a spending bill Thursday to re-open the Department of Homeland Security.

Some House Democrats have privately dismissed the DHS proposal as a messaging document meant to ease their rank-and-file’s frustrations with the prolonged stalemate. But House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) said Thursday he’s confident the Democratic counteroffer will be a starting point for serious talks with the president once the government is reopened.

“I maintain hope that people will come to their senses real soon. And I’m very confident that the proposals we’re putting forward will gain traction and will become a significant part of whatever the negotiations are going forward,” Clyburn said. “We won’t get 100 percent of what we want and we want the president to understand he won’t get 100 percent of what he wants.”

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said Thursday that part of the reason is Democrats haven’t decided how to present the offer – whether just to roll out a DHS bill or send Trump an accompanying letter outlining what exactly they will support on the border.

“The letter is still a work in progress. As to what format it will be, we’re not sure. It could be that or it could be another format,” Thompson told reporters.

Another issue up for debate: Whether to include any money for new fencing in some spots along the border.

“The question is still being debated as to whether any new fencing would be included,” Thompson said, although another Democratic source with knowledge of the bill disputed that.

Still, both parties remain publicly dug-in. Democrats have been adamant that Trump must re-open the government before they negotiate on a border security deal, while Trump says he will not re-open the government without funding for his border wall.

“They know full well that we’re here,” Pelosi told reporters on Thursday. “It’s the president of the United States. We’d meet with him anytime he wants to meet.”

Even before Thursday votes, the shutdown appeared to be taking a toll, with Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) yelling at Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) over the shutdown.

“These crocodile tears that the senator from Texas is crying for first responders are too hard for me to take,” Bennet said. “How ludicrous it is that this government is shut down over a promise the president of the United States couldn’t keep. And that America isn’t interested in having him keep.”

Cruz responded that he never “bellowed or yelled” at one of his colleagues on the Senate floor.

The Senate’s vote against stop-gap legislation to fund the government temporarily comes more than one month after it voted by voice vote for similar legislation to keep the government open through Feb. 8.

Thursday’s funding bill had some differences from the legislation passed in December, however. The House-passed bill included funding for disaster relief, some limits on physical barrier construction and changes to Medicaid.

On Wednesday, Pelosi and Trump sparred over whether the president would deliver his State of the Union address from the House of Representatives before the government was re-opened. Trump responded initially that he would find an alternative venue, but then said he would wait until the shutdown ended to deliver the speech. Clyburn said he was a “bit more hopeful” about ending the shutdown after Trump conceded to Pelosi on the speech.

Meanwhile, even as he demands Congress give him money for his border wall, Trump has also declined to rule out declaring a national emergency to build his border wall — an explosive and legally dubious move but one that could offer an alternative route to ending the shutdown.

Burgess Everett, James Arkin and Sarah Ferris contributed to this report.

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How Lauren Jauregui’s ‘More Than That’ Video Is A Celebration For Women, By Women



Courtesy Lauren Dunn

Half a year after “god is a woman” became part of the cultural vernacular, Lauren Jauregui has taken that concept one step further by embodying a real goddess. The singer-songwriter has been steadily introducing herself to the world as a solo artist, and thus far, she’s given us a pair of singles, “Expectations” and “More Than That,” which hint at her promising star power.

The common thread between those two videos is creative and director Lauren Dunn, whom Jauregui trusted to bring her precise artistic vision to life. For “More Than That,” released last week, that meant chronicling the goddess Aphrodite’s visit to Earth, following her through a strip club to convey a message of female empowerment.

“Aphrodite is the ultimate celebration of femininity and beauty and sexuality in an empowering way,” Dunn told MTV News. “When we think of a strip club, it’s often darkly lit and seedy and secretive and you don’t tell people you’re going. It’s not a place you envision women getting together and going to to celebrate other women.”

In the video, though, Jauregui’s Aphrodite — along with a crowd of entranced women — admire the dancers in front of them and eventually join in on the celebration. Dunn said the video was partially inspired by the Renaissance painting La Primavera, in which the goddess Venus stands among a trio of women dancing around her. Those are the three women flanking Jauregui as she enters the club (aptly titled “Olympus”), and their ethereal wardrobe takes cues from the women’s gowns in the painting.

The dancers, too, had their own feminine approach to what you would wear to pole dance, and the video’s stylist worked with each one of them to pick the outfit that made them feel the most empowered. The result, Dunn said, is seeing exotic dancers in a way we’re not used to.

“The dancers we hired — it’s just amazing to watch them move. It was like magic; you can’t believe the things they can do,” she explained. “We don’t see them in that light as often as we should.”

She added, “Ultimately, it’s just a celebration of women’s power and beauty, in every form. Every body type, every color. Because that’s where real beauty lies, is diversity. Lauren’s life mantra is celebrating women, and we just wanted to literally see these women in a new light.”

Even more impressive, the focus on femininity onscreen was heavily mirrored offscreen. The video’s entire post-production team — including the editor, colorist, and art director, as well as the lead production designer — were all women. Dunn explained, “I would like to say it’s probably intentional that we end up working with women because the energy is there. We sort of brought this thing to life together.”

Besides wardrobe and a diverse cast, the key to the video, Dunn said, was visual design; in other words, creating the world of Aphrodite. The director and her team spared no details, packing the video with symbolism galore. Those stage lights illuminating the dancers? They’re classic theatre lights shaped like shells, one of the most commonly associated symbols of Aphrodite. The pomegranates, wine, and golden apple covering the table in front of Jauregui? They’re all symbols of Aphrodite, too. And the video’s color palette, comprised mostly of seafoam green, rose, and light blue? You guessed it — they’re all colors associated with the goddess.

Some of those symbols can also be seen on the single’s cover art, which recreates the classic painting The Birth of Venus, and which was gorgeously brought to life in the video — though it proved to be a herculean task.

“That was the scariest photo I’ve ever taken,” Dunn said of the cover art, explaining that she used a “really old-school Pentax camera” and soft, low light to pull off the admittedly “risky” shot. She also bought upwards of 500 flowers, which were meticulously arranged around Jauregui in a way that mirrored classic art.

“I had to get up on a scissor lift, and I was strapped in and dangling over Lauren,” Dunn recalled. “I had decided I wanted to shoot through some vintage filters, which is why you get that kind of soft glow. I’m leaning over, and you’re hoping your hand doesn’t shake as you fire the shot. Everyone on set was quiet — we had a crew of probably 30 or 40 people and no one was speaking; everybody knew how scary of a moment it was for me. But after we got the shot, I was like, ‘That’s it, I know that’s the one.’”

Drawing inspiration from those famous pieces of artwork was “a very bold thing to do,” Dunn admitted, but she was relieved that fans could immediately identify the references and understand her intentions. Plus, her collaborator — in all her glowing glory — demands nothing less than the best.

“It’s legendary art and you don’t want to not do it justice,” Dunn explained. “But when you’ve got a subject like Lauren, she literally looks like a Renaissance painting brought to life.”

Jauregui is credited as a creative director and co-editor on the video, and Dunn chalked that up to the way the 22-year-old approaches her art and “builds her own world” in her music and her videos.

“She is inspiring because from even writing the song to editing the video with us, she’s so hands-on and has such a vision for who she is,” Dunn said. “She makes such a mood with her music. A lot of great music feels cinematic, and a lot of what she writes has that energy to it.”

What Jauregui’s next video will look like is still anyone’s guess, but fans may be able to look at her last two for clues. Though Dunn said there’s not an explicit connection between “Expectations” and “More Than That,” she did explain, “We used some of the imagery from [“Expectations”] and re-referenced it in a new way [in “More Than That”]. Some of the symbols that are associated with Aphrodite, like doves and roses, we had so much of that in the first video and we wanted to sprinkle some of that in the new one, to sort of keep a through line of the goddess that is Lauren.”

She added, “The narrative has evolved and they each are standalone videos, but we really wanted to have some sort of visual connection that made sense.”

That awesome attention to detail is a testament to how stunningly Jauregui is navigating her debut solo era. And much like those clubgoers stood entranced by her moves in the “More Than That” video, we’ll be watching closely to see what she does next.

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How can the political crisis in Venezuela be solved?

After years of turmoil, Venezuela’s political crisis has escalated dramatically over the past few days.

The head of the opposition-controlled National Assembly Juan Guaido declared himself interim president after the biggest protests against President Nicolas Maduro in two years.

The US, Canada and much of Latin America quickly threw their support behind Guaido.

But Maduro said he wasn’t going anywhere and ordered US diplomats to leave the country by Sunday.

What will this mean for Venezuela’s deep economic and political crisis?

Presenter: Laura Kyle

Guests:

Paul Dobson – Journalist for Venezuela Analysis

Leopoldo Martinez – Former Venezuelan congressman and president of The Center for Democracy and Development in the Americas.

Christopher Sabatini – Executive director of the Global Americans think-tank and editor of Latin America Goes Global 

Source: Al Jazeera

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Watch Gordan Ramsay suffer while eating extremely hot wings

Payback is best served extremely hot. 

I didn’t know that this was the video I’ve been waiting all my life, but  First We Feast‘s show Hot Ones released their season 8 pilot starring none other than Gordan Ramsay. 

For those not familiar, host Sean Evans asks celebrities questions as they feast on hot wings that get progressively hotter.

So who can really blame me for letting out a guttural and hearty evil laugh as Ramsey opened up and started chugging a bottle of Pepto-Bismol. This is the quality content I’ve been waiting for. 

I have often thought that the hottest sauce sauce featured on “Hot Ones” is a fate worse than death that I would not wish upon anyone … except, apparently, Gordon Ramsey. 

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Nestlé making moves to slow the Earth’s decline into plastic hell

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Greek parliament delays vote on Macedonia name change

A vote in the Greek parliament on the approval of the name-change of Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) to North Macedonia has been delayed following heated debates.

The ratification of the new name was expected to take place on Thursday, but Greek parliamentary speaker Nikos Voutsis said it has been postponed until Friday.

“There is an unprecedented high number of MPs who want to speak,” Voutsis said, adding the vote is now scheduled to take place on Friday at 1230GMT.

According to Voutsis, close to 230 MPs wanted to have their say before the vote would take place.

Most are given six minutes to speak, a rule which has been routinely broken in the highly charged session which opened on Wednesday. 

The change in name would put to rest a 27-year dispute over Macedonia name after ratifiying the Prespes Agreement reached last June between the two countries.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras seems to have secured the support of at least 151 deputies in the 300-seat house to get the deal approved, but opinion polls have shown most Greeks oppose the term “Macedonia” being used in any agreement.

The Greek population fears the use of the word Macedonia could lead to territorial claims over Greece’s largest northern province of Macedonia and an appropriation of Greek cultural heritage, allegations which Macedonia has denied. 

Police in Athens were on hand for more protests on Thursday evening and demonstrators took to the streets and the ancient Acropolis.

About 1,500 police officers took up positions around Athens ahead of several planned demonstrations.

“We are going to win, we are going win this battle to keep our morality because this is a fight, we are currently fighting and we will defeat them no matter what they vote inside,” said Giannis Orfanos, a protester.

Greece is bound by terms of the deal to stop blocking Macedonia from NATO and other international groups and to allow it to start European Union accession talks as part of the deal.

“I’m here to protest against that agreement they are debating inside. It’s very simple: they are disregarding our will, our history, our voices and we have come to protest peacefully,” said Andonis Phiamegos, another protester.

On Sunday, tens of thousands rallied against the deal in Athens and members of the Greek Communist Party (KKE) unfurled banners on the walls of Acropolis.

The accord was ratified by Macedonia’s parliament earlier this month, when 81 MPs voted in favour of the name change in the 120-seat chamber, securing the required two-thirds majority.

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