LA teachers strike: Educators strike for better conditions, pay

More than 30,000 Los Angeles teachers demanding higher pay walked off the job in the second-largest US school system on Monday, leaving hundreds of thousands of students in limbo, union officials said.

About 640,000 students arriving on Monday for classes at some 900 campuses in the Los Angeles County School District were met by teachers carrying picket signs and rallying in the rain. 

The union wants a 6.5 percent pay rise, more librarians, counselors and nurses on campuses, smaller class sizes and less testing, as well as a moratorium on new charter schools.

Weeks of ultimately failed negotiations led to the decision to the launch the district’s first teachers’ strike in 30 years. 

First day of our historic strike! On the line for our students. So much at stake. #UTLAStrong #WeAreLA #Strike4Ed pic.twitter.com/KkQ18zo0Pa

— United Teachers Los Angeles (@UTLAnow) January 14, 2019

No formal talks were held over the weekend, dashing hopes of an 11th-hour deal between the teachers union and the school district.

Talks broke down on Friday, when union bargaining chair Arlene Inouye said she and her fellow negotiators were “insulted” by the latest contract offer from district officials.

‘Set us up for failure’ 

Videos posted on Twitter by the United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA), showed teachers and others marching with picket signs outside of a local public school chanting.

Students are with us in this fight for their future! #Strike4Ed #UTLAStrong #WeAreLA pic.twitter.com/y8t8fsgzB4

— United Teachers Los Angeles (@UTLAnow) January 14, 2019

“You can’t put students first if you put teachers last,” the UTLA union posted on Twitter late on Sunday.

“When you cut our schools to the bone, you set us up for failure,” UTLA wrote on Twitter on Monday. “When you reinvest in our schools, we thrive.”

The strike has gained nationwide backing, including support from several unions, former teachers and labour rights advocates, the Los Angeles Times reported. 

Teachers and students protest and picket in the pouring rain [Barbara Davidson/Getty Images/AFP] 

A handful of celebrities and the Screen Actors Guild‐American Federation of Television and Radio Artists have also proclaimed their support for the historic strike. 

“We stand with our sisters and brothers from @UTLAnow as they fight for their students and schools,” the Maryland State Education Association wrote on Twitter. 

Classes for elementary, middle and high schools will continue through the strike, local media reported. Hundreds of substitute teachers have been hired and administrators have been reassigned. 

The strike follows a number of similar actions across the country last year in which teachers in West Virginia, Kentucky and Oklahoma, among other states launched strikes, walk outs and/or “sick outs” to call for education reform and better pay for teachers. 

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Dulles closes screening lanes, lines sprawl in Atlanta as shutdown strains air travel


The Washington Dulles International Airport as seen in 2014

At Washington Dulles International Airport, seen here in 2014, TSA, airport and airline officials decided to “consolidate checkpoints” Monday because of the absences related to the government shutdown. | Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Washington Dulles International on Monday became the latest airport to close screening lanes because of absences by unpaid TSA agents, adding to a pileup as the 24-day-old government shutdown strains air travel across the country.

Miami International and Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental airports similarly announced checkpoint closures over the weekend because of a higher-than-usual rate of no-shows by TSA agents. Meanwhile, passengers at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport — the busiest in the world — were stuck in security lines more than an hour long Monday morning after closures of at least six security lanes, The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported.

Story Continued Below

“We are down a few security lanes because of the shutdown,” an Atlanta airport spokeswoman told POLITICO. “The lines are long but there is a continuous flow; they are moving.”

The news came three days after TSA agents missed their first paychecks related to the shutdown. By Monday, the number of unscheduled absences at the agency had doubled to 7.6 percent, compared with 3.2 percent for the same day the previous year.

“We’re very concerned that the current situation of government employees working without pay is unsustainable,” said Christopher Bidwell, senior vice president of security at Airports Council International-North America.

Meanwhile, the shutdown forced TSA to cancel training for 323 front-line employees — baggage screeners included. Basic training classes considered “mission critical” continue, but 18 supervisory and advanced training classes for TSA workers have been nixed, according to a TSA spokesperson.

At Dulles, TSA, airport and airline officials decided to “consolidate checkpoints” Monday morning because of the absences, TSA spokesman Michael Bilello said. He partially attributed the absences to this weekend’s snowstorm but acknowledged that it was “slightly higher than a normal call-out rate.”

TSA has vowed that airport security will not be compromised by the shutdown. It has also tried to soften the financial blow to screeners by pledging to compensate agents for the first day of the shutdown and provide $500 bonuses this week.

Still, most airports expect that TSA staffing issues will worsen and, like Miami and others, have developed contingency plans to manage security lanes, Bidwell said.

The airports council and House Democrats have urged TSA to find another way to pay screeners. For example, it could consider tapping into security fee revenue that airline passengers pay as part of the price of a ticket.

However, TSA has said it doesn’t have access to that money. Congress annually takes more than a billion dollars of TSA fee revenue for general deficit reduction and the remainder is required to be deposited in the Treasury, Bilello told POLITICO.

Another group of essential personnel also working without pay — air traffic controllers — are also victims of the shutdown. Their union, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, has filed suit against the government over the matter. A court hearing on a request for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction was supposed to be held Monday, but it has been rescheduled for Tuesday due to snowy conditions in the region.

Jennifer Scholtes contributed to this report.

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How China is radically reinventing urban architecture to go green (Promotional Feature by UBS)

China is a land of contrasts. The rural parts of the country are known for beautiful, green expanses. China’s cities are breathtaking in a more literal sense. It’s common to see people on the streets wearing face masks to avoid breathing dangerously polluted air. 

Large Chinese cities like Beijing consistently land in the “very unhealthy” range for air quality. This reputation for pollution — and the health consequences associated with it — is causing China to take quick action. On top of cleaning up its smog-filled cities, combating climate change is a key part of China’s current five-year plan

China is expected to be home base for almost half of the world’s new construction in the next ten years.

As the country finds new ways to bolster its robust economy while doubling down on sustainability, significant investment opportunities are emerging in Chinese markets such as construction, architecture, and urban design. In fact, China is expected to be home base for almost half of the world’s new construction in the next ten years. Currently, the country builds up to two billion square meters annually.

Below are a few ways in which China’s commitment to innovative architecture is paving the way for a greener future — and for exciting sustainable investment opportunities.

A commitment to green urban living

Many of the current construction projects in Chinese cities adhere to strict environmental regulations. The Chinese government now requires that 50 percent of new urban buildings be certified sustainable. China’s State Council Green Building Action Plan mandates that public buildings like schools and hospitals meet sustainable building standards of the country’s three-star rating system, the Green Building Evaluation Label. This system takes six categories into consideration including land, energy, water, resource efficiency, indoor environment quality, and operational management. The US’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) system also has a strong presence in China. In 2015, LEED-certified Grade A office buildings in 10 of China’s major cities were 28 percent of the total market.

Even the ways in which Chinese innovators are approaching construction are changing drastically. Take Zhang Yue, the chairman of Broad Group, who has launched dedicated units to take on sustainable building projects. These efforts have led to prefabricated, modular, and sustainable steel skyscrapers that can be constructed in a matter of a couple of weeks.

There’s financial incentive for such projects to continue, as well as for investors to flock to. A report found that office space in China with green certifications enjoys up to 26 percent rental premiums. These buildings also stand a higher chance of thriving during a downturn in the commercial real estate market. Additionally, China’s commitment to sustainable architecture has  led to growth opportunities in industries ranging from waste management to LED lighting to wind- and solar-powered energy. 

Forest Cities and Vertical Forests

Shijiazhuang Forest City conceptual artwork

Shijiazhuang Forest City conceptual artwork

Image: Stefano boeri architetti

China is dedicating significant resources in order to meet ambitious sustainability goals. 

China’s Shenzhen region is one of three “sustainable development zones” that the Chinese government has designated for development by 2030. Shijiazhuang, a northern industrial hub in Shenzhen, is where one ambitious “Forest City” project is being planned. The hope is that the initiative will curb Shijiazhuang’s historically high rate of air pollution. 

Artistic renderings created by architecture firm Stefano Boeri Architetti depict the Forest City as a sustainable utopia in which every building is covered in plants — nearly a million of them. These green citizens are expected to absorb thousands of tons of carbon dioxide and pollutants produced by 100,000 human residents.

The Shijiazhuang Forest City is the most ambitious project of its sort underway in China, but it isn’t the first. In Liuzhou, in China’s mountainous southern region of Guangxi, another “Forest City” is being imagined. In Nanjing, about an hour from Shanghai, two “Vertical Forest” buildings are also being inserted into the city skyline. The two buildings in Nanjing are expected to suck up to 25 tons of carbon dioxide out of the air each year and produce around 60 kg of oxygen each day.

Liuzhou Forest City conceptual artwork

Liuzhou Forest City conceptual artwork

Image: Stefano Boeri Architetti

With efforts like Forest Cities and Vertical Forests underway, China is attempting to prove that sustainability and economic growth can go hand in hand. But the World Economic Forum estimates the country needs an additional $19.4 trillion in order to bring its green economy to life. A combination of private and institutional investment may help give the country a chance to set an example — and for other powerful nations to follow suit.

China’s willingness to innovate in the architecture arena presents countless possibilities for investors. The country’s ambitious plans to support increasing urbanization — coupled with its dedication to going green — will create an abundance of sustainable investment opportunities in groundbreaking architectural design.

“Green building, green cities, [and] energy efficiency will be one of the interesting, thematic ideas investors can look out for,” adds UBS equity analyst Hyde Chen.

What kind of sustainable investor are you? Take this NYT quiz to find out.

The value of investments can go down as well as up. Your capital and income is at risk.

ESG/Sustainable Investing Considerations: Sustainable investing strategies aim to consider and in some instances integrate the analysis of environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into the investment process and portfolio. Strategies across geographies and styles approach ESG analysis and incorporate the findings in a variety of ways. Incorporating ESG factors or Sustainable Investing considerations may inhibit the portfolio manager’s ability to participate in certain investment opportunities that otherwise would be consistent with its investment objective and other principal investment strategies. The returns on a portfolio consisting primarily of ESG or sustainable investments may be lower or higher than a portfolio where such factors are not considered by the portfolio manager. Because sustainability criteria can exclude some investments, investors may not be able to take advantage of the same opportunities or market trends as investors that do not use such criteria.  Companies may not necessarily meet high performance standards on all aspects of ESG or sustainable investing issues; there is also no guarantee that any company will meet  expectations in connection with corporate responsibility, sustainability, and/or impact performance.

In providing wealth management services to clients, UBS Financial Services Inc. offers both investment advisory and brokerage services which are separate and distinct and differ in material ways. For information, including the different laws and contracts that govern, visit ubs.com/workingwithus. 

©UBS 2018. All rights reserved. UBS Financial Services Inc. is a subsidiary of UBS AG. Member FINRA/SIPC.

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This flaming cocktail belongs in ‘Harry Potter’

2019%2f01%2f08%2f0f%2f20192f012f072f5a2fphoto.17e48.8aa97By Harry Hill

Some mixologists double as magical wizards.

Bartender Joe Cobbe recently lit up his feed and our lives with a fiery homemade cocktail named “Misty Eyes.” 

SEE ALSO: Marie Kondo memes imagine her as a bloodthirsty demon spirit

If you dare to attempt this flaming cocktail at home, you’ll need absinthe, lime juice, Tanqueray, coco powder, and gomme syrup on hand. Oh, and a torch. 

Cobbe is a bartender at The Register Club, an upscale cocktail bar in Edinburgh, Scotland. Feast your eyes on this magical concoction and other similarly attractive creations from Cobbe’s account.

These deeply satisfying vids should tide you over until happy hour starts. 

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AP College Basketball Poll 2019: Complete Week 11 Rankings Released

TALLAHASSEE, FL - JANUARY 12:  RJ Barrett #5, Zion Williamson #1 and Jack White #41 of the Duke Blue Devils huddle against the Florida State Seminoles at Donald L. Tucker Center on January 12, 2019 in Tallahassee, Florida.  (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

That silence you hear is a sense of calm before the (likely) storm in college basketball.  

A relatively uneventful week of games resulted in a completely unchanged Top 10 in the Associated Press rankings.

Duke remains the nation’s top-ranked team and is followed by Michigan, Tennessee, Virginia and Gonzaga. Here is a look at how the entire poll played out:

1. Duke

2. Michigan

3. Tennessee

4. Virginia

5. Gonzaga

6. Michigan State

7. Kansas

8. Texas Tech

9. Virginia Tech

10. Nevada

11. Florida State

12. Kentucky

13. North Carolina

14. Auburn

15. Marquette

16. Buffalo

17. NC State

18. Ole Miss

19. Maryland

20. Oklahoma

21. Houston

22. Villanova

23. Iowa

24. Mississippi State

25. Indiana

While no Top 10 team lost, every team from Nos. 11-16 dropped at least one game. The chaos started immediately with No. 11 Auburn, which dropped three spots following an 82-67 loss to Ole Miss. The Tigers shot just 32.8 percent from the floor and sent Ole Miss to the line 37 times in their SEC opener.

“No matter what I tried to do in the last 11 days, there’s just no way in practice you can duplicate the physicality and the pace of the game,” Auburn coach Bruce Pearl told reporters. “It’s a long layoff, and we looked like it, but that’s no excuse. We got outcoached and we got outplayed.”

North Carolina also moved back one spot to No. 13 after an 83-62 blowout loss to Louisville. It was the worst home loss of Roy Williams’ career with the Tar Heels.

“We never really got into the game,” Williams told reporters. “I’d like to give you a brilliant answer as to why, but I can’t give you that brilliant answer.”

Dwayne Sutton, Jordan Nwora and Steven Enoch each scored 17 for the Cardinals, who had lost two of their last three coming into the contest.

No. 13 Florida State actually ascended to No. 11 thanks to a close home loss to Duke. Mississippi State rocketed 10 spots back all the way to No. 24, with South Carolina and Ole Miss each pulling off upsets. The Rebels’ wins over Auburn and Mississippi State allowed them to enter the rankings at No. 18.

Kermit Davis has a team many expected to finish at the bottom of the SEC playing like a true NCAA tournament contender.

Ohio State moved out of the Top 25 thanks to losses at Rutgers and Iowa, giving the Buckeyes three straight defeats overall. Iowa State suffered a similar fate with one-score losses to Baylor and Kansas State.

Iowa State, St. John’s and TCU also moved out of the rankings following rough weeks. No. 18 Ole Miss, No. 19 Maryland, No. 22 Villanova and No. 23 Iowa. 

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In the US South, anti-Confederate protesters face harassment

A pick-up truck crept past as Jeremy and Tracie Parzen waited for fellow protesters to show up for a rally against a new Confederate monument in Orange, Texas, on November 10. “F*** y’all,” the truck’s driver screamed before slamming on the gas pedal and rumbling away.

Having been cursed at by motorists in the past, Jeremy and Tracie did not initially pay the incident much mind.

But the driver circled the truck back around, parked in a petrol station and approached them, hollering as he neared. Sensing trouble, Tracie pulled out her telephone and started filming.

“At that point, we both thought he was going to physically attack us,” Jeremy told Al Jazeera by telephone. “Our adrenaline was pumping pretty hard.”

In the video, the man screamed, “Why don’t y’all get out of here? What gives y’all the right to be f**king protesting America?”

Tracie remained calm. She responded, “This is free speech. We can stand on this corner.”

Although the incident passed without physical violence, the man’s nearly two-minute, profanity-laced tirade came on the heels of a wave of intimidation, harassment and attacks during recent anti-Confederate monument rallies. 

In recent years, harassment has become commonplace during protests against Confederate monuments, with threats levied and brawls breaking out at rallies in Texas, North Carolina, Louisiana, Virginia and elsewhere.

A billboard put up by the Repurpose Memorial campaign in Orange, Texas [Courtesy of RepurposeMemorial.com]

On August 12, 2017, white nationalists from across the country descended on Charlottesville, Virginia, for Unite the Right, a rally staged to oppose the city’s decision to remove a statue of Confederate leader Robert E Lee.

As participants attacked counterprotesters and community members throughout the city, James Alex Fields Jr slammed his car into a crowd, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring dozens.

Earlier this year, in August, a Confederate flag-toting man punched a protester in the face in front of the Silent Sam statue at the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill.

On May 7, 2017, white nationalists arrived at the Robert E Lee statue in New Orleans, Louisiana, wearing body armour, masks, and helmets, and carrying sticks, pepper spray, and guns. Brawls erupted and at least three people were arrested, local media reported. 

Monuments removed, monuments preserved

After white nationalist Dylann Roof shot dead nine African American worshippers in a Charleston church in June 2015, photos of the killer posing with a Confederate flag emerged online.

Roof’s massacre prompted nationwide rallies calling for Confederate symbols to be removed from public spaces.

Pro-Confederate have held their own rallies in support of preserving the memorials; they argue that removing monuments and statues erases history.

Dylann Roof appears by closed-circuit television at his bond hearing in Charleston [File: Reuters]

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), an Alabama-based watchdog, has documented the removal of at least 110 Confederate memorials in 22 states since Roof’s deadly rampage.

But at least 1,728 Confederate memorials – among them 772 monuments – remained intact as of June 2018, the SPLC found. 

As the monuments grew into flashpoints for violence and protest across the South, research suggested that one’s view of Confederate iconography largely depends on race.

Based on 1,000 respondents, a recent Winthrop University Southern Focus survey found that 58 percent of African American view Confederate symbols “unfavourably”, while a majority of white people say they represent “Southern pride”.

‘Holding the city hostage’

The first protests kicked off in Orange, Texas in December 2017. Three months after Unite the Right, the first Confederate flags were raised on the unfinished memorial.

During the more than subsequent eight rallies held by the Repurpose Memorial group, motorists have occasionally cursed at the protesters, and some have exited their vehicles to argue with demonstrators, including the Parzens. 

But the November 10 incident in Orange was the first time the Parzens felt physically threatened. “Y’all are f**king idiots, and you don’t deserve to be in this godd*** country,” the man screamed. “You don’t like it, take your a** on.”

His demeanour growing more aggressive, the man called them “stupid sons of b******” and “dumb*** Democrats” who are destroying “America’s heritage”.

“You don’t like us?” he bellowed. “Get the f*** across the border.”

Funded by the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), the monument remains unfinished. But travellers passing through Orange on the I-10 freeway are greeted by its 13 columns, one for each Confederate state, and 32 flags, one for each Texas-based Civil War unit.

Located on Martin Luther King Jr Drive, the monument brews controversy in the 18,500-person community: the local chamber of commerce asked its owners to consider abandoning the project, and the city passed an ordinance limiting the height of flagpoles not owned by the local government.

But the city cannot simply remove the monument – it sits on private land – and city officials have little recourse to act beyond passing non-binding resolutions.

“The best way to put it is that they’re (SCV) holding the city hostage,” Jeremy Parzen said.

“We’re not the only city in America where something like this is happening, and part of it is about their veiled white supremacy.”

During its building phase, an SCV spokesman defended the monument, telling the Associated Press, “The more education about the South and what they were fighting for, the more compassion people will have for the Confederates and what they did.” 

Despite the harassment, anti-monument protesters in Orange are planning to continue their rallies.

‘Look at your history’

Some 560km away from Orange, in Denton, Texas, 73-year-old Willie Hudspeth has encountered threats and intimidation time and again while protesting the local Confederate monument.

Since 1999, Hudspeth has held protests in front of the monument, a grey stone arch sitting in front of Denton’s historic courthouse.

Willie Hudspeth has protested against a Confederate monument for nearly 20 years [Patrick Strickland/Al Jazeera]

For years, he stood by himself in front of the monument several times a month, holding a placard that read: “God said, ‘Love everybody.’”

Passersby have often shouted at him, sometimes hurled racist slurs at him, and issued vaguely-worded threats.

But the threats escalated when Hudspeth, who is also the president of the local NAACP chapter, found himself leading a resurgent protest movement against the monument after the 2015 Charleston church massacre.

Five weeks after the bloodshed in Charleston, on July 20, 2015, Hudspeth stood under the shade of the monument. He stared back at a black AR-15, dangling from the shoulder of university student Stephen Slade Passariello.

“Why is this just now a big deal?” Passariello stammered. “Why weren’t you out here months ago?”

Hudspeth fired back, “I’ve been out here … Look at your history.”

The incident, recorded by a bystander, prompted outrage on local news outlets and on social media. Facebook users dug up a comment in which Passariello exclaimed his readiness to “get the f***ing lynch ropes out”.

But as Passariello confronted him, Hudspeth remained vigilant. Even as his fellow protesters backed away, he moved closer to his detractor. “I knew if I’m right here [close] on him, he can’t do anything,” he told Al Jazeera.

“And I knew exactly how to take him down: I was going to kick him in the nuts,” he added, punting his leg into the air to mimic the motion.

A Confederate monument in Denton, Texas, has seen protests and controversy [File: Patrick Strickland/Al Jazeera]

The standoff ended without a confrontation, but Hudspeth saw in it cause for celebration. “It really helped our cause,” he said, pointing to increased support in the wake of the incident.

Hudspeth has since kept up his protests, lobbied local officials and continued to call for action on the Confederate monument.

The new county judge, Andy Eads, has promised to continue studying the plumbing beneath the town square in order to decipher whether a pair of fountains on the monument were ever hooked up to running water.

Hudspeth says the fountains were whites-only, while supporters of the monument argue that the fountains were never hooked up to the underground water pipes.

And in nearby Pilot Point, Hudspeth and other volunteers gather each week to clean up a long-abandoned African American cemetery.

Despite the harassment and political hurdles, Hudspeth says momentum is on his side. “We are going to keep posting up right outside that monument and keep talking to people about that monument.”

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Barr pledges to allow Mueller to complete investigation


William Barr

Trump nominated William Barr in December to replace Attorney General Jeff Sessions, with whom the president became frustrated with after he recused himself from overseeing the investigation. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

Attorney General nominee William Barr will pledge this week to allow special counsel Robert Mueller to complete his investigation into suspected collusion between President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia, according to his written testimony submitted to the Senate.

The Mueller investigation is expected to take center stage when Barr appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee for his confirmation hearing Tuesday and Wednesday. In his testimony, Barr emphasized his respect for the investigation and aimed to reassure lawmakers that his allegiance is to the rule of law.

Story Continued Below

“I believe it is vitally important that the Special Counsel be allowed to complete his investigation,” Barr wrote in his testimony. “I have the utmost respect for Bob and his distinguished record of public service.”

In addition, Barr vowed to provide as much transparency as he can “consistent with the law” to the public and to Congress on the results of the Mueller investigation.

Trump routinely criticizes the Mueller probe as a “witch hunt.”

Barr’s promise to allow Mueller to complete his investigation is likely to provide some relief to lawmakers. Last week, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), along with Sens. Chris Coons (D-Del.), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) said they would reintroduce legislation to protect Mueller. The bill clarifies that the special counsel may only be fired by a senior Department of Justice official for good cause and gives the special counsel 10 days to request judicial review of his or her firing.

Senate Democrats are also expected to grill Barr on a memo he wrote last year to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein that described Mueller’s investigation into possible obstruction of justice by Trump as “fatally misconceived.”

In his written testimony, Barr described the controversial memo as “narrow in scope” and emphasized that it “did not address — or in any way question — the Special Counsel’s core investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.” He added that memo did not suggest that a president could never be guilty of obstruction of justice.

In addition to addressing the Mueller investigation, Barr pledged to implement last Congress’ criminal justice reform bill, enforce immigration laws and to prioritize fighting foreign interference in U.S. elections.

Barr, who was attorney general under President George H.W. Bush, is expected to receive broad Republican support. But he’s already come under scrutiny from some Senate Democrats on the committee, who say he should have reached out to their offices to meet prior to the confirmation hearings.

Trump nominated Barr in December to succeed Jeff Sessions as attorney general. The president became frustrated with Sessions when he recused himself from overseeing the special counsel’s investigation.

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15 Anticipated Movies In 2019 That Have Nothing To Do With Thanos



Universal/Warner Bros./Marvel Studios

By Matt Wood

2018 is officially in the rearview mirror, and it was a banner year for movies. With a total domestic box office haul of more than $11 billion, millions of people kept going back to the theater — even if it was just to see Black Panther for the fourth time. And while awards season is keeping our attention on last year’s films, 2019 has a lot to offer other than the long-awaited conclusions of two of cinema’s greatest sagas: Avengers: Endgame and Star Wars: Episode IX. From the anticipated big-screen return of Bill Skarsgård’s terrifying Pennywise to Timothée Chalamet‘s Netflix reign, this year has something for everyone — and for every platform.

So let’s take a look at some of the releases, big and small, you should have on your radar this year. Don’t forget to mark your calendars now.

  1. Honey Boy

    Shia LaBeouf has certainly led an interesting (and meme-able) life, but he’s returning to his roots in Honey Boy, a movie inspired by his own life and complicated relationship with his father. Written by LaBeouf, the film spans a decade and follows a young child actor (Lucas Hedges) attempting to mend his relationship with his ex-rodeo clown, alcohol-abusing father (LaBeouf). That’s a few different levels of meta, and it’s not every day that you get a movie where the subject essentially plays his dad. Directed by Alma Har’el (LoveTrue), Honey Boy will premiere at Sundance Film Festival on January 25.

  2. Captain Marvel

    Better late than never! After 10 years and 20 movies, Marvel Studios’ first female-led film will introduce fans to Brie Larson’s powerful and highly anticipated superhero, Captain Marvel. Set in the ’90s, Captain Marvel follows Carol Danvers (Larson), an AirForce pilot-turned-amnesiac warrior of the alien Kree race who travels to Earth to learn the secrets of her past and stop an intergalactic war from ravaging the planet. Directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the film also stars Jude Law, Annette Bening, and a digitally de-aged Samuel L. Jackson. The movie arrives right before Avengers: Endgame, which will reportedly bring Captain Marvel into the fold to defeat Thanos.

  3. Us

    Ever since the release of his smash-hit psychological horror flick Get Out, fans have been foaming at the mouth to learn more about Jordan Peele’s follow-up, Us. The unsettling film is a spin on the home-invasion genre and follows a family of four who are under attack by their creepy doppelgängers. Starring Black Panther’s Lupita Nyong’o and Winston Duke as #mom and #dad, Us takes the idea that we are our own worst enemy very literally. March 15 can’t get here soon enough.

  4. Rocketman

    If you still have a musical biopic itch that needs scratching after Bohemian Rhapsody, then look no further than Rocketman. Directed by Dexter Fletcher (who coincidentally stepped in to finish directing Bohemian Rhapsody), the movie follows the life of Elton John, from his early days at the Royal Academy of Music to his eventual musical partnership with Bernie Taupin. Taron Egerton steps into the dazzling outfits of the legendary piano man, and the actor already proved that he has the pipes to nail Elton’s iconic discography in 2016’s animated musical-comedy Sing. If nothing else, this movie is definitely a toe-tapper. It arrives March 31.

  5. Little

    What would happen if you were to suddenly be transformed into your teenage self? That’s the general concept behind Little, an idea that was pitched by 13-year-old Black-ish star Marsai Martin. Prolific producer Will Packer (Girls Trip, Think Like a Man, Ride Along) is on board to produce, while Tina Gordon (Peeples) directs. Not content to just come up with Little and star in it, Martin is also attached as its executive producer. Issa Rae from HBO’s Insecure joins the teen multi-hyphenate in the family-friendly comedy as her overworked, underpaid assistant. Little is slated to hit theaters on April 12.

  6. The Sun Is Also a Star

    Young Adult movies don’t perform very well at the box office these days, but following the success of Netflix’s To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before, could The Sun Is Also a Star be the next YA studio hit? Based on the novel by Nicola Yoon, the story follows a young girl who inexplicably falls in love with a boy 12 hours before her family is set to be deported to Jamaica. Yara Shahidi (Black-ish, Grown-ish) and Charles Melton (Riverdale) star as the central couple, while Ry-Russo Young (Nobody Walks) directs. The timely romance is set to be released on May 17.

  7. Toy Story 4

    Toy Story 3 was pretty much the perfect ending, but anytime Pixar returns to its most successful (and best) franchise is worth our attention. It’s had some behind-the-scenes shake-ups — most notably, former Pixar and Disney Animation exec John Lasseter stepping down as director prior to his departure from the studio. (He has an original story credit on the film, and it’s unclear how Lasseter’s history of misconduct at Pixar will affect the film’s press cycle.). Toy Story 4 has been described as a romantic comedy, and it finds Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen), and the gang reuniting with the long-lost Bo Peep — the object of Woody’s affection. Along for the ride is Tony Hale’s Forky, a spork-turned-toy that suffers an understandable existential crisis. Look out for it on June 21.

  8. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

    Quentin Tarantino is back and he’s brought the most handsome cast in Hollywood with him. While originally thought to be about the Charles Manson murders, the film instead uses the murders as a backdrop to tell a story set during that fateful summer of 1969 in Hollywood. Throw a stone at any awards after-party and you’ll probably hit someone acting in this movie. The ensemble is huge but the core cast includes Leonardo DiCaprio as TV star Rick Dalton, Brad Pitt as his stunt double Cliff Booth, and Margot Robbie as Sharon Tate. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is scheduled to arrive in theaters on July 26.

  9. IT: Chapter 2

    Have you almost recovered from your fear of clowns? Well, call your therapist because Pennywise is back to haunt your nightmares in IT: Chapter 2. The sequel to 2017’s horror hit, the film picks up 30 years after the Losers’ Club defeated the evil entity. Now emotionally damaged adults, the Losers return to Derry, Maine to end the evil clown’s child-feeding frenzy once and for all. IT: Chapter 2 has an all-star cast that includes James McAvoy (Bill), Jessica Chastain (Beverly), Bill Hader (Ritchie), Jay Ryan (Ben), Isaiah Mustafa (Mike), James Ranson (Eddie), Andy Bean (Stan), and Bill Skarsgård as Pennywise.

  10. The Kitchen

    Here’s a comic book movie that ditches the cape and cowl for the Irish mob and a 1970s setting. Based on the DC imprint Vertigo comic of the same name, The Kitchen follows three mob wives who must take over the family business in Hell’s Kitchen after their husbands are sent to prison. The very talented trio of Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish, and Elisabeth Moss star as the women who take to the cutthroat mob lifestyle very quickly with Andrea Berloff making her directorial debut. The movie arrives in theaters on September 20.

  11. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood

    People are still drying their tears from the documentary Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, but you can never have too many movies about Mr. Rogers — especially when that movie stars America’s dad, Tom Hanks. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood follows a cynical journalist (Matthew Rhys) who is assigned to do a profile for Esquire on beloved TV icon, Fred Rogers (Hanks). The story is based on a real 1998 profile, and it’s probably going to give you the warm fuzzies before the credits roll. The film is directed by Marielle Heller (The Diary of a Teenage Girl) and will release on October 18.

  12. Little Women

    Based on the classic 1868 novel of the same name by Louisa May Alcott, Little Women is once again gracing screens this Christmas. As her follow-up to the critically beloved Lady Bird, indie powerhouse Greta Gerwig both wrote and directed the film, and she’s assembled quite the adored cast. Playing the March sisters are Emma Watson, Lady Bird‘s Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, and Eliza Scanlon, with heartthrob Timothée Chalamet, Laura Dern, Bob Odenkirk, and Meryl Streep rounding out the cast. This is the eighth time Little Women has been adapted, and Gerwig’s version will focus more on the Marchs’ young adult life — because even those raised in the 1800s did not escape the universal experience of adolescent awkwardness.

  13. The King

    Are you a fan of Timothée Chalamet? What about Shakespearean plays? What if Chalamet was in one of those plays? As a king? Well, do we have the movie for you. It’s called The King, which is based on William Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part 1, Henry IV, Part 2, and Henry V. Chalamet stars as young, disgraced Prince Hal (a.k.a. Henry V), who inherits the crown and must learn what it means to be a king, guided by his one true friend, Falstaff (Joel Edgerton). David Michod (Animal Kingdom) directs, and the cast includes Robert Pattinson, Lily-Rose Depp, and Ben Mendelsohn. The film is poised to hit Netflix sometime this year.

  14. The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind

    Netflix continues to grow its ever-expanding library of original films with The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind. Based on a true story and a novel of the same name, it follows 13-year-old William Kamkwamba, who saves his village in Malawi from famine by learning how to build a windmill. Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor wrote the script and will make his directorial debut with the film. He’ll also star as William’s father, making him a real triple threat on this feature. The movie is expected to arrive in 2019.

  15. The Irishman

    Netflix is going big with The Irishman, the long-gestating passion project from Martin Scorsese that follows the life of alleged mob hitman, Frank Sheeran. This thing has Oscar written all over it. Scorsese reunites with Robert De Niro, who leads a cast that includes Al Pacino and a fresh-out-of-retirement Joe Pesci. That alone is worth the price of admission — or the price of a Netflix subscription, in this case. The Irishman reportedly boasts groundbreaking technology that digitally de-aged De Niro to play the title role throughout the many phases of his life and had a budget of a whopping $200 million. Here’s hoping the streamer’s big bet pays off when the film hits your Netflix queue later this year.

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How to KonMari your way to a happier digital life

I’ve been about that KonMari life since 2016. That’s when I fell under the spell of The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, the 2014 book from Marie Kondo that sparked her new Netflix series, Tidying Up With Marie Kondo.

KonMari is a decluttering and organizing system that promises nothing less than improvements in every aspect of your life. Adherents take all their worldly belongings, put them in a pile, hold up each one, and ask themselves if it sparks joy. If it does not, they thank the item and get rid of it; if it does, they put it away in an orderly fashion.

The process has earned Kondo a cult-like following, a follow-up book called Spark Joy, a manga, an army of Konsultants, partnerships, and now the show. In each episode she walks in and says some variation on, “I’m so excited because I love mess!” It would be hard to believe that statement from anyone else, but Kondo seems sincere as she calmly surveys the chaos. She then kneels in the entryway, greets the house, and gets to teaching her ways.

The KonMari method sounds a little woo-woo, but it worked for me. I bought the book as a Christmas gift for my ever-tidying, ever-cleaning mother. As it turns out, I was not the first person to think of her when I saw it and since she already had a copy, I kept the one I got for her. It sat unread on my shelf in a very un-Kondo-like way for a while. But one day I picked it up, and midway through I was swept up in tidying mania and all of my possessions found themselves on my bed.

After many days of purging, my apartment—which has always been clean and neat—reached a new level of order, as did my life. Following the principles of the book, I have evaluated life choices consumer and personal and decided about them, at least partly, depending on whether or not they spark joy.

Though smartphones don’t take up much space, they do create emotional clutter. Social media fights and memories that fill up the memory on our gadgets can hold us back. Luckily, Kondo has some advice for tech addicts, too. Read on for that and a few thoughts of my own to KonMari your digital life.

1. Visualize

Image: pinterest 

In Tidying Up, Kondo says, “The most important step is to have an image of your ideal lifestyle that you want to lead when you finish tidying. The clearer the image, the better.” Instead of just visualizing how you want your digital life to look, create a real representation of it that you can look at when you’re done to take stock of your achievement. If you’re a visual person, make a mood board on Pinterest; if you’re skilled at drawing, sketch it out in an app like Procreate; or if you’re more of a word person jot it down in a plain-old notepad app.

2. A New App-titude

Apple's top iPhone apps of 2018 are out.

Apple’s top iPhone apps of 2018 are out.

Image: lili sams / mashable

Kondo loves vertical stacking and containers. On desktops and laptops, choose a clean-looking, inspiring wallpaper image. Then create folders by category.

On phones and tablets, folders can create clutter. Small icons become miniscule; you’ll never be able to tell Netflix from Yelp at that size. So keep your apps out in the open but do organize them by screen.

My Home screen has all of the apps I use in the morning, pretty much in order of use: weather, social media, train schedules, coffee cards, and the like. The next screen is dedicated to work-related apps like Slack, Asana, Workplace, and Google Drive. Then there are screens devoted to off-hours entertainment, shopping, and health. The bottom tray are the things I turn to constantly: messaging, mail, and camera.

3. Read It Never

Image: Pocket

Going through my books and getting rid of them was one of the most difficult things for me. Books are the only thing I keep that I don’t truly need. But I followed Kondo’s advice about only keeping those that fall into your personal Hall of Fame (four bookshelves for me).

The corollary here is to go through your computer and phone and get rid of things you’ve been meaning to read sometime for way too long: bookmarks, endless tabs, ebooks, and things you saved to Pocket. As Kondo says, “I’m afraid that from personal experience I can tell you right now, ‘sometime’ never comes.”

4. Unwarranted

Image: Pexels

As paper-free as you try to make your life, most digital goods still come with manuals and warranties. Kondo is pretty ruthless here regarding manuals; she advocates throwing them out (well, recycling them) because they can probably be found online. Warranties should all be stored in one clear plastic folder that’s sorted through regularly with expired documents tossed.

If you have books on technology, programming, or anything else that you’ve mastered or moved past, you can donate them to a prison if they’re less than five years old. This was a suggestion by comics writer G. Willow Wilson on Twitter; one former inmate responded that he’s now a programmer thanks to the books he picked up in prison.

5. The Sound of Silence

Image: Peterásteffen/Epa/REX/Shutterstock

CDs, DVDs, and video games are in the same category as books. Pick each one up, evaluate your feelings toward it, and divest yourself of those that do not enhance your joy. If you feel guilty throwing things out, use an app like decluttr to sell them. But “whatever you do, don’t stop to listen to music or watch a DVD,” Kondo warns.

6. Cut the Cords

Image: Getty Images

You know that somewhere in your closet lurks a coil of cords whose mystery you may never unravel. Is that the charger that came with your camera? The PalmPilot you owned last century? You’ll probably never know so let them go. Recycle them along with any earphones, chargers, printer cartridges for printers you no longer have, and other small, abandoned electrical items.

Store gadgets you’re keeping in boxes. Do the same with cords but first wind them around cord wrap and put them all in a box.

7. Call It Off

Image: Raymond wong/mashable

“Many people tend to hoard old cell phones,” Kondo writes in Spark Joy. If you have no sentimental attachment to the phone and you are not using it, get rid of it. No matter how old your phone is, you can probably get some cash for it; at the very least you should recycle it. If you’re holding on to a phone because it contains photos or messages you want to save, download them and deal with them at the end of your tidying efforts and discard the phone itself.

8. Social Niceties

Image: chandan khanna/AFP/Getty Images

Kondo never addresses social media, but she is very clear on moving beyond the past. So if you are friends with exes or “frenemies” on social media and it is taking a toll, mute or unfollow them.

As for apps that fill you with a sense of dread, evaluate why. Carefully cultivated social media profiles are often blamed for causing depression and anxiety, but before you wipe out Instagram and Facebook altogether, consider who you follow. My personal Instagram is used to follow adorable animals; if you want the formula for sparking joy, that is it.

In these politically divided times, Facebook can be a minefield of fighting family and sparring with childhood friends. If it is too much, visit it less or turn down the volume when you feel overwhelmed. Facebook lets you unfollow people without unfriending them; they don’t show up in your News Feed and you avoid having to explain an un-friending episode. Twitter, meanwhile, is an incredible source of information, but it is also populated by lots of bots. Until the service fixes its abuse problem, mute, block, and use the tools it provides to filter what you see.

9. In a Sentimental Mood

Image: pexels

Kondo gives you mental space for sentimentality but does not allow for a lot of actual space. She advises that you save these for the last stage of tidying because they are the most difficult to deal with. Kondo has three basic rules: don’t store these items outside your home (or phone, computer, etc.); for things you truly cannot part with, keep them with confidence, not shame; and consider how the future you will benefit should you decide to hang onto something.

Sentimental items fall into every category, so this means going through whatever app you use for notes, as well as your photos app, and yes those text messages from past loves. Separate what you decide to keep into a folder or album system. If you’re holding on to something from an ex, keep it only if the thing itself is now such a part of your daily routine that you no longer associate it with that person. Kondo is all about acknowledging the past, being grateful for it, and moving forward.

    This article originally published at PCMag
    here

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    Excited man spots 3 rare lynx right outside, but no one cared

    By Sage Anderson

    Some wild animals are seen so rarely that they’re thought of as mythical creatures at this point. Take the majestic lynx, for example. 

    An Alaskan man was working construction on a house when suddenly one, then two, then three of these mysterious cats decided to grace his presence. But when he called his coworkers over to see, let’s just say no one exactly came running. 

    Sometimes you just have an unbelievable experience that no one is there to witness. But let it be known the man who cried “lynx” was telling the truth.

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