For undocumented migrants, wildfires bring on additional worries

Oxnard, California – Last month’s Woolsey Fire in southern California wasn’t the first time Jacob* and his family witnessed the devastation a blaze can bring. They survived the Thomas Fire last December. And other smaller fires before that. 

So when the smoke began to rise from Ventura County, they knew what kind of trouble was on its way.

The Woolsey Fire, like many of those that have ravaged California, destroyed houses, land and crops. It also destroyed the livelihood for hundreds of undocumented individuals, including Jacob, who work in the fields in and around the area.

Jacob and his wife pick strawberries in Ventura County. 

Although it’s hard physical work, it gives them the possibility to offer their six children a good life.

But the wildfire smoke brought chemicals to the agricultural area, destroying the harvest Jacob and his family depend on for their livelihood.

“Due to the wildfires, there’s less work because many fruits went bad,” Jacob told Al Jazeera.

“This is difficult for us out in the field. The paychecks get a lot smaller which makes us feel cramped up. The bills don’t wait – the rent, the telephone, the doctor.” 

Jacob and his family don’t have much in their savings. They also don’t have a federal fund such as FEMA or disaster unemployment benefits to turn to like other victims of the fires do.

Instead, they must rely on the generosity of others, including a new fund that was specifically created to help undocumented individuals affected by the wildfires.

Most vulnerable are the hardest hit

The fund, called the Undocufund, was born out of the devastation caused by the December 2017 Thomas Fire and has since continued to help those affected by the Woosely and Hill Fires last month.

Nayra Pacheco, Undocufund coordinator at the organisation MICOP (Mixteco/Indigina Community Organizing Project) based in the city of Oxnard, told Al Jazeera that at the time of the Thomas Fire and the following mudslides, they realised that many undocumented people didn’t receive the help others were getting.

“Agencies were putting out calls for relief aid, services for help and support, and a lot of that wasn’t put out in Spanish, let alone in Mixteco, a native language in Mexico spoken by many farm workers,” she said. “For example, advice to boil the water because of health risks was put out only in English.”

Together with other community organisations, MICOP started to register people affected while raising funds. By June 2018 – more than six months after the fire began – the Undocufund had registered around 1,800 undocumented families who needed help.

The fund has been able to provide about $1,500 to families who applied. 

There are, however, still 400 families. on the waiting list for help from the last fires, and more than 100 more, including Jacob’s, have applied for aid due to this year’s blazes.

An undocumented woman wears a bandana she used to cover her nose and mouth to avoid inhaling smoke while working in the fields during the Hill Fire [Philip Cheung for The Washington Post/Getty Images] 

In the office where Pacheco works, stacks of applications lined her desk. Behind her, a poster read, “Rise up as one.” In the back of the room, a woman answered questions in Spanish from an affected family. 

The vast majority of the applications are from those in Ventura County who have found themselves without work.

It’s difficult to determine the exact number of undocumented individuals in this area, but research by PEW research centre found that there were about 50,000 undocumented migrants in the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura region in 2014. The Undocufund estimates that the number of undocumented immigrants living and working in the fire-hit areas Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties is closer to 126,000.

Although the Undocufund already raised almost $1.5m, they don’t have the funds yet to help everyone in dire need.

Others who have applied complain of health concerns. Some workers have been pressured to keep working while smoke filled the fields. 

Organisers also witnessed people working in the fields without any respiratory protection during the Woolsey Fire.

“Those of us who are most vulnerable, are hit the hardest,” Pacheco told Al Jazeera. “We hear stories of people developing health problems like asthma. They will get respiratory problems, which will last for a long time.”

Fear of deportation

Applying for aid creates a lot of anxiety within immigrant communities due to the fear of undocumented individuals being handed over to federal authorities.

Miguel* sat in the Undocufund office with his wife, Maria*, and their four children last month.

“We came to the United States 11 years ago to work in the fields,” Miguel told Al Jazeera. “We saw friends and family doing this and they started to make a living. In Oaxaca, there is not a lot of work,” he added, referring to the Mexican state he fled more than a decade ago. 

Last year, the family received some aid from the Undocufund, but the fires also brought on health conditions that have persisted for months.

Maria, who had dark bags under her eyes, had developed strong headaches.

The Woolsey Fire destroyed more than 49,000 hectares [Eline van Nes/Al Jazeera]

According to Pacheco, some of the families who contacted Undocufund continued working in the fields while they were full of smoke, developing more severe conditions like asthma.

The family said they have nowhere else to turn out of fear of being arrested and forced to leave the country.

“There is always that fear of deportation,” Miguel told Al Jazeera. “We have heard about families who got deported. So now we stay inside a lot. We are always afraid: What will ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) do now? Will they come knocking on doors?”

The new reality

After the family left the office, Pacheco sat down again at an old plastic camping table they use as a desk and started to discuss with one of the volunteers how to work through the stacks of applications. 

Pacheco is undocumented herself. She was brought to the US when she was six years old and is currently protected under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme, which President Donald Trump has moved to end. 

“I think it’s important for undocumented people who can’t speak up that somebody takes a risk,” Pacheco told Al Jazeera.

“We see a lot of problems come together in a climate that is very hostile for immigrants,” Pacheco told Al Jazeera. “I hear stories of people whose husband, for instance, was just deported and now suffer from the fires. These fires don’t happen in a vacuum, but in a community already struggling.”

A burned lemon tree is seen in the backyard of house in Thousand Oaks, California [Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images]

For Pacheco, the wildfires are an intersection of everything that is currently happening in the US: the lack of action towards climate justice, the lack of labour rights or paid sick leave, the crackdown on immigration, racism towards people of different backgrounds.

“Because these huge wildfires are becoming an annual event, we have to realize that this is the new reality,” Pacheco said. “For the long term, we will need to have a conversation with the state what this will mean for the immigrant labour community.”

*Name has been changed to protect the individual’s identity

More white and privileged people live in high wildfire risk areas, so why are Native Americans and people of color more vulnerable to wildfire impacts? pic.twitter.com/ylHl6ngJed

— AJ+ (@ajplus) November 25, 2018

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This Bazzi Super Fan Just Got Three Giant Framed Photos From Her Mom

A 17-year-old Bazzi super fan and her equally obsessed mom are proving a point: Stanning doesn’t have to be kept a secret from your family.

That’s the lesson to be learned after Tammy surprised her daughter, Savannah, with three massive photos of Bazzi, one of the high school student’s all-time favorite artists. Just as much as Savannah shares her fandom online, both mother and daughter express their love of Bazzi in the real world, too.

Just one day after seeing Bazzi for the first time at 106.1 KISS FM’s Jingle Ball in Dallas, Tammy pulled out all the stops for her daughter. Though Tammy’s rather new to the “Beautiful” singer’s fandom, Savannah is a long-term, card-carrying member.

“I started to stan fully this April when he released Cosmic, his album,” Savannah tells MTV News. “I immediately felt a connection to the album and the fact that he literally put his heart and soul into it. The lyrics and meaning behind each song are so powerful and I think that’s what made me fall in love with them.”

And while her mom wasn’t a full-fledged fan just yet, Tammy was fully aware of Bazzi as a result of Savannah’s stanning and attendance at the Cosmic tour earlier this year.

“[My mom] was super excited because of how highly I talk about him and his stage presence,” Savannah explains. “We saw him and, of course, she fell more in love, so the next day she spends time looking him up and watching all his interviews on YouTube. And while she’s doing this, she’s texting me the whole time while I was in school and telling me all the new stuff she found out about him.”

Little did Savannah know, Tammy was plotting the giant photo surprise for her daughter as a birthday present.

“I loved his music even more after hearing him live!” Tammy tells MTV News about Bazzi’s performance. “After seeing all the great photos of Bazzi on Instagram, I thought this would be a great idea. I mean, come on; who wouldn’t love looking at his beautiful face everyday all day?!”

Savannah’s tweet showing her mom with the three life-size Bazzis immediately caught the love and affection of fellow fans, all in agreement that Tammy is the definition of mom goals.

“I was pretty shocked at all the attention the photo got,” Tammy says. “I mean it’s just me being me.”

ohmygod we decided to stan

— 𝖒𝖊𝖌 (@bazzifuI) November 30, 2018

O M G…..I love this. and her….and you.

— Hayley (@HoldOnHayleyy) November 29, 2018

Being supportive of her daughter’s interests isn’t anything new for Tammy. In fact, it’s Savannah and Tammy’s shared fandom of Bazzi and other musicians that keeps their relationship so tight.

“It honestly means the world to me that she supports me and my stan life, for Bazzi and for other artists,” Savannah says about her mom. “She’s my best friend and I always keep her up to date with the new artists nowadays.”

Tammy’s parenting philosophy is different from what most would expect from a stan’s parents. She actively makes an effort to listen to what Savannah’s into and show support for her daughter’s interests.

“I was told most parents don’t get into their kids’ music much,” Tammy explains. “I’m a firm believer in order to stay close and connected, sometimes we have to join them in their likes and dislikes!”

“Parents are so busy nowadays making a living they forget the little things,” Tammy continues. “It’s the little things that mean the most! And my daughter Savannah is my top priority!”

As far as the three framed photos go, Savannah and Tammy already have a plan for where they’re going.

“I’m definitely planning on hanging them up,” Savannah says. “My mom has already said she wants the larger one put in her room, being it’s the first time she’s seen Bazzi and she wants a huge picture of his face hanging in her room. I couldn’t agree more.”

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Drake’s 2018 Streams Are In The Billions, With A ‘B’



Prince Williams/Wireimage

Every December, while we patiently wait for those sweet, automated Spotify year-end playlists to hit our phones, we’re treated to an even larger banquet of number-crunching — namely the granular data that reveals which artists had the best 2018 as far as streaming is concerned. Now we know who ruled, and the answer makes total sense to anyone who’s been following along not just the Hot 100 chart all year, but certainly culture at large.

And the person who ruled, naturally, is Drake.

Spotify revealed Tuesday (December 4) that Drizzy had another gargantuan year on the platform. In addition to becoming its most-streamed artist of all time, he was streamed 8.2 billion times in 2018 alone. It’s fitting, given how three of his singles — “God’s Plan,” “Nice for What,” and “In My Feelings” — hit No. 1 this year; just yesterday, Travis Scott’s “Sicko Mode,” on which Drake features, also hit No. 1. The dude needs to cover Nelly at his next karaoke outing.

“What an amazing way to end off the year,” Drake wrote on Instagram to celebrate the dual achievements.

Following Drake on Spotify’s most-streamed artists lists are Post Malone, XXXTENTACION, J Balvin, and Ed Sheeran. Ariana Grande, whose also had a massive year, overtook Rihanna as the platform’s most-streamed female artist and the most-streamed female artist of 2018, ahead of Dua Lipa, Cardi B, Taylor Swift, and Camila Cabello.

The good news didn’t stop there, though. Drake was also chosen as Apple Music’s artist of the year as well. He also had three songs — his three No. 1s, to be precise — in the top five of that platform’s top 100 global songs chart.

Congrats to Drizzy for all these accomplishments, but also for being the object of desire for people looking to raise the profiles of their weak-as-fuck IGs.

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There’s more than one Hannukah song, y’all

When I was in elementary school, my chorus teacher, riding that multicultural music wave, introduced some Hanukkah songs into our holiday concert line-up that were extremely — how do I say it? — bad.

I can’t blame her. The only Hanukkah song most of the gentile (and even many of the Jewish) community knew back then and know now is “Dreidel, Dreidel, Dreidel.” So my teacher took whatever complimentary Hanukkah sheet music she got in the mail and made do with those somber minor chords.

It didn’t have to be that way. There’s plenty of  … better Hanukkah music out there. You just need to know where to look (this post). 

SEE ALSO: Tater tot latkes: An easy twist on a Hanukkah classic

Read on for some of the best Hanukkah music available — for your Spotify playlist or elementary school concert.

1. Adam Sandler, “The Hanukkah Song”

Sandler first performed this song in 1994 for Saturday Night Live. It centers on the feelings of Jewish kids forced to endure Christmas, and it has been a Hanukkah staple ever since. 

2. Matsiyahu, “Miracle”

You have to give Matsiyahu credit for this combination of labels: He creates dancehall jam-band-style Jewish-American reggae music. I’m extremely here for one of his best creations, “The Hanukkah Song.” It premiered in 2010 and climbed to the top of the charts. 

As Matsiyahu claimed on NPR’s “All Things Considered,” part of the reason his song was so popular was simple scarcity. Jewish-American artists, he said, have been far too busy creating Christmas music to develop any of their own. 

3. Levees, “How do you spell Hanukkah?”

I don’t think I’ve spelled Hanukkah correctly in my 35 years on this earth. If you see the word spelled correctly in this piece, it’s only because of my editor.

4. Saturday Night Live, “Christmastime for the Jews”

This 2005 SNL sketch captures what’s truly great about the holiday: no lines at movie theaters.

5. The Maccabeats, “Candlelight”

I suffered through four years of terrible liberal arts college a capella music. But I’ve been able to look past my trauma for “Candelight,” a Hanukkah song made by a capella group The Maccabeats and inspired by Taio Cruz’s “Dynamite.” Thankfully, this one comes with a beat.

It’s an obscenely, borderline offensively dorky Hanukkah masterpiece.

6. Barenaked Ladies, “Hanukkah, O Hanukkah”

My apologies: Any post involving the Barenaked Ladies should come with a trigger warning. If you’re going to listen to the Ladies, let it be this song, which features atmospheric ancient civilization chants. 

7. Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, “8 Days of Hanukkah”

If you’re interested in *hip* phunky soulful Hanukkah music, this is your choice … your only choice. 

8. Erran Baron Cohen, “Hanukkah O Hanukkah”

This Hanukkah classic sounds like a really good Casio keyboard demo. I’ve got a soft spot for the Hebrew rapping and the sick *flute* work.

Bonus: Erran Baron Cohen is Sacha Baron Cohen’s brother and wrote original music for his show.

9. Rugrats, “Hanukkah O Hannukah”

For those of us who love baby voices (not me) there’s this Rugrats hit, which I guess appeals to someone out there.

10. Six13, “A Hamilton Hanukkah”

If you’re going to do musical parodies, let them be choreographed Hanukkah parodies sung by Hamilton nerds.

11. Erran Baron Cohen, “Ocho Kandalikas”

Pretty much any song from Baron Cohen’s album, “Songs in the Key of Hanukkah,” is great. I’m a particular fan of this one, which falls into my favorite category: sultry Hanukkah music.

12. Tom Lehrer, “Hanukkah in Santa Monica”

This hit definitely falls into the category of “music my father finds funny and no one else.” A nostalgic favorite nonetheless.

13. Woody Guthrie, “Hanukkah Dance”

I don’t typically associate “religious Jewish celebration” with Woody Guthrie. Nothing about this song screams dance, either, unless your version of dancing is “gentle foot-tapping.”

A winner.

14. “The Hanukkah Waltz,” Bela Fleck and the Flecktones

It’s moody, dark, and decidedly un-festive — just the way I like my holiday music. 

15. “Rock of Ages,” Def Leppard

Leppard appears to have taken the title of this song from the traditional prayer sung after the Menorah is lit. There’s really no other Hannukah elements involved; I’m just happy to include it on this list.

16. Six13, “A Bohemian Hanukah”

Hanukkah-o let me go and enjoy this song!

Happy eight nights of Hanukkah karaoke, everyone. 

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Pompeo to Brussels: Trump’s critics ‘just plain wrong’

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo gives a speech in Brussels on 4 December. | Francisco Seco/AFP via Getty Images

US secretary of state attacks bureaucrats and multilateralism ‘as an end to itself.’

Trump is right, Europe is wrong, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared in a speech in Brussels Tuesday.

Pompeo, who was in Europe to attend a meeting for NATO foreign ministers, said U.S. President Donald Trump was putting America’s interests ahead of the international order but insisted that Washington was acting to the benefit of the entire world.

“We won the Cold War. We won the peace,” Pompeo declared, citing the late President George H.W. Bush‘s role in the reunification of Germany. “This is the type of leadership that President Trump is boldly reasserting.” The secretary of state also took repeated jabs at “bureaucrats” — a frontal assault in a city that employs tens of thousands of government functionaries.

Aside from two brief heckles, the audience responded with silence.

It was a remarkably undiplomatic speech by the top American diplomat, and called into question the system of international cooperation just two days after the U.S. signed on to the latest conclusions of the G20 at a summit in Buenos Aires of leaders of the world’s 20 biggest economies.

“Donald Trump is returning the United States to its traditional central leadership in the world” — Mike Pompeo

“Multilateralism has too often become viewed as an end to itself,” Pompeo said at the event sponsored by the Germany Marshall Fund of the United States that cites “strengthening transatlantic cooperation” as its mission. “The more treaties we sign, the safer we supposedly we are. The more bureaucrats we have, the better the job gets done. Was that ever really true? The central question that we face is the question of whether the system as currently configured as it exists today, as the world exists today, does it work? Does it work for all the people of the world?”

His remarks were in striking contrast to a speech given in the same venue by Secretary of State John Kerry In October 2016 before the Obama administration left office, in which he declared, “The need for our unity is as great as ever.”

In his remarks, Pompeo pushed back forcefully on Trump’s critics in Europe. “Even our European friends sometimes say we are not acting in the world’s interest,” he said. “This is just plain wrong. Our mission is to assert our sovereignty before the international order, and we want our friends to help us and to assert their sovereignty as well. We aspire to make the international order to serve our citizens not to control them. American intends to lead now and always.”

Later in the speech, Pompeo called the U.S. national security strategy under Trump “common sense” and insisted that only nation states can guarantee democratic freedoms — an assertion flatly contradicted by recent events in Europe where the EU has had to respond to restrictions on civil rights and the undermining of judicial norms in countries like Hungary and Poland.

Mike Pompeo arriving in Brussels for a meeting with Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel on 4 December | Francisco Seco/AFP via Getty Images

“Every nation must honestly acknowledge its responsibility to its citizens and ask if the current international order serves the good of its people as well as it could and if not, we must ask how we can right it,” he said.

“This is what President Trump is doing. He is returning the United States to its traditional central leadership in the world. He sees the world as it is, not as we wish it to be. He knows that nothing can replace the nation state as the guarantor of democratic freedoms and national interests.”

And he later invoked the U.K.’s decision to leave the EU to question the motivation of the EU institutions in Brussels.

“Brexit if nothing else was a political wake-up call,” Pompeo said. “Is the EU ensuring that the interests of countries and their citizens are placed before those of bureaucrats here in Brussels?”

“Yes,” a man in the audience shouted at him. Pompeo ignored the heckler.

“These are valid questions,” the secretary of state continued.

At the conclusion of his formal remarks, Pompeo took no questions, and left quickly for NATO. At the back of the audience, a man shouted: “Why no questions? Why no questions?”


Read this next: The 28 people shaping, shaking and stirring Europe.

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Night King actor reveals pretty big spoiler about a vital scene in ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 8

Warning: Spoilers for Game of Thrones Season 8 may lie ahead!

You know it’s coming. You might even have seen that major spoiler. The ultimate battle between the living and the dead will be upon us in Season 8 of Game of Thrones. And one major character just let slip a pretty big piece of information about said battle. 

Game of Thrones star Vladimír Furdík, who plays the frightening, blue-eyed creature that is The Night King, revealed that the legendary battle might be on your screen sooner that you’d expect. 

SEE ALSO: ‘Game of Thrones’ drops stunning first Season 8 trailer

Since Game of Thrones has the habit of letting the penultimate episode of the season be the most dramatic (see episodes “The Rains of Castamere,” “Battle of the Bastards,” and “Beyond the Wall” for reference), fans had expected the fifth episode of the six-part finale to feature the battle-to-end-all-battles.

But, according to Furdík, we won’t have to wait quite that long. Speaking at a fan convention in Hungary, the Slovakian actor said that the battle will take place in the middle of the season. 

“In the third episode of the last season, there is a battle that the creators intended to be a historic moment in television,” said Furdík, according to Hungarian site SorozatWiki. Mashable had a native speaker of Hungarian verify the translation of the quote.

Furdík is talking about the battle that famously took 55 days to film. According to Furdík, the 55-day battle has been cut down to about an hour of action-packed television. 

“Almost the full episode will be about the battle, it will take about one hour,” Furdík said. 

This changes everything, honestly. We have no idea what to expect anymore. 

H/T Metro.

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Russian ride-hailing app comes to U.S. with set-your-own-price scheme

A record-breaking cold night in Siberia back in 2012 spurred the creation of a more reliable ride-hailing service that spread through Russia and now that company is making its way to the U.S. First stop: New York City.

inDriver, a new Uber and Lyft ride-hailing app alternative arrives Tuesday, the same day as the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission meets for a final vote on driver earnings and pay rules for app-based drivers.

The new ride-hailing app isn’t just a Uber copycat. Instead of ordering a car and getting a price quote for the ride and then matching with a driver after you agree to the price, the app has passengers set their own fares. On the app you throw in a “bid” for a route. Drivers get the offer and come back with their price. After negotiating the price, on the app there’s a list of different offers with other details like estimated arrival time, driver rating, and car type.

The company says it already has 14 million users and 10 million downloads from Google Play. The app is also available on iOS. It’s the same app for drivers and users. For the first six months in New York, drivers won’t have to pay any commission fees, so they’ll keep the entire fare after taxes, tolls, and other fees. This is a promotion to lure drivers frustrated with handing over portions of every ride to Uber and Lyft. After the no-commission period drivers will be charged 5 to 8 percent. Uber’s rate is about 25 percent.

SEE ALSO: Lyft adds driver features because Uber and Lyft can’t stop one-upping each other

inDriver’s CEO of North America Sasha Ozeran described the car service in a phone call as a “fully transparent model” that lets drivers independently negotiate terms. (The company first started as a social media group called Independent Drivers where riders could request a car for a requested price, hence the name inDriver.)

“We’re truly trying to bring power back to both passengers and drivers,” she said. So far 4,000 New York-approved drivers have signed up for the app. Ozeran says the system works to passengers’ benefit as well with a more affordable option for travelers heading in or out of outer boroughs.

For anyone trying to game the system, there’s a minimum price set for routes, so you can’t throw in a $1 offer and hope a desperate driver will take you for a ridiculously cheap ride. “The driver has to make honest living,” Ozeran said.

Here’s how the app works with “bids” to drivers for the price you’re willing to pay:

Https%3a%2f%2fvdist.aws.mashable.com%2fcms%2f2018%2f12%2f88ef4cd9 9462 3cd0%2fthumb%2f00001

Other companies like inDriver are trying to chip into the success of Uber and Lyft. But since Uber (and to a lesser extent Lyft) dominates the traditional ride service market, startups are leaning into alternative options with unique features or pricing structures.

Via, with a presence in New York, Chicago, and Washington, D.C., is all about shared rides. Before Uber Pool and Lyft Shared (previously known as Lyft Line) rides arrived in 2014 and 2015, Via was already operating in New York and strongly associated with shared car service. It launched there in 2013.

“Everyone expects and knows they are going to share,” Via CEO Daniel Ramot said in a recent phone call.

Ramot said that in New York, 45,000 passengers use the service daily. The company does offer private rides for those moments when you just need the car to yourself, but Ramot said only 5 percent of users are opting for the solo ride. Which makes sense — that’s when an Uber or Lyft ride makes more sense.

It also has designated drop-off spots to streamline drops off and time spent in the car. It recently offered a “price match” program to incentivize riders to try out the car service. 

Share a ride.

Share a ride.

Image: via

Capitalizing on a gap with Uber and Lyft service, Hitch is about intercity travel. That’s longer distances, like, Los Angeles to San Francisco or Austin to Houston — anywhere from 50 to 350 miles. The type of rides that would cost a small fortune for a rider to order on Uber and would need to pay out well to convince a driver to cover the long ride.

At the TechCrunch Disrupt tech conference back in September Hitch co-founder Kush Singh talked about tapping into a driver community that is willing to add some riders in the back seat to reduce travel costs and already has the mindset of “I’m going there anyways.” 

Reminiscent of Lyft’s early origins as Zimride, the nascent service sees its competition more as Megabus or Greyhound bus services. It wants to offer a carpool option that’s more door-to-door that going to a bus stop or station.

Knowing that Hitch specializes in long rides, Singh promises the middle seat won’t ever be filled. 

Focusing more on the driver experience and distinguishing itself from the pay model that Uber and Lyft use comes Bounce. Only available in San Diego, it’s offering a new way to look at the ride-hailing driver experience. As Will Preston wrote on the The Rideshare Guy blog drivers are paid based on how often they drive, how long they’ve been with the company, and how much they promote Bounce. Drivers also get stock options. 

How drivers get paid for rides harkens back to Uber and Lyft’s early structure where an estimated price was given to riders. This leaves more room for traffic, longer rides, and other factors to more accurately reflect the final fare.

More distinguishing features are part of the new app, but details aside, it’s another option for drivers and passengers trying find non-Uber or Lyft rides. Alternatives are out there, you just have to find them. 

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Urban Meyer Will Retire as Ohio State Head Coach; Ryan Day to Replace

Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer holds the trophy after Ohio State defeated Northwestern in the Big Ten championship NCAA college football game, early Sunday, Dec. 2, 2018, in Indianapolis. Ohio State won 45-24. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Michael Conroy/Associated Press

Urban Meyer will retire as head coach of the Ohio State football team following the Buckeyes’ Rose Bowl clash with the Washington Huskies on Jan. 1.

According to Bill Landis of The Athletic, Ohio State offensive coordinator Ryan Day will take over as head coach effective Jan. 2.

Landis added that Ohio State will hold a press conference Tuesday at 2 p.m. ET to formally announce the forthcoming changes.

Per Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports, multiple factors contributed to Meyer’s decision, including his “happiness with the state of the Ohio State program.” 

Meyer has also suffered from health problems. He underwent brain surgery in 2014 to treat a congenital arachnoid cyst that caused him headaches, but the headaches have reportedly returned in recent seasons.

According to Thamel, doctors cautioned Meyer about the long-term health risks if he continued to coach.

Thamel also noted that Meyer views the transition to Day as similar to what occurred at Oklahoma when Bob Stoops handed the program to Lincoln Riley before the 2017 season.

OSU is 12-1, and it beat Northwestern 45-24 to win the Big Ten title. The school won three conference championships during Meyer’s tenure, including each of the past two seasons. The Buckeyes finished just sixth in the College Football Playoff rankings, though, as Oklahoma nabbed the fourth and final CFP spot, while two-loss Georgia was ranked fifth.

Day served as the acting head coach for the first three games of the 2018 season after Meyer was suspended for his handling of domestic violence allegations against former assistant Zach Smith.

The Buckeyes went 3-0 under Day.

This marks the second time the 54-year-old Meyer has retired from coaching, as he previously did so after the 2010 season while with the Florida Gators to focus on family and his health.

Meyer missed just one season before he took the OSU job in 2012.

During his time with the Buckeyes, Meyer went 82-9 and capped the 2014 season by winning the first College Football Playoff National Championship Game.

Overall, Meyer went 186-32 in 17 years as a head coach at Bowling Green, Utah, Florida and Ohio State.

In addition to his national title at Ohio State, Meyer won it all with the Gators in both 2006 and 2008.

Aside from his three-game stint as head coach earlier this season, the 39-year-old Day will become a head coach for the first time, although he has extensive experience as an assistant both collegiately and with the Philadelphia Eagles and San Francisco 49ers in the NFL.

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A new ‘Call Me By Your Name’ book is currently in the works and OMG

For those of you who also wept uncontrollably when you finished reading Call Me By Your Name, there’s a beacon of hope on the horizon. A sequel. Like, an actual book sequel! 

André Aciman, who penned the novel, revealed on Twitter that he loves the idea of a sequel to CMBYN and he’s currently writing one. 

SEE ALSO: How come nobody’s talking about the poop scene that got cut from ‘Call Me By Your Name’?!

Of course, we already knew that a sequel to the movie is in the works, but this is the first mention of a second book. And we couldn’t be more thrilled, to be honest. 

Now, the question remains: What on earth is going to happen next? Could more adventures be in store for Elio and Oliver? Is our heart going to be torn asunder all over again?

I would actually love a sequel to Call Me by Your Name. In fact I am writing one.

— André Aciman (@aaciman) December 4, 2018

Frankly I’m not even sure my emotions can handle any further heartbreak. 

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