Did Riverdale Just Kill Off Archie And His Impeccable Abs? The Internet Has Doubts



The CW Network

SPOILER ALERT: Spoilers for Riverdale Season 3 Episode 9 titled “No Exit” below.

Remember when Riverdale pretended to kill off Jughead and we all collectively sobbed and screamed and melted for an entire week while we waited to learn his fate?

Well, in the January 16 episode, they tried to do it again, except this time with Archie, and the reaction has been very, shall I say, ‘fool me once…’

To sum up the cliffhanger, Archie, living an isolated life in the woods with his dog Vegas, is brutally attacked by a bear. After calling for help and dressing his wounds to the best of his ability, Archie has a fever dream in which he ultimately realizes he needs to die to make all the chaos end and starts bashing a second copy of himself. Then we see Archie — not the dream iteration, but the real Archie — laying in bed, having lost a lot of blood and looking pretty lifeless.

As in dead. Archie looks dead. He had a dream about dying, and then he dies. Just like that myth about dying in a dream meaning you die in real life.

Actually, if you die in a dream, it “symbolizes inner changes, transformation, self-discovery and positive development,” according to the dream scientists at Dream Moods, so this could be a good thing for Archie! If he’s alive — which everyone seems to think he is.

Rather than mourning the loss, fans immediately started doubting the plausibility of this storyline. After all, they can’t kill off their most shirtless cast member!

“Wait what?! I’m not gonna believe for a second that Archie is dead. Nope! No! We’re not doing this tonight!” wrote one fan at the episode’s conclusion.

Others sleuthed for clues that Archie couldn’t possibly be dead, pointing out that Archie-portrayer KJ Apa was on set long after last night’s episode finished shooting, his IMDb page indicates that he still has more episodes coming, and that there’s still Archie footage in this season’s extended promo that we haven’t seen yet.

Of course, the most telling sign that he’s going to pull through this near-death experience is that he was just cast in Riverdale High’s upcoming production of Heathers: The Musical.

I, for one, am looking forward to Riverdale‘s extraordinary doctors helping Archie through an inevitably speedy recovery. In the meantime, here are more reactions to the episode’s wild cliffhanger.

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Bradley Beal, Wizards Beat Knicks 101-100; Kevin Knox Held to 5 Points

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 17: Bradley Beal #3 of the Washington Wizards looks on during the 2019 NBA London Game against the New York Knicks on January 17, 2019 at The O2 Arena in London, England. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Ned Dishman/NBAE via Getty Images)

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The Washington Wizards defeated the New York Knicks 101-100 on Thursday at the O2 Arena in London.

Noah Vonleh scored inside with 33 seconds remaining to put the Knicks ahead by a point. Thomas Bryant was credited with the game-winner when Knicks rookie Allonzo Trier was whistled for goaltending.

New York had 0.4 seconds to hoist a desperation attempt, but Emmanuel Mudiay’s turnaround jumper was wide of the mark.

Bradley Beal struggled, going 10-of-29 from the field, but still scored 26 points. Otto Porter Jr. stepped up to provide a double-double (20 points, 11 rebounds) off the bench.

The Knicks were without Enes Kanter, who’s averaging a double-double this season (14.4 points, 11.0 rebounds). Kanter cited safety concerns stemming from his criticism of Turkey president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The impact of Kanter’s absence was evident as Washington out-rebounded New York 51-42.

Knicks first-round draft pick Kevin Knox shot 2-of-11, including 0-of-6 from beyond the arc, en route to a five-point performance.

Reaching Postseason Would Be Counterproductive for Wizards with John Wall out for Year

The Wizards outscored the Knicks 24-11 in the fourth quarter to pull out Thursday’s victory. With the win, Washington is now only three games back of the eighth-place Charlotte Hornets for the Eastern Conference’s final playoff berth.

Things looked bleak when the Wizards confirmed John Wall will miss the remainder of the 2018-19 season after undergoing heel surgery. Instead, they’re a respectable 6-4 since Wall’s injury forced him out of the lineup.

Washington might return to the postseason after all.

Tas Melas @TasMelas

The Wizards are going to the playoffs cause of course they are.

At the very least, Wizards owner Ted Leonsis made it clear the team “will never, ever tank,” per the Washington Post‘s Candace Buckner. It’s worth wondering, though, whether the franchise is better off in the long term by punting the rest of this year in hopes of tumbling down the lottery.

The pendulum has arguably shifted too much in favor of the idea a team should tank if it can’t win a championship. Reaching the playoffs can be a fulfilling achievement and give the fans something to get excited about.

The Wizards, however, wouldn’t ultimately gain that much by sneaking into a playoff position and getting beaten by the Milwaukee Bucks or Toronto Raptors in the first round.

Renan Borelli @renan

+ glad the wiZards could show our friends across the pond what it’s like to contend for an 8 seed every year https://t.co/1WlOozM2Bc

Wall’s injury presented Washington with a unique opportunity in that it could justifiably throw in the towel temporarily.

A lack of financial flexibility is one of the Wizards’ biggest problems. Wall’s four-year, $169.3 million extension is set to kick in next year, and Washington is projected to be $7.4 million over the salary cap, per Spotrac.

General manager Ernie Grunfeld doesn’t have the cap space necessary to pursue marquee free agents, and he has little in the way of trade assets outside of Beal. The 2019 draft is the one avenue through which Grunfeld can make an impact.

At 19-26, the Wizards own the sixth-worst record in the NBA, and they have a 37.2 percent chance of landing a top-four selection, according to Tankathon.

If the front office is unwilling to execute a complete teardown of the roster, then it could at least position the team for a top-10 pick in the draft.

What’s Next?

The Wizards return to the hardwood Monday and welcome the Detroit Pistons to the nation’s capital. The Knicks are also off until Monday, when they host the Oklahoma City Thunder. 

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Honduran refugees await papers in Mexico as new caravan arrives

Tapachula, Mexico – Luis Jose Carbajal was 19 years old when he was shot. It was two months after the June 2009 coup d’etat in Honduras, and people all over the country were continuing to take to the streets to protest the military’s ousting and expatriation of elected president Manuel Zelaya.

Carbajal was participating in a demonstration against the coup in northwestern Honduras, along a key highway between San Pedro Sula, the country’s second largest city, and Puerto Cortes, its main port. Police and soldiers showed up and before long, opened fire.

“I heard the gunshots and felt something searing,” Carbajal told Al Jazeera.

Carbajal was shot in the thigh, but the bullet went straight through his leg and did not hit an artery. He does not have any documentation from the hospital, because he never went, fearing security forces would track him down there.

Those fears may well have been well-founded. Al Jazeera interviewed several people in northwestern Honduras shot and wounded by security forces during protests against the 2017 reelection of President Juan Orlando Hernandez amid widespread reports of election fraud. In some cases, people reported that security forces showed up in the hospital to intimidate them and their relatives.

Between December 2017 and January 2018, human rights groups documented six people shot dead during crackdowns on protests in the Lopez Arellano Sector alone, more than any other place in the country.

According to organisers of Lopez Arellano Sector opposition alliance support collective who are now in Mexico, more than a dozen people shot and wounded never went to the hospital, and were instead treated by local nurses supporting the protests.

A member of the local collective, Carbajal participated in the recent protests, but military police began monitoring and intimidating him and other collective members, he said. Carbajal fled the country in October, together with thousands of Honduran migrants and refugees who left the country en masse in a highly visible group initially dubbed a caravan. 

“My plan is to prosper, to move forward and create a better future for my children,” said Carbajal, a 28-year-old father of three.

Carbajal was part of a Central American exodus last year that saw thousands of migrants and refugees flee Honduras and El Salvador in highly visible groups dubbed caravans. An estimated 6,000 migrants and refugees travelling collectively for safety made it to the US border in Tijuana late last year.

Some remain in Tijuana, some returned home, and many have since crossed into the US, both at and between official points entry, to seek asylum in the US. Carbajal was not among them. He is still more than 1,700km away from the US border.

Carbajal stayed behind in Tapachula, in southern Mexico, with more than 3,000 participants in the Central American exodus who presented themselves to immigration authorities upon entry into Mexico, received temporary legal status, and are now in the country’s refugee status consideration process.

While many refugees from last year’s caravans await the months-long process, thousands more are beginning to cross the Guatemala-Mexico border. A new caravan of more than 1,800 Central Americans left Honduras and El Salvador earlier this week and are now beginning to arrive in Tecun Uman, Guatemala, on the border with Mexico.

My plan is to prosper, to move forward and create a better future for my children.

Luis Jose Carbajal, Honduran refugee

Central Americans are fleeing their home countries for a variety of reasons, but for some, including Carbajal, the reason was political persecution and state violence. Many people brought supporting documentation with them, and Carbajal is no exception.

Carbajal’s court documents were in surprisingly good condition after the more than 700km journey and brief stint sleeping outdoors in the Tapachula central park after being released from two weeks in immigration detention.

The court documents detail the decision of a Honduran judge to throw out a case against Carbajal several years ago. In 2014, he was on his way to a local football field when he was stopped by police while taking a shortcut through an urban land occupation. The police asked for his identification card before letting him continue on his way, and Carbajal thought nothing of it, but it later spurred years of legal troubles. 

In 2016, the military police arrived outside his house, asked for his ID, and informed him there was a warrant out for his arrest on the charge of usurpation. Carbajal was taken into custody by military police until his nighttime appearance before a judge.

The judge threw the case out for lack of evidence, but coincidence or not, the arrest warrant was erroneously never quashed. Known to police and military police officers in the area for his active involvement in protest activities, Carbajal was repeatedly arrested in the years that followed.

“Wherever they found me, they would arrest me, even when I was carrying the court documents,” he said.

Now in Mexico, Carbajal still carries the court documents, but he also carries the Mexican immigration and Mexican Commission for Refugee Assistance (COMAR) documents that grant him the right to live and work in Mexico and affirm that he is under consideration for refugee status in the country.

‘My son was decapitated’

Carla* also carries her COMAR documents with her everywhere. She fled Honduras months before the mass exodus. Bright and energetic, she helped explain the ins and outs of the process to other Central Americans waiting in line outside the COMAR office in Tapachula. 

“My son was decapitated,” she said, reaching into her purse to retrieve a newspaper clipping with a photograph of grieving women hugging in front of yellow police tape blocking off the crime scene.

The grisly murder of Keny Anderson Trochez Garcia in San Pedro Sula made the front page of Honduran newspapers last year. Trochez Garcia was killed, decapitated and his heart removed from his body in February 2018. He was 18 years old.

Trochez Garcia worked as a minibus driver’s assistant between San Pedro Sula, the regional social security institute hospital, textile factories, and communities north of the city, shuttling workers and nurses between work and home. The 19-year-old minibus driver, Augusto Nery Diaz, was also murdered and decapitated alongside Trochez Garcia.

On her mobile phone, Carla carries photographs of her 18-year-old son, Keny Anderson Trochez Garcia, who was murdered and decapitated [Sandra Cuffe/Al Jazeera] 

Throughout Honduras, the transportation sector is plagued by extortion by gangs and other criminal networks, but killings over non-payment are particularly frequent along routes between San Pedro Sula, Choloma, and Puerto Cortes. Extortion payments are often a burden shared between owners, drivers and helpers, but that was not the case for Trochez Garcia and Diaz. 

“The owner said he was making the extortion payments. He never paid anything,” said Carla, Trochez Garcia’s mother.

Carla said neighbours warned her not to, but she filed a formal report to Honduran prosecutors when it appeared to her that no real investigation was taking place. She could not just do nothing, she told Al Jazeera. Soon after, she and her whole family began receiving threats.

Carla, her husband, and three of their children fled Honduras months before the high-profile caravan groups. The family has already been granted temporary protection by COMAR, but she was back at the commission offices to request the addition to the case of another daughter who recently made it out of Honduras to join the family in Tapachula.

The protection status is not full asylum, and the family is not entirely sure what their future holds. A United States policy announced in June by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions instructed US border personnel to “generally” deny asylum claims grounded in gang violence or domestic violence, considering them personal matters. But a federal court struck that policy down last month.

On her mobile phone, Carla carries photographs of her 18-year-old son, Keny Anderson Trochez Garcia, who was murdered and decapitated earlier last year [Sandra Cuffe/Al Jazeera] 

Next steps unclear

Elsa Santos is not sure what her family will do either. Some of her relatives had already fled gang violence in Honduras months before the caravans. Santos and her husband left with the first wave of the public exodus in October, fleeing political violence.

Al Jazeera first met Santos on October 15, shortly after the first wave of the Honduran exodus had entered Guatemala. Santos and her husband had walked with the crowd from the border to a kilometer or two before reaching Esquipulas. Guatemalan police officers were blocking the highway to prevent the Hondurans from making it to town.

Most people had not eaten all day, and there was limited water to go around, so individuals prioritised giving it to families with babies and small children. A few people were so exhausted that they laid down in the thick, tall grass along one side of the highway. 

Santos has never wanted or planned to leave Honduras. She loves the country and has been involved for years in different social movement struggles in and around El Progreso, 30km southeast of San Pedro Sula. But everything changed for Santos last year.

“I received death threats,” she told Al Jazeera.

Santos and other residents in the Colonia Aleman neighbourhood were engaged in a conflict with the mayor of the El Progreso over the title to the community’s lands. On September 23, 2017, a gunshot was fired outside Santos’ house. That same day, another woman involved in the land title dispute was killed.

“I was traumatised for quite some time,” said Santos, her voice breaking slightly.

Santos left home the next day. She and her husband hid out in another part of the country. Santos and the Colonia Aleman community council filed reports with authorities, but more than a year later, there has been no progress, she said. At one police station, officers told her others no longer there had taken the report and that the file was lost, she said.

Santos places the blame squarely at the feet of municipal government officials and Honduran President Hernandez. 

“The government is the one violating our rights,” she said.

Now in Tapachula, Santos and her husband are making the best of the situation while they wait for the outcome of the refugee status consideration process.

They have been lucky, she told Al Jazeera this month, sitting on a bench in the city’s central park. Her husband found work in security at a local bar, and Santos, who worked as a seamstress in Honduras, is waiting to hear back this coming week about a job helping a local Tapachula seamstress.

Santos, Carbajal, and the thousands of other Central Americans from the exodus whose refugee status is under consideration in Tapachula were set to find out the outcomes of their cases this month, but Mexican authorities extended the process another 45 business days.

*Al Jazeera has changed the individual’s name for security reasons. She requested that only her deceased son’s real name be included.

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Travis Scott Raps About An ‘Ass Fatter Than A Peach’ On James Blake’s New Song



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Just hours before the arrival of his long-awaited fourth album, Assume Form, James Blake has prepared the masses by sharing one of its buzziest collaborations.

“Mile High” reunites Blake with Travis Scott and features additional production work from trap master Metro Boomin. The result is a perfect marriage of their distinct sounds: an atmospheric banger with Scott’s signature bass hits, Blake’s innate melancholy mood, and Metro’s hypnotic textures. Trav delivers a celebratory hook (“We just be mile high clubbing / I’m on a thousand mile running”), and his blunt rhymes (“ass fatter than a peach”) are balanced by Blake’s gentle crooning (“I found myself an imaginary friend”).

“Mile High” marks Blake’s second collaboration with Scott. The rapper and the elusive singer previously teamed up for “Stop Trying to Be God,” with Blake joining Scott to perform the Astroworld cut at last year’s VMAs. They’re a surprisingly great team, and hopefully fans will get to see them together again soon — Blake recently shared a photo of them on Instagram that looks like a possible music video teaser.

Along with releasing “Mile High” on Thursday (January 17), Blake also shared Assume Form‘s closing track, the ambient “Lullaby For My Insomniac.” Listen below, and look out for the album — which also boasts features from André 3000, Moses Sumney, And Rosalía — when it arrives on Friday.

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Undeterred by tightened borders, Honduran caravan continues to US

Esquipulas, Guatemala – Isabel Flores and her husband, Eric Laynez, see fleeing their home in Honduras to the United States as their only option.

“There is no work in Honduras,” Flores told Al Jazeera as she stood outside the Casa de Migrante shelter in Esquipulas, Guatemala after crossing the border earlier in the week. She’s travelling with her husband, Eric Laynez, their three-year-old son, Daniel and one-year-old daughter, Michelle.

Flores said that even if one finds work in Honduras, the pay isn’t enough to cover rent, food, electricity and other goods, and you run the risk of continually being robbed by gangs, who threaten to kill individuals who go to police.

“One finds it better to endure rather than risk their lives,” she said. 

Flores and her family left their home in Saba, Colon on a bus to the border town of Ocotepeque, Honduras on Tuesday night. They then walked with hundreds of other Hondurans who set off in a new US-bound caravan, eventually crossing into Guatemala on Wednesday.  

By late Wednesday more than 1,500 Hondurans and 170 Salvadorans had crossed into Guatemala, most on their way to the US border.

Many said they are fleeing rampant poverty and crime.

Honduran migrants and refugees rest outside the Esquipulas Casa de Migrante [Jeff Abbott/Al Jazeera]

Flores has worked in small businesses in the past, including selling ice cream and plastic items. She has been robbed by gangs and fears speaking out against the assaults.

The threat is real. At least 26 people in gang violence have been killed since the beginning of 2019.

“They (the government) say Honduras is getting better, but we aren’t seeing it. Things are getting worse,” Flores said. “It is difficult in Honduras.”

Flores and her husband hope things in Honduras improve so that they can buy their own home in the country with the money they hope to earn in the US. 

“One migrates not because they want a life there [in the United States], but because they are looking for a means to build a home in Honduras. I want my own home. I want to go for 5 years to build my home,” she said.

Sitting not far from Flores at the shelter was Maria Salguero. The 18-year-old from Ocotepeque, Honduras joined the caravan in hopes of finding better opportunities in US.

“If one doesn’t struggle, then they will never advance,” she told Al Jazeera as she clutched her backpack to her chest.

Salguero left school in the fifth grade to support her mother and younger siblings.

“There was no one to support my mom, so I had to leave school to support the family,” she said, adding that she hopes to earn enough in the US to send back home to her family.

Tightened borders: ‘They have no respect’

Most in the new caravan plan on joining the thousands of Central Americans already waiting at the US-Mexico border to apply for asylum in the US. The administration of US President Donald Trump has implementing a metering-system at the border, limiting the number of asylum cases that are heard each day. This means for those who just left Honduras and El Salvador, it will likely be months before they step foot into the US. 

This coupled with the tighter immigration measures put in place by the Central American governments has made the journey even tougher for those fleeing.

“They did not want to let us pass,” Salguero said, referring to Honduran authorities who used tear gas on a group of Hondurans attempting to cross the border.

She had to wait hours without food, water or shelter, she said.

The Guatemalan Migration institute issued a statement upholding the CA-4 agreement of free travel within the region for those who carried proper identification. It said that those without proper documents will be sent back. The institute added that the process is put in place to protect travellers from human rights violations and guarantee their protection from human traffickers.

At the official border crossing, migrants and refugees are given slips of papers by Guatemalan immigration authorities upon crossing the border and must present the document when leaving.

A group of Honduran migrants and refugees board a bus to the Guatemalan department of Peten [Jeff Abbott/Al Jazeera] 

Flores said her family were stopped four times by Honduran authorities as they made their way to the border. 

“We feel repressed by our own government, by our own fatherland, we don’t feel secure,” Flores said. “They are not at the side of the poor, or the people. We walked feeling restricted and with fear,” she said.

Her husband, Laynez added, “they have no respect”.

“The treat us as criminals for leaving the country. We have the same value as them, but they treat us poorly,” he said.

Despite the immediate challenges and the obstacles awaiting them at the US-Mexico border, most migrants and refugees Al Jazeera met in the latest caravan seem undeterred and motivated by the possibility of a better life further north.

“We have no future,” Laynez said. “We are looking for a better life to support our family.”

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NBA All-Star Game 2019: LeBron, Giannis, Luka Doncic Lead 3rd Voting Results

Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James (23) during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Memphis Grizzlies Sunday, Dec. 23, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press

The NBA has released the third returns in 2019 All-Star Game fan voting, and LeBron James leads all players in votes, followed by Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo and Dallas rookie Luka Doncic.

2019 NBA All-Star @NBAAllStar

The third returns of #NBAAllStar Voting 2019 presented by @Google!

Vote on https://t.co/R6fBO5LSAS , the NBA App or by searching for your favorite player or team on Google.
Vote now! https://t.co/7WGNCNxnJB https://t.co/FPyWNVEosn

If the current voting holds, the 10 starters for the game would be James, Doncic, Paul George, Stephen Curry and Derrick Rose out of the West and Antetokounmpo, Kawhi Leonard, Joel Embiid, Kyrie Irving and Dwyane Wade out of the East.

Under the new format, however, James and Antetokounmpo—the top vote-getters in their respective conferences—would select their teams during the All-Star draft Feb. 7, per Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium.

Many of the top names in the voting don’t come as a surprise. Players like James, Curry, Leonard and Irving are perennial All-Stars and among the best at their positions. George is having one of his best seasons (26.6 points and 8.1 rebounds per game), while Antetokounmpo and Embiid have emerged as two of the brightest stars in the game and are MVP candidates this season.

A few potential starters are more intriguing, however.

Doncic has earned the love he’s getting from fans, averaging 20.3 points, 6.7 rebounds and 5.1 assists per game while keeping the Mavericks (20-24) on the edge of the postseason mix. He’s the runaway favorite for Rookie of the Year, but it’s rare that rookies are selected for All-Star Games, let alone as starters.

While Doncic is likely going to play in his first All-Star Game this year, Wade will be playing in his last. He’s having a solid season, averaging 13.8 points as a reserve for the Miami Heat, and his inclusion in the starting lineup is a show of respect from fans.

Then there’s Rose, who also doesn’t start for his team, the Minnesota Timberwolves, but appears headed for a starting spot in the All-Star Game unless James Harden or Russell Westbrook makes a late push in the voting. Rose has been one of the best stories in the NBA this season, averaging 18.8 points and 4.8 assists in 29.4 minutes per game after playing in just 25 contests last year.

Among the stars not currently slated to start in the game but deserving of an All-Star selection are the aforementioned Harden and Westbrook along with Kevin Durant, Anthony Davis, Nikola Jokic, Kemba Walker and Ben Simmons.

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Is Kenya containing the threat from al-Shabab?

Al-Shabab has long threatened Kenya’s security with attacks targeting civilians and members of its military.

Dozens were killed on Tuesday when five gunmen attacked a hotel complex in Nairobi. The latest assault raised questions about the country’s ability to ensure people’s safety.

Can these assaults be prevented? And what is the message the armed group is trying to send?

Presenter: Dareen Abughaida

Guests:

Mustafa Yusuf Ali – Horn of Africa security analyst

Stig Jarle Hansen – Author of an upcoming book: Horn, Sahel and Rift: Fault Lines of the African Jihad

Nerima Wako Ojiwa – Political analyst and executive director of Siasa Place, an NGO that works to encourage women and young people to participate in politics.

Source: Al Jazeera News

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Miley Cyrus Brought The House Down With Her ‘Heavenly’ Chris Cornell Tribute Performances



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Wednesday night’s (January 16) Chris Cornell tribute show boasted no shortage of rock royalty — the late grunge icon‘s former bandmates in Soundgarden, Audioslave, and Temple of the Dog were on hand, as were Foo Fighters, Metallica, Ryan Adams, and more. But perhaps the buzziest performance of the night came from Miley Cyrus, who proved herself a chameleonic star by putting her stamp on a pair of beloved Cornell tunes.

Taking the stage at The Forum in Inglewood, California, Cyrus certainly looked the part of a grunge fan, wearing a sweatshirt bearing Cornell’s image, glossy pants, and platform boots. And as soon as she opened her mouth, she sounded the part, too. Cornell — who died in May 2017 at age 52 — had a formidable range that’s practically untouchable, but the 26-year-old pushed her vocals to the max on “Say Hello 2 Heaven,” headbanging alongside Temple of the Dog and drawing cheers from the shocked crowd.

Sharing a clip of her passionate performance on Instagram, the newly married singer wrote, “Had a heavenly experience with you tonight, Chris. We felt you and heard you…. your words and spirit filled the room…. there was an overwhelming feeling of so much love… we miss you deeply … tonight was an honor.”

Elsewhere during the nearly five-hour tribute concert, Cyrus delivered a soft but soulful performance of Cornell’s 2009 blues ballad “Two Drink Minimum.” “It’s hard to say goodbye,” she wrote alongside a clip from that cover.

In addition to her spine-tingling Cornell tributes, the past few weeks have given us Miley covers ranging from pop (“No Tears Left to Cry“) to Christmas classics (“Happy Xmas (War Is Over)“). So just remember: there’s seemingly no genre this girl can’t absolutely crush.

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America’s most stunning jerks are flocking to your national parks

Like an unlocked museum, national parks have been left largely defenseless during the most recent government shutdown, allowing scoundrels and cheats to tramp over unstaffed lands.

While much of the federal government is funded during the longest-ever shutdown, the national parks aren’t. Yet in 2018, the Trump administration made the unusual — and possibly illegal — decision to keep many of the nation’s crown jewels operating with skeleton crews.

Destruction, mounds of litter, and vandalism have ensued. This unsavory form of recreation has been especially stark in Joshua Tree National Park, where people cut through locked gates, created roads on protected wild land, and may have committed a bona fide desert sin: chopping down a Joshua tree.

“If they really are a full-fledged asshole, there’s not too much hope.”

But why would anyone exploit such vulnerable national resources for selfish motives, faux perceptions of power, or bizarre satisfaction? 

“It’s not only that they knew they wouldn’t get caught, but they take delight in the destruction of the place,” says Aaron James, a professor of philosophy at the University of California, Irvine and author of the book Assholes: A Theory.

James does note that it’s unknown who exactly drove into Joshua Tree, chose to deface the park and plop their tents down on long-protected land. But there’s potential, he says, that some of the culprits were younger.

“Maybe they’re just teenagers going through an asshole phase,” said James.”You don’t know if they’re proper assholes.”

What makes an asshole? From James’ studies on the topic, they are rational adults who allow themselves to “enjoy special advantages in social relations out of an entrenched sense of entitlement that immunizes [them] against the complaints of other people.”

This stubborn subset of people may be resistant to changing their ingrained, entitled behavior.

“If they really are a full-fledged asshole, there’s not too much hope,” says James.

“It’s a fundamental split in the philosophy of people,” says Christoph Adami, a professor of microbiology and molecular genetics at Michigan State University who conducted research illustrating that selfish behavior among humans is not evolutionarily sustainable, but rather a long-term detriment. 

Despite that, people act selfishly.  This is because, in the short term, selfishness can be a valuable tactic. It could mean getting to off-road and camp in forbidden places or the visceral anti-regulation joy of “sticking it to the government.” Beyond parks, it could mean reaping big financial gain, at the expense of others

“The selfish strategy will win over the short-term,” said Adami. “Absent certain forms of punishment, this is the rational and correct strategy.” 

Selfish behavior eventually loses out to longer-term cooperation, emphasizes Adami. Yet, punishment is the only thing that will stop a certain subset of people who cheat the system.

“If cheaters aren’t being punished, they ruin it for everybody,” says Adami.

But in shutdown-vulnerable national parks with few rangers, people recognize that they either won’t be punished for acting selfishly, or they won’t be caught. 

And in today’s polarized-America, this behavior is further stoked by political passions. 

“A larger political environment can encourage assholery,” notes James.

Take the anti-government sentiment that’s wafting through the country. “The mistreating, exploiting, and vandalizing of national parks during the government shutdown is of a piece with the anti-government sentiment that helped propel the election of Donald Trump as president,” says Richard Grusin, the director of the Center for 21st Century Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

“It seems like they are attacking nature, but they are attacking an ideology of government,” adds Grusin, the author of Culture, Technology, and the Creation of America’s National Parks.

SEE ALSO: Antarctica’s once sleepy ice sheets have awoken. That’s bad.

National parks, places for all Americans, “grew out of an expression of socialism, or democratic socialism,” explains Grusin. These were grand parks for everyone. “Public use and recreation was more important than private profit and development.”

But the Trump administration has successfully reversed course. They are actively promoting development at the expense of protected lands. And Grusin suspects Trump’s base is feeding off the same anti-government, anti-regulation sentiments. He cites the Bundy ranchers armed takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge visitor center in 2016. 

“You have a kind of radical antigovernment individualism,” says Grusin.

Adami, who suspects that most of the national park vandals are Trump supporters, likens the issue to the public’s perception of global warming: One in three Americans don’t accept government scientists’ repeated warnings about the detrimental societal consequences of a globally disrupted climate.

“They don’t really care,” Adami says, noting that they take a purposefully contrarian attitude.  “This type of ‘I don’t care about others’ attitude is the type being promulgated by this [Trumpian] politics.”

“Leaving the parks open without these essential staff is equivalent to leaving the Smithsonian museums open without any staff to protect the priceless artifacts,” Jon Jarvis, former director of the National Park Service. https://t.co/A3sW0g8FiN

— Grand Canyon News (@GCanyonNews) January 11, 2019

It’s unknown what percentage of the U.S. population fits James’ “asshole” designation, or Adami’s natural born “cheater” classification. Regardless, the largely unwatched national parks have enabled them. 

“This opens the floodgates for a small percentage of people,” says Josh Klapow, a clinical psychologist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s School of Public Health.

This selfish or destructive behavior is a release from their primal instincts, the “Id” or impulsive, biological parts of our personality, as Freud described it, notes Klapow. In the case of national parks, it’s allowed this unpleasant, illegal behavior to emerge even though the perpetrators know it’s wrong.

“A larger political environment can encourage assholery.”

It’s animalistic. 

“It’s our less civilized selves,” says Klapow. 

To guard against uncivil behavior or persons, the future of the parks is heavily dependent upon the the continued watchful eyes of the people who are invested in conservation, like park rangers and staff. Jon Jarvis, the former chief of the Park Service, has emphasized that the parks shouldn’t be open at all during a shutdown — in part because of bad actors.

“The existence of a punishing body is absolutely essential,” says Adami. 

But there hasn’t been enough park staff around to stop them. 

“They feel licensed to do it,” says James. 

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Gregg Popovich: ‘I Don’t Know’ If I’ll Coach Spurs Next Season

San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich signals to his players during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Charlotte Hornets, Monday, Jan. 14, 2019, in San Antonio. Charlotte won 108-93. (AP Photo/Darren Abate)

Darren Abate/Associated Press

San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich did not provide an update on his coaching future when asked about his plans for the 2019-20 season.

“I don’t know the answer,” he said, per Marc Stein of the New York Times.

“He’ll coach as long as he wants to coach,” team president R.C. Buford added.

According to Stein, Popovich and Buford have “periodically discussed the club’s various options after this season.”

Popovich will serve as the head coach of men’s USA Basketball for the next two summers, however.

The 69-year-old has already secured his legacy as one of the greatest NBA head coaches in basketball history. He’s gone 1,223-561 in his 23-year career, winning five titles in six trips to the NBA Finals. Under his leadership, the Spurs have made the postseason 21 straight years and, with a 26-20 record this year, appear on the way to making it 22 years in a row.

Popovich doesn’t have a core in place the likes of Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker, though DeMar DeRozan (21.7 PPG, 6.1 RPG) and LaMarcus Aldridge (20.5 PPG, 8.5 RPG) have played well this season.

However, the loss of Dejounte Murray for the season in October hurt whatever slim title chances the Spurs had. One of the questions Popovich will have to consider is whether he wants to remain with the Spurs if they’re unable to build a roster capable of competing with an elite team like the Golden State Warriors.

The Spurs are unlikely to have cap space this summer, barring some personnel moves, so adding another superstar could be difficult. Of course, Popovich may still love coaching, title contender or not. But it’s hard to imagine the state of the Spurs won’t factor into his decision.

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