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Former lawmaker Mary Murphy, longest-serving woman in Minnesota House, suffers strokeMargot Robbie Still Doesn’t Know Why People Didn’t Like Babylon By 2022’s was a box office bomb, not to mention a critical dud — and still doesn’t quite understand. What did Margot Robbie say about Babylon? Speaking during a recent appearance on the Talking Pictures podcast (via ), the movie was brought up and Robbie mentioned that she really had no idea why people seemed to dislike the movie. “I don’t get it either. I know I am biased because I am very close to the project and I obviously believe in it, but I still can’t figure out why people hated it,” Robbie said. “I wonder if in 20 years people are going to be like, ‘Wait, Babylon didn’t do well at the time?’ Like when you hear that Shawshank Redemption was a failure at the time and you’re like like, ‘How is that possible?’” The film was directed by Damien Chazelle (La La Land), and was his biggest project to date, with a budget of around $80 million. Despite the film’s mixed reaction, Robbie said that she had a great time making it. “Damian is so thorough,” the Barbie star said. “Do you know what I loved so much about working with him? I felt like no one had really put their foot to the floor with the gas, but he wanted that all the time. He wanted more always. Even when we were prepping.” Set in 1926, Babylon told the story of the rise and fall of multiple characters during Hollywood’s transition from the silent film era to sound films. Alongside Robbie, Babylon also starred Brad Pitt, Diego Calva, Jean Smart, Jovan Adepo, and Li Jun Li. P.J. Bryen, Lukas Haas, Olivia Hamilton, Max Minghella, Tobey Maguire, Flea, Samara Weaving, Olivia Wilde, Spike Jonze, Chloe Fineman, and Phoebe Tonkin also appeared in the film, as did many other high-profile actors. (Source: ) Anthony Nash has been writing about games and the gaming industry for nearly a decade. When he’s not writing about games, he’s usually playing them. You can find him on Twitter talking about games or sports at @_anthonynash. Share article
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Overreaction Monday: Buccaneers will catch the Falcons and win the NFC SouthBryce Miller was a fourth round pick by the Mariners in the 2021 MLB draft and never appeared higher than 98th on MLB Pipeline’s Top-100 prospect list. Still, he reached the major leagues after just 160 total innings in the minors and enjoyed immediate success. That success faded quickly, but he’s done an incredible job reinventing himself as a pitcher over his brief career and looks to be on the verge of stardom. Here, I’m going to talk about the adjustments he made on his way to breaking out, why they worked, and what to expect from him next season. I’m writing these break out pieces every week. Check out how Hunter Greene is on the path to becoming an ace from last week and how Tarik Skubal became the best pitcher in baseball two weeks ago. Pitching is Easy? Bryce Miller burst onto the scene in 2023 as a fastball-forward, power pitcher who wasn’t afraid to challenge hitters. Initially, that was a great plan. In his MLB debut, he took a perfect game into the sixth inning. Over his first five starts, he had a sparkling 1.15 ERA – lowest in the league – with 28 strikeouts, three walks, and completed at least six innings in each start. At the same time, Miller was throwing his fastball 70% of the time. That was more often than any other pitcher in baseball. And it worked because he came to the majors with one of the most explosive fastballs in the league. It had above average velocity, significantly above average induced vertical break, was difficult to barrel up, and hitters had no answers despite Miller filling up the zone with it. Everything was perfect! Easy, even. Show up and throw a bunch of fastballs in the strike zone. They’ll never hit it, right? This major league baseball thing is simple. Well, that turned out to not be true. The Yankees lit Miller up for eight runs in his next start and he went on to have a 5.31 ERA over his next 20 outings to end his rookie season. He began to tinker a bit during these struggles by adding a two-seam fastball and sweeper while more changeups, but couldn’t pull himself together. That gave him a new tenacity to attack the offseason with. Thomas Nestico wrote a great thread about how Miller used science to become an ace and this excerpt he used taken from an interview with Brandon Gustafson says it all. Passion, open-mindedness, creativity, desire to be great, whatever you want to call it was at the center of Miller’s breakout. Do the Splits The first step for Miller was finding a better way to attack left-handed batters. Simply put, they torched him during his rookie year. So, he went straight to the lab and was determined to develop a splitter. Here’s a video from his own Twitter account last winter showing his progress with the new pitch. Progression of the splitter continues 🧪 pic.twitter.com/crYPFdVAyK That was on December 22nd and he was already so confident in the pitch that he broadcasted it from his own social channels (shoutout B Money). He even included the pitch’s characteristics that his Trackman captured. By the time the regular season rolled around, his splitter had been featured in countless articles, videos, and even got the Pitching Ninja treatment in spring training . Clearly chomping at the bit, he threw it 20 times in his 2024 debut – 16 of which to lefties – and it forced six whiffs, earned a 40% chase rate, and allowed just one measly single. He also nabbed his first two strikeouts of the season with it as looked downright nasty in the process. Bryce Miller's 3Ks in the 1st. That new Splitter sure looks good (1st 2 Ks) pic.twitter.com/6fAXsfsCOf With the early success, the pitch was still very new and thereby inconsistent. Splitters are often inconsistent by nature, but Miller’s was extreme even by normal splitter standards. Check out the pitch movement chart for Miller’s split compared for Shota Imanaga’s from this past season. David Adler wrote a great piece about this bizarre movement pattern in May and said that Miller basically had three different splitter variations inside the one pitch. Miller told him all he was trying to really do was locate it below the zone and “if it’s moving either direction, or just straight down, that’s fine.” He also said the pitch “kind of has a mind of its own sometimes,” to Adam Jude of the Seattle Times in April. While wonky, the pitch was working. It had a 38.5% whiff rate in April and Miller had a 2.04 ERA at the end of that month. Yet, its effectiveness began to fade as the season wore on. It missed fewer bats in May than it did in April, then fewer bats in June than it did in May. Between those two months, Miller’s ERA spiked to 4.94 and he once again needed to find a new wrinkle to break out of his slump. ‘Death’ to Batters Some pitchers just have a knack for picking up new pitches. Yu Darvish and Zack Greinke seemed to pick up new ones or add variations to their existing ones whenever they felt like it. Miller’s teammates George Kirby and Logan Gilbert have picked up a few each in their short time in the majors, too. Miller is no different. He adapted with his two-seamer as a rookie, his splitter soon after, and then a curveball that would push him towards ace status. The Mariners acquired reliever Mike Baumann from the Orioles on May 22nd. He was designated for assignment on July 19th. In those 50 days, Miller was able to learn his patented ‘spike curve’. “It was like a ten second conversation,” Baumann told Lookout Landing , “and all of a sudden he was throwing it in games.” Uncanny. He debuted the new knuckle curve on June 29th and that started a string of 15 starts to end the season where he had a 1.94 ERA. Interestingly, Miller experimented with a curveball the year before, but it was a more traditional, looping curve and he scrapped it after throwing just 20 in games. Check out the different movement profiles between the old and new curveballs. The new pitch is coming in much harder and moves more straight up and down. That classifies it as a ‘death ball’ shape. Jeff Passan popularized the Death Ball trope last postseason when Jordan Montgomery rode it to World Series glory. All the death ball classification really means is that the pitch is dropping due to its gyro spin rather than falling over itself with top-spin, like most other curveballs. When you hear gyro spin, think about the way a football leaves your hand when you throw a spiral. If I can nerd out for a moment... Death balls are more so a variation of gyro sliders than actual curveballs because they share the same spin characteristics as the gyro slider, just with more drop. Also, the death ball especially kills side-to-side movement and can be thrown much harder, just like those sliders. Miller already threw a gyro slider which is why the death ball likely came easy to him. Lance Brozdowski has a great YouTube Video explaining death balls more in depth if you want to learn more. Don’t worry too much about that death ball moniker, though. It will not be the new sweeper. Just a more specific pitch classification that’s meant for players, coaches, and fellow nerds. Anyway, here’s an overlay from Thomas’ thread showing how well the death ball plays off his fastball. When working on his knuckle curveball, Bryce Miller wanted a pitch to specifically play off his fastball. “I’m hoping it looks like a fastball, and then just drops” ( @TheBGustafson ) Let’s see how this interaction worked out against NL MVP Finalist, Francisco Lindor 14/ pic.twitter.com/l7thnHiHiX Pitch shape jargon aside: this is really all that matters: the pitch looks like his fastball and then the bottom falls out. It’s exactly what Miller needed to tie his repertoire together. Results While his season took many twists and turns, it was still very good on the whole. Miller wound up with a 2.94 ERA across 180 1/3 innings with 171 strikeouts for the season. That made him the seventh most valuable starting pitcher for fantasy – better than Seth Lugo and Corbin Burnes – according to FanGraphs’ player rater . If you segment from when he first used his knuckle curve (or death ball hehe), Miller’s 1.94 ERA trailed only Blake Snell, Paul Skenes, and Chris Sale while his 0.91 WHIP trailed only Snell and teammate Logan Gilbert. He was also in the top-20 in SIERA and K-BB%. That is superstar level, SP1 quality with a clear and obvious material change that spurned his success. What’s Next? I’m incredibly bullish on Miller mostly because of how dominant he was once he had both the curveball and splitter at his disposal. Sometimes we can muddy the water looking at splits in our analysis, but Miller had true, material changes that turned him into a stud. Yet, he’s currently the SP13 – between Imanaga and Aaron Nola – in early drafts over at the NFBC. That’s surprising since he beat that price last season, got markedly better, and remains in one of the best situations for a pitcher in baseball with the friendly confines of T-Mobile Park in Seattle. Perhaps his price is relatively low because he’s outshined by teammates Gilbert ad Kirby who are each being drafted inside the top-40 picks overall. Or maybe there’s fear Miller will take another half step back as he’s done each of the first two times he vaulted himself forward. I wouldn’t let either of those dampen the shine of what Miller can do. We have a starter in one of the best pitchers’ parks in baseball with a rock-solid fastball, multiple effective secondaries, and a knack for picking up new pitches whenever the moment strikes. He is a star.New Valley Waters councillor ready to learn 'as I grow'
Lok Sabha Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi and Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi on Tuesday met victims of Sambhal violence at the residence of party leader Sonia Gandhi. "Today Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi and Congress General Secretary and MP Priyanka Gandhi met the victims of Sambhal. The incident in Sambhal is the ill-effects of BJP's hate politics and it is fatal for a peaceful society," Congress said in a post on X. "Together we have to defeat this violent and hateful mentality with love and brotherhood. We stand with all the victims and will fight to get them justice," the post added. Congress MP Imran Masood said Rahul Gandhi heard the victims of the Sambhal incident. "Rahul ji heard and said that he is always with them if they face any issues," he said. Congress leader Pradeep Narwal said that both the Congress leaders stand with the victims. "Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi met the bereaved family today. They stand with the family; the entire Congress party stands with them. What happened in Sambhal is absolutely wrong. People say that deaths have occurred, but it is not death but murders by the government...Around 1.5 hour-long interaction was held with the family. Eleven members of all families were present there, they shared their pain. We had tried visiting Sambhal but we were stopped. Today, the family came here. Rahulji and Priyankaji will stand with the victims even in the days ahead and extend them all possible help," Narwal said. On December 4, Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi and other party leaders, were stopped by police at the Ghazipur border while attempting to visit violence-hit Sambhal. The violence in Sambhal erupted on November 24 during an Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) examination of a Mughal-era mosque, resulting in four fatalities and multiple injuries among police personnel and locals.This is a customer submitted press release. Submit your press release. Jared Isaacman’s nomination as NASA Administrator sparks excitement and questions. A billionaire entrepreneur and private astronaut, he brings unmatched expertise in spaceflight and business. Yet, his ties to SpaceX and challenges like the SLS program and lunar ambitions loom large. Can he revolutionize NASA and lead humanity’s next leap into space? Nominating Jared Isaacman for NASA Administrator is a breathtaking pick for the position and is stirring lots of excitement and some closeted amount of trepidation within and outside the agency and on Capitol Hill. He has a unique combination of management skills, government procurement experience, spaceflight program management, and in-flight experience that I dare say few could match in the history of the agency and the Administrator’s office. Jared Isaacman as a Keynote speaker at SpaceCom 2023 At the ripe young age of 41 with an estimated net worth of $1.9 billion, Isaacman is the founder of Draken International, founder and CEO of Shift4 Payments and instigator and commander of the Inspiration4 and Polaris Dawn missions, two high-profile private spaceflights. Draken, with a fleet of around 150 warplanes, provides adversarial training services to the U.S. and European militaries, working with the former since 2015. It’s safe to say Jared knows government procurement. Shift4 Payments is a publicly traded company – started by him at the age of sixteen – that processes billions of point of sale (POS) transactions annually for hundreds of thousands of businesses around the world. The company expects to crank through $166 billion in transactions through FY 2024, delivering an adjusted EBITDA of $688 million, both at growth rates of 50% year over year. Shift4 has grown through a combination of acquisition, application of the latest technologies, and optimization of its business practices. Fair to say Jared knows how to build, manage, and grow a multi-billion-dollar private enterprise, skills that will come in handy in the years to come. If he can apply those same skills at NASA, including bringing in and developing upper and mid-level managers, the agency is sure to benefit. When it comes to spaceflight, Jared has literally put his money and his body into the pursuit, in the process clocking more orbital flight time than current NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. Isaacman logged nearly three days in LEO on Inspiration4, and added nearly five more days on Polaris Dawn, compared to Nelson’s six days on STS-61-C. Polaris Dawn was the first of three planned private missions to push and test the bounds of commercial space technology and operations, conducting the highest Dragon flight to date and the highest altitude flight of any human mission since the Apollo program, the first commercial spacewalk that tested SpaceX EVA suits in orbit, and conducting Starlink laser communications with a Dragon capsule. The final flight of the Polaris program was to be a crewed mission onboard Starship. So, Jared intimately knows crewed space flight and SpaceX flight operations, including the risks and capabilities of the current generation of operational vehicles. If you are not suitably impressed enough by Mr. Isaacman’s resume by this point, then pointing out his ongoing charitable partnerships with St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and other organizations is simply a waste of time. By all accounts, he seems to be a nice guy when he’s not being a world-class overachiever. Mr. Isaacman faces three perils as he moves onto Capitol Hill hearings and hopefully beyond to the Administrator position. The first one is dealing with Congress and its established interest groups, many of whom support the idea of a leaner, more efficient NASA, so long as it doesn’t affect the flow of funding to existing projects in their home states. Tough questions will be asked about Mr. Isaacman’s positions on SLS, Orion, returning to the Moon, and ultimately heading out to Mars. The second peril will be his relationship with SpaceX and Elon Musk. Mr. Isaacman’s role in managing and executing SLS will no doubt be scrutinized. Questions will be asked if he can be a neutral broker when evaluating established NASA programs without showing favoritism to a vendor he’s intimately worked with for years. As co-chair of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Mr. Musk will more than likely turn his eye towards the long-delayed and very expensive SLS program but eliminating it would also presumably put more money into SpaceX’s pocket as a result. How SLS’s future plays out is sure to be challenging for all involved. Finally, Mr. Isaacman will have to face an established culture at NASA that, to be blunt, has long resisted rapid change to the status quo. Alan Stern and Lori Garver both fought to change the way NASA operated, but without the advantage of being at the top of the agency and having steadfast White House support. Stern ultimately lost his battle to preserve science over politics while Garver battled hard to establish and fund the Commercial Crew that paved the way for continued multi-vendor/multi-source competition and the success of SpaceX Dragon to provide sovereign and reliable access to the International Space Station. Listen carefully in the weeks to come for Isaacman’s positions on three topics: SLS, Hubble servicing, and China. As noted earlier, Isaacman will face tough questions on the future of SLS on Capitol Hill. How he presents his answers is as important as what the answers are. In the private sector, Isaacman wanted to conduct a crewed servicing of the Hubble Space Telescope but was politely dissuaded by NASA managers. Now he is the head “decider,” with apologies to George W. Bush, does he re-open the idea to a high-risk mission? One of the driving forces for returning to the Moon and establishing a permanent presence there has been China’s plans to land there and do the same. What tone will Isaacman set in returning to the Moon, given the Great Powers competition framing and the incoming administration’s views on China? Will he install a sense of urgency and be able to secure additional resources for an increased tempo of cis-lunar operations and a permanent base on the Moon? Time will tell. In an ideal world, Isaacman will be able to use one thread to connect the needles of improved government efficiency as promised by the incoming Administration, bringing Capitol Hill onboard as a participant to reshape the status quo, and getting buy-in from the NASA workforce. If he can manage to do so, he has the potential to pave the way for a sustainable return to the Moon and build a realistic roadmap to landing on Mars within a decade. By Doug Mohney Read more content at spacecomexpo.com
Arsenal, Man City and Bayern advance to Women's Champions League quarterfinalsChristmas stories with brands: a barrative taking over social media. We see this trend in the case of a woman who shared her experience of taking the “most Christmassy Uber,” where the driver surprised her with a letter—although many called it “creepy.” According to data from Statista, the mobility app sector reached a historic high in 2023 with $133 billion in revenue. Forecasts indicate that this figure will grow even further, approaching $216 billion by 2028. Uber holds a 25 percent market share, making it the global leader in ride-hailing and taxi services. Lyft, the California-based company, comes in second, albeit far behind, with an 8 percent share. Uber operates in over 70 countries, whereas Lyft is limited to the United States and Canada. A woman shared one of the strangest experiences she had while taking an Uber. She initially thought her Christmas-themed driver was adorable, but things took a turn when he handed her a “creepy” note. The story began after Nama Winston, a mother, went out for dinner on a Friday night and called an Uber to get home safely. However, she couldn’t have predicted what was about to happen. “The Uber that arrived looked like Christmas had exploded all over it. It was incredibly festive,” she said. “I asked the driver if he had kids, and he told me he simply loves Christmas. Being polite and curious, I asked if he was celebrating Christmas with his family this year. He mentioned that his family was in Brazil, so he and his friends would spend Christmas together.” Aside from the decorations—which included colorful lights, Santa hats, and garlands—everything seemed normal. When the ride ended, Nama said she was about to get out of the car when the driver handed her one last surprise. “While driving, I noticed him fiddling with something in the driver’s seat,” she said. “Watching closely, I felt relieved when we arrived at my destination. ‘Merry Christmas,’ he said.” “I noticed it was sealed with a small Christmas sticker. It was also addressed directly to me. ‘How creepy!’ I thought.” Though a little weirded out, Nama said she thanked the driver for the sweet gesture and wished him happy holidays before exiting the car. She rushed upstairs to show her teenage son so they could open the envelope together. Inside, there was a card, a Christmas chocolate, and a candy cane. The card, addressed to Nama, included a simple message: “Thank you for being a valued passenger. I’m glad I was able to get you safely to your destination. “Your trust and kindness make my job a pleasure! Wishing you happiness, health, and love always!” Although Nama’s name was handwritten, the message appeared to be pre-stamped. When she showed it to her son, opinions were divided. “At first, I thought it was a little promotion for him as a driver, but in reality, his message was so sincere that it seemed genuinely heartfelt,” she said. “My son wasn’t as impressed and called it ‘creepy.’ “Yes, I found it a bit too familiar and felt odd about it. But it also made me reflect on how cynical I’ve become, thanks to social media, where acts of kindness are often questioned.” Her friends had mixed reactions too: one agreed the gesture was “creepy” and warned against eating the treats, while another joked, “This could be your next chance at love.” This isn’t the first time an Uber ride story has gone viral. In another instance, a Mexican passenger shared how the driver played Mexican music during an international trip, turning a routine ride into a memorable experience. Cancela en cualquier momento Acceso exclusivo a rankings y radiografías. Análisis profundos y casos de estudio de éxito. Historial de la revista impresa en formato digital. ¡Disfruta de lo mejor del marketing sin costo alguno por unmes!In the immediate aftermath of his acquittal on criminal charges Monday, the Marine veteran Daniel Penny and his legal team went to a bar in lower Manhattan, a bar employee told CNN by phone. There, Penny held a drink in one hand while giving a thumbs-up with the other in a posed picture with his attorneys Thomas Kenniff and Steven Raiser, according to a photo from Kenniff . The post-verdict celebration underscores a basic fact about Penny’s future: The 26-year-old who had been accused of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide in the subway death of Jordan Neely is now a free man . So what’s next for Daniel Penny? His exact plans remain unclear. His attorneys have not responded to a CNN request for comment on his future. While the criminal case against him is over, Penny still faces a civil lawsuit from Neely’s father alleging he caused Neely’s death. As for Penny’s life and career, he previously took college classes in engineering and architecture. Further, the trial and debate over his actions on the subway have made him a recognizable public figure and a political talking point – for better or worse. “Certainly you’ll find people in society who look down upon what he did and his actions, but equally I think you’ll see people who are really favorably inclined to embrace him because of his actions,” CNN legal analyst Joey Jackson said. Legally, the criminal case against him is over. On Monday, a jury found Penny not guilty of criminally negligent homicide. Penny also previously faced a more serious second-degree manslaughter charge, but Judge Maxwell Wiley dismissed it at the request of prosecutors after jurors twice told the court they could not come to a verdict on the count. Penny could have faced up to 15 years in prison if convicted of manslaughter. “For over 18 months our client has lived under the weight of a criminal indictment, all the while guilty of nothing more than trying to protect his fellow New Yorkers from a psychotic madman with a history of violence,” Kenniff said in a statement Monday. “Today the Manhattan Jury has spoken, and the misguided prosecution of Daniel Penny will go down as a sad chapter in the history of New York criminal justice.” Penny’s history as a student and Marine The case against Penny stemmed from the death of Neely, a 30-year-old street artist who struggled with homelessness, mental illness and drugs , on a New York City subway car on May 1, 2023. Neely entered the subway car and began acting erratically, throwing down his jacket and yelling that he was hungry and thirsty and didn’t care whether he died, witnesses said. Penny, a passenger on his way from a college class to the gym, grabbed Neely from behind in a chokehold, forced him to the train floor and restrained him there for several minutes. When Penny let go, Neely was nonresponsive. He was later declared dead. Prosecutors argued at his Manhattan trial Penny acted recklessly and negligently by restraining Neely in a chokehold for so long, even after Neely stopped moving. His defense, meanwhile, said he was acting to protect others from a threat and challenged a medical examiner’s finding that Neely died from the chokehold. After restraining Neely that day, Penny remained on scene when police arrived and later explained his actions to several NYPD officers. In one videotaped interview at the police precinct, he made small talk with a detective about his Marine service and career plans. Penny served four years in the Marines as a sergeant, from 2017 to 2021, with his last duty assignment at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, according to military records. “I’m in school. I’m using that GI Bill,” Penny said, referring to the federal program that offers benefits to veterans for higher education. He said he was studying engineering and architecture at New York City College of Technology. “But we’ll see,” Penny added. “I miss the Marine Corps. I miss the camaraderie.” Penny’s legal and political future Penny still faces a civil lawsuit related to Neely’s death. Neely’s father, Andre Zachery, filed a lawsuit in New York Supreme Court last week accusing Penny of assault, battery and causing Neely’s death. Zachery, who is listed as the administrator of Neely’s estate, accused Penny of having caused the death due to “negligence, carelessness and recklessness.” The suit does not specify the amount of money the family is seeking. Kenniff, Penny’s defense attorney, did not respond to a request for comment on the suit. Finally, Penny’s fame and notoriety could lead to both challenges and opportunities in the public sphere. Penny’s controversial actions in restraining Neely have made him a target of protests outside court throughout the trial. The not-guilty verdict further sparked emotions Monday: Neely’s father was escorted out of the courtroom after the verdict was read following an audible outburst with expletives, and Hawk Newsome, a co-founder of Black Lives Matter of Greater New York, yelled “Small world, buddy,” at Penny while being led out. On the other hand, right-wing political figures have praised his actions and elevated him as a hero. Trump previously commented on the case, telling Fox News, “It’s an awfully tough case, I think.” Vice President-elect JD Vance expressed his support for Penny on Monday, saying on X, “thank God justice was done in this case.” Rep. Eli Crane, a Republican from Arizona, introduced a resolution in Congress on Monday to grant Penny a Congressional Gold Medal for his “heroism,” he said in a post on X. “Courage should always prevail over moral cowardice. Thankfully, our justice system got it right yesterday,” Crane said. CNN’s Lauren del Valle, Gloria Pazmino and Celina Tebor contributed to this report.