Migos’ First Move Of 2019 Is An Unfiltered Collaboration With Mustard



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Never ones to sit for too long, Migos are back and reloaded for 2019. For their first move of the new year, the Atlanta superstars joined forces with Mustard (the super-producer formerly known as DJ Mustard) for a new banger called “Pure Water.”

The bouncy, upbeat track features a Quavo hook and verses from all three Migos, which is refreshing to hear after so many months of solo tracks from the trio. Offset in particular fires off some memorable bars, referencing Talladega Nights by boasting, “I’m Ricky Bobby with your bitch.”

“It sounds like a party,” Mustard said of the collab while premiering it on Beats 1 on Wednesday (January 16). “And I’m not saying like a down-south party or a trap party. It’s like Migos coming to L.A. and having a house party here.”

Speaking more about the track on Beats 1, Mustard explained that it was always intended for Migos. “At first it was just a song me and Quavo came up with, and then I was like, ‘Man, I gotta get the whole gang on here,’” he said. “With me and Quavo, it was just tag-teaming, getting everybody involved, but once it came together, it was like a match made in heaven type thing.”

“Pure Water” is the first new track from Migos since their album Culture II was released last January. Since then, they’ve made some serious solo moves — Offset’s album remains outstanding, while Quavo and Takeoff’s solo debuts dropped late last year.

As for Mustard, he said on Beats 1 that “Pure Water” is just the latest in a string of upcoming big-name features — he said he’s been in the studio with Future, Meek Mill, 21 Savage, and more. “We call them nuclear bombs, ’cause we gonna shake the whole world up. I got records, and I got a lot of them,” he said. You’ve been warned.

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Cannabis may alter the genetic makeup of sperm

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Slack has a new logo and it’s … fine

New Slack who dis.
New Slack who dis.

Image: slack

2016%2f09%2f16%2f8f%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.c1888By Karissa Bell

New year, new Slack.

The popular workplace chat app redesigned its logo, ditching the hashtag symbol and replacing it with, well, whatever this is.

Slack's new logo.

Slack’s new logo.

Image: slack

The new design is rolling out now on all the service’s platforms. The company says it will also be redesigning other elements of its website, marketing materials, and “some places in the product” in the coming months to align with the new design.

While Slack’s previous hashtag-shaped logo was an iconic part of the brand, it “was also extremely easy to get wrong,” according to the company. 

“It was 11 different colors—and if placed on any color other than white, or at the wrong angle (instead of the precisely prescribed 18º rotation), or with the colors tweaked wrong, it looked terrible. It pained us,” Slack explained in a blog post. This resulted in the company using several different variations of its logo — its app icon totally ditched the hashtag symbol altogether, for example. 

Image: slack

The new logo addresses this with an icon that not only looks decent on different-colored backgrounds, but can more easily adapt to different platforms.  It uses the same four colors as the original symbol, but has a more flower-like shape.

It kind of also looks like four ducks, as one Twitter user pointed out.

As with any major redesign, Slack users on Twitter had lots of opinions about the new logo. 

The new slack logo looks/feels very truthful to the experience of using the product. Like wild whirlpool of stress sweat.

— Patrick (@patrickehrlund) January 16, 2019

Even Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield acknowledged the change will likely take some adjustment time.

My prediction for this week:

• 7% of people will be write-my-congressperson level 🤬


• 9% will be 😩

• 14% will be 🙄

• 17% will be 😱

• 35% will be 😤

• 11% will be 🤯

• 5% will be 😄

• 2% will be 😘👌

And a month from now everyone will be ¯_(ツ)_/¯ https://t.co/q3PeVQVFDd

— Stewart Butterfield (@stewart) January 16, 2019

But many others had a much more pressing concern — what does this mean for the plaid, Slack-themed socks the company has given out as swag over the years?

Turns out, there’s hope for new Slack socks yet. Whew. 

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What’s the future of the ICC after Gbagbo’s acquittal?

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has acquitted the former president of Ivory Coast, Laurent Gbagbo.

He was arrested in the capital Abidjan in 2011 and charged with crimes against humanity in connection with the violence that followed disputed presidential elections in 2010.

But after a three-year trial, judges said the prosecution failed to prove Gbagbo’s involvement in the violence and ordered his release.

So, what will this mean for Ivory Coast and the ICC?


Presenter: Folly Bah Thibault

Guests:

Jim Wormington – researcher, Africa Division of Human Rights Watch.

Gilles Yabi – political analyst and founder of the WATHI Think Tank.

Mark Kersten – deputy director of The Wayamo Foundation and author of ‘Justice in Conflict: The Effects of the International Criminal Court’s Interventions on Ending Wars and Building Peace.’

Source: Al Jazeera

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Waters targets Carson, Mulvaney in fighting Trump rollbacks


Maxine Waters

Rep. Maxine Waters said she would be “keeping a watchful eye on all of the financial regulators.” | Zach Gibson/Getty Images

House Financial Services Chairwoman Maxine Waters warned top Trump administration officials Wednesday that she plans to scrutinize their efforts to weaken consumer protections and fair housing safeguards, and vowed to introduce legislation to undo the rollbacks.

In her first major policy speech since taking over the powerful panel, the Los Angeles Democrat called out former CFPB acting Director Mick Mulvaney, who now serves as White House chief of staff, and HUD Secretary Ben Carson.

Story Continued Below

Though Mulvaney is no longer at the CFPB, Waters said she has informed him that “the time for accountability for his actions is about to begin.” Carson, she said, had overseen “unprecedented attacks on fair housing.”

Waters said she would be “keeping a watchful eye on all of the financial regulators.”

“It is a new day in Congress and for the Financial Services Committee,” she said at a Washington event hosted by the Center for American Progress, a Democratic-leaning group.

The speech made clear that Waters — one of President Donald Trump’s fiercest critics in Congress — plans to take full advantage of her watchdog role now that she has the committee’s gavel. The agenda she laid out represented a stark shift from the committee’s focus of the past several years, which under Republican control was largely defined by deregulation and the wish list of the finance industry.

“This was known as the juice committee,” Waters said. “There’s no more juice in this committee.”

Waters previewed renewed attention on housing and homelessness. She said housing finance reform would need to include a comprehensive strategy on access to affordable credit and rental housing.

She said the committee will keep an eye on big banks and their activities, “including by holding many hearings.” The committee will probe credit reporting, which she said needed a comprehensive overhaul. She said the panel will also pay close attention to financial technology firms as well and the risks they may pose to consumers.

Waters elaborated on plans for addressing the lack of minority and women representation in the leadership ranks of corporate America through a new diversity and inclusion subcommittee. She said the subcommittee needed to first compile information about diversity at major companies.

The Financial Services Committee is seeing an infusion of new members, including progressives like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). Waters praised them, saying they showed during their campaigns that they cared about looking out for families and holding big financial institutions accountable.

“They didn’t just start thinking about this coming on to the committee,” she said. “They wanted to come on to the committee, they know many of these issues and they’re prepared to fight for our families.”

As for Republicans, Waters said she planned to work with ranking member Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) on legislation and will reintroduce a bill with him related to insider trading.

Waters, who has called for Trump’s impeachment and been harshly mocked by him as “an extraordinarily low-IQ person,” conceded that “we are not relying on this administration for much of anything.”

But she sees an opening to work with Senate Republicans.

“I believe that the Senate is going to join with us on many of these bills, with a few Republicans adding on,” Waters said. “And then we’re going to send it to whoever is president at the time.”

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New ‘Captain Marvel’ posters are out and one of them is just a cat

Disney released a bunch of new character posters for Captain Marvel. One of them is a cat named Goose. Guess which one is the most popular.

Image: Marvel Studios

Yes, obviously the cat. Goose belongs to Carol Danvers, the human alter-ego of Captain Marvel. Even before this poster surfaced, there was reason to believe that Goose wouldn’t turn out to be what he seemed. Now it’s pretty much confirmed.

In the comics, Danvers’ cat Chewie (who is also an orange tabby) is actually a Flerken. This race of alien beings resembles the house cats of Earth, except their mouths are filled with extendable tentacles. Further, the Flerken oral cavity is in fact a pocket dimension that can contain entire universes.

SEE ALSO: ‘Captain Marvel’ just dropped an electrifying new trailer

Goose may or may not turn out to be a Flerken too, but the fact that he gets a whole character poster to himself suggests he’s got a key role to play in the movie.

Disney released some other posters as well, highlighting the humans (and humans playing aliens) of Captain Marvel. But they’re not nearly as exciting. Brie Larson’s is the best, because… hey, this movie looks kickass and she’s going to rock. 

Jude Law’s, on the other hand, is the worst. Like… is that actually Jude? It doesn’t even look a little bit like him.

Image: Marvel Studios

Image: Marvel Studios

Captain Marvel hits theaters on March 8, 2019.

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Impromptu speed spelling is actually hilarious

2019%2f01%2f16%2f0f%2fscreenshot20190115at11.16.03am.f2d73By Charlotte Roos

If your biggest fear is not knowing how to spell a word, this video will cause you major distress.

Twitter user @kaykayx2, whose name is Kaylie Kindler, posted a compilation of her friends randomly quizzing each other on speed-spelling of simple words. The results are pretty hilarious. 

last year at nationals we decided to randomly yell words at each other and then try to spell them as quickly as possible without thinking about it. These were the results pic.twitter.com/kljBvX4n5S

— Kaylie Kindler (@kaykayx2) January 14, 2019

SEE ALSO: 15 of 2018’s most exceptional memes

The process was simple: Kindler and her teammates on the Indiana University cheerleading team yelled words at each other with no warning. Then, the team members spelled the words as fast as humanly possible.

Bring up traumatizing pop quiz memories? It did for us, too. Honestly, can’t blame these women for panicking.

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Gordon Hayward Is Getting His Groove Back

It looked like Gordon Hayward was finally on the verge of rediscovering his old self. Little signs of progress had popped up during the first two-plus months of the season—the first time he propelled off his left foot for a dunk, the first time he caught a lob pass from a teammate and slammed it through the rim, the first time he gathered, went up strong, got fouled and was able to stabilize his body by landing on his once-dislocated left ankle—but this four-game stretch to kick off 2019 was different.

Hayward welcomed in the new year by lighting up the Minnesota Timberwolves for a season-high 35 points. He registered double-figure scoring marks in his next three games after that. 

Sure, he wasn’t quite the dynamic creator who’d been named an All-Star in 2016-17 and was handed a four-year, $128 million contract by the Boston Celtics. But this was the closest Hayward had come to resembling that player since his injury. He was attacking the paint. He was gliding around screens and fluidly uncorking pull-up jumpers. He was dunking the ball in transition. The Celtics, pegged by most experts before the season as Eastern Conference favorites, were surging. Hayward, in his new role off the bench, was one of the reasons why.

This is how the arc usually goes, right? Athlete suffers gruesome injury, puts in the hours rehabbing and returns the following year as a feel-good story. Except that’s not how life works.

Hayward followed up that four-game streak by taking just seven shots and scoring just six points in a blowout loss to the Miami Heat on national TV. He followed that up with another subpar performance in a loss to the Magic; he only scored eight points and was chastised by teammate Kyrie Irving for his decision to inbound the ball to Jayson Tatum on the Celtics’ final play.

“There have been some low moments,” Hayward told Bleacher Report two days later, before a Celtics practice in Brooklyn.

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - JANUARY 12: Gordon Hayward #20 of the Boston Celtics looks on as the Orlando Magic make free throws in the first quarter at Amway Center on January 12, 2019 in Orlando, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that,

Harry Aaron/Getty Images

Boston was slated to play the Nets that night, and Irving, the team’s ball-dominant star, was slated to miss the game because of an injury. So was Marcus Smart, another Celtics guard. This was a night on which the Celtics needed Hayward; he’d be given the freedom to run the offense and impose his will. Yet, he spent the evening wandering the perimeter, attempting a meager six shots, hitting just one and finishing with three points in an ugly loss, the Celtics’ third straight. Once again, the team was reeling, sliding down the ranks of the Eastern Conference. Once again, Hayward was reeling, too.


If you want to know what the cliche one step forward, two steps back looks like in real life, ask Gordon Hayward about his recovery. The saga started last October when Hayward dislocated his left ankle and fractured his left tibia after landing awkwardly following an attempted alley-oop against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA‘s season opener. He needed surgery to mend his wounds. The recovery caused Hayward to miss the entire season. The plan was to return over the summer. By springtime, Hayward was jumping and shooting and cutting. But he was also feeling pain around his ankle. Doctors determined that removing the plate and screws, which had been inserted into his leg during his initial surgery, gave him his best chance of recovery. So, Hayward’s leg was cut open again. 

“I think there’s definitely doubt that comes after you have a major injury like that, you kind of want it to go right back to the way it was, but that’s not the reality of the situation,” Hayward said. “You know it’s going to be a work in progress. I’m happy that I’m out here on the court so I try to find some joy in that.”

That’s much easier to talk about than to actually go through with. Not many 28-year-olds are equipped to deal with the realization that their primary skill set has been taken away. But with Hayward, the ordeal seemed especially cruel.

“Gordon’s a perfectionist,” his agent Mark Bartelstein said in a phone interview. “He has no patience when it comes to himself.” That tendency to shrewdly self-assess shows up after almost every Celtics game, when Hayward and Bartelstein speak over the phone about Hayward’s play. On good days, the calls are shorter. “He’s not interested in talking much after he plays well,” Bartelstein said. “He’s much more likely to beat himself up after a bad game.” 

Hayward’s patience was waning almost immediately after he began his rehab process. Barred from five-on-five action, he spent his summer working out in various gyms on the West Coast, shooting jumpers and playing lighter games of one-on-one. And even then, he’d grow frustrated over the lingering rust clinging to his twice-surgically repaired left leg.

“He would say that he doesn’t feel right, that he doesn’t have that first step quite yet,” said his Celtics teammate Semi Ojeleye, who trained with Hayward in San Diego. “He’d say that he remembers what he was before the injury and that he’s not that yet.”

ORLANDO, FL - JANUARY 12: Gordon Hayward #20 of the Boston Celtics handles the ball during the game against the Orlando Magic on January 12, 2019 at Amway Center in Orlando, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloadin

Fernando Medina/Getty Images

Hayward’s numbers are down across the board (he’s averaging 10.9 points in 26.4 minutes per game, compared to the 21.9 points and 34.5 minutes he averaged during his last season with the Utah Jazz). The drop-off was expected. Not only is Hayward still working his way back to full strength, but he’s also on a new team in a new system.

“We’re asking him to play a different role than he’s used to as he returns to form,” Celtics head coach Brad Stevens said.

In Utah, everything on offense ran through him. His usage rate of 27.6 percent was one of the highest marks in the league. In Boston, however, Hayward is in a pass-heavy system surrounded by scorers. Sometimes, it’s his job to attack; sometimes, he is expected to space the floor. Early in the year, he was starting; now, he’s coming off the bench.

Not surprisingly, the adjustment has been clunky, both for Hayward and his Celtics teammates who carried the team to the Eastern Conference Finals last season despite Hayward’s absence.

But things like fit and system are secondary concerns when it comes to Hayward’s on-court resurgence. Hayward acknowledges that he’s played timidly this season. He’s driving the ball to the basket just 5.3 times per game and finishing a below-average 57 percent of his looks at the rim. Two seasons ago, he averaged 9.2 drives per game and shot 67 percent at the rim, one of the best marks in the league.

“I think most of that is probably from a lack of confidence in going to the basket and challenging bigs—especially at the beginning of the year,” Hayward said. “I think that’s the last part that’s not all the way back yet.

“Moving horizontally, I’m definitely starting to feel like I felt a couple years ago, but vertically I’m still not as confident as I want to be, and I think some of that is a deterrent when I go to the rim.”

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JANUARY 09: Gordon Hayward #20 of the Boston Celtics dribbles against the Indiana Pacers during the second half of the game at TD Garden on January 09, 2019 in Boston, Massachusetts. The Celtics defeat the Pacers 135-108.  NOTE TO

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Hayward only knows one way to push through. “Just get into the gym, it’s what I’ve always done,” he said. He gets extra shots up before and after practice. He pores over film with both Bartelstein and the Celtics coaches. “He’s burning the candle at both ends,” Bartelstein said. “Figuring out how to get back to an All-Star level.” Bartelstein and Stevens say they have no doubt that at some point over the next year, he’ll return to his previous form. The Celtics likely need him to if they intend to make a Finals run.

Yet Hayward, despite the repeated assurances from those around him, still often finds himself drifting between confidence and self-doubt. 

It’s during those low moments that he tries to focus on all the progress he’s made. There’s an example he keeps lodged in the back of his mind. Earlier this season, “I went up to try blocking a shot and came down on my left a little bit awkwardly, and, you know, I felt it,” he recalled. The feeling left Hayward spooked.

But he moved on, and a few games later, he had another chance to swat an opponent’s shot. This time, he geared up, jumped and landed with little fanfare. “I thought about my leg but only for a second and was able to keep playing,” he said. “The time after that, none of that stuff”—his injuries, his surgeries, his distrust of his body—”even crossed my mind.”

“Those are the moments,” he added, “where I’m like, It’s going to be all good.”

Yaron Weitzman covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow Yaron on Twitter, @YaronWeitzman, and sign up for his newsletter here. 

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Over 1,000 Rohingya flee India for Bangladesh fearing crackdown

At least 1,300 Rohingya have crossed into Bangladesh from India since the start of the year, an official said on Wednesday, as fears of deportation to Myanmar spark an exodus.

New Delhi has faced sharp criticism for turning Rohingya people over to Myanmar in the past months, despite the members of the persecuted minority facing threats to their safety there, with the United Nations and rights groups accusing India of disregarding international law.

India, which is not a signatory to the UN Refugee Convention, arrested 230 Rohingya in 2018 – the highest number in years – as Hindu nationalists called for the displaced Rohingya to be deported en masse.

“For the past year the government of India has been making life difficult for the Rohingya refugees in India”, Ravi Nair, of the South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre (SAHRDC), told Al Jazeera.

Nair said that the Rohingya in India are subjected to “regular visits by local intelligence officials, this includes harassment about their paperwork. A large number of Rohingya, our own data shows over 200, from Jammu to Tripura, Assam and West Bengal states have been arrested and imprisoned”.

The round-ups in India and fear of deportation to Myanmar have driven even more of the stateless Rohingya into Bangladesh, where a million already live in sprawling refugee camps in the country’s southeast.

Increase in new arrivals

Nayana Bose, a spokeswoman for the Inter Sector Coordination Group (ISCG), which includes UN agencies and other foreign humanitarian organisations, said the pace of new arrivals to Bangladesh had increased since January 3.

“Some 1,300 individuals from 300 families have arrived from India to Bangladesh until today,” she told the AFP news agency.

UNHCR spokesman Firas Al-Khateeb said the UN refugee agency was “aware of the situation”.

Those crossing the border in recent weeks have been intercepted by police and sent to Cox’s Bazar, a southern district home to the world’s largest refugee camps.

Some 40,000 Rohingya are believed to have taken shelter in India over the years. Bangladesh police said those who arrived at the borders had been living in India for a long time.

Humanitarian law

Rohingya for decades have faced persecution and pogroms in Myanmar, which refuses to recognise them as citizens and falsely labels them “Bengali” illegal immigrants.

They were concentrated in Rakhine state, the epicentre of a brutal Myanmar army offensive in August 2017 that UN investigators described as genocidal in intent.

At least 720,000 Rohingya fled the bloody crackdown and entered Bangladesh to join some 300,000 already living in camps there.

Amnesty International, among other rights groups, has blasted India for forcibly repatriating the Rohingya to Myanmar when persecution in Rakhine is ongoing.

The Rohingya refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar district is among the largest in the world [Malavika Vyawahare/Al Jazeera]

The Oxford Human Rights Hub has said India and its Supreme Court were in “breach of several international human rights obligations” when it decided to deport the Rohingya asylum seekers in October 2018. “Amidst the rising tide of Hindu nationalism, this decision raises cause for concern.”

Nair of the SAHRDC said India must honour the “right to protection” and “non-refoulement”, the practice of not forcing refugees or asylum seekers to return to a country in which they are liable to be subjected to persecution, both aspects of international humanitarian law. 

He added: “The Bangladesh foreign minister is expected here next week, and we hope he will take this up strongly with India.” 

Zeenat Saberin contributed to this report from New Delhi.

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Tiger Woods Will Play in 2019 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - DECEMBER 06:  Tiger Woods speaks next to the Presidents Cup during a Presidents Cup media opportunity at the Yarra Promenade on December 5, 2018 in Melbourne, Australia. The Presidents Cup 2019 will be held on December 9-15, 2019, when it returns to the prestigious Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Australia.  (Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images)

Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Tiger Woods will open his season at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in Calfornia on Jan. 24-27, according to Ryan Lavner of the Golf Channel.

That wasn’t the only major announcement in the past 24 hours regarding the tournament, as Rory McIlroy will also make his first appearance at the tournament, per Lavner.

According to Lavner, Jason Day, Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose, Xander Schauffele, Jon Rahm and Tony Finau are also set to play at Torrey Pines.

Woods, 43, had a fantastic 2018 after being plagued by injuries in recent years, winning the TOUR Championship to close the season—his first win since the 2013 campaign.

He also tied for sixth at the British Open, finished second at the PGA Championship, appeared in the Ryder Cup for the United States and had seven top-10 finishes in all, easily more than he managed in his four prior seasons.

He comes into this season ranked No. 12 overall.

Woods is no stranger to Torrey Pines. He’s won the Farmers Insurance Open seven times and won the 2008 U.S. Open on the course.

The veteran golfer said in December he plans to cut back on his schedule in 2019, however.

“I played in too many this year, and that was from adding an event because I missed the cut at [the Genesis Open] to qualifying to get into Akron (the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational),” Woods said, per Steve DiMeglio of USA Today. “All those events took a toll.”

Woods may never again be the dominant, sport-changing superstar he was in his early years, but last season he re-emerged as one of the stars of the sport, and it’s a trend he will hope to continue in 2019.

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