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Brazilian dunes dotted with dazzling pools make UNESCO heritage list

By - Jul 27,2024 - Last updated at Jul 27,2024

SAO PAULO — Brazil’s Lencois Maranhenses National Park, famed for its white dunes that fill with blue and emerald lagoons in the rainy season, was on Friday declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The vast park, named for the dunes’ resemblance to a bedsheet spread across the landscape — “lencois” means sheets in Portuguese — is located in the northeastern state of Maranhao, in a transition zone between the Amazon, Cerrado, and Caatinga biomes.

The decision was taken during the 46th annual meeting of the United Nations World Heritage Committee, which is taking place in India’s capital New Delhi.

Lencois Maranhenses is the 24th site in Brazil to make it onto the list of places of significant cultural or natural significance.

The national park was created in June 1981 and covers an area of 156,000 hectares, more than half of which offers a landscape of dunes and multi-coloured lagoons, which attract more than 100,000 tourists each year.

According to UNESCO, it is the largest expanse of dunes in South America.

The Lencois Maranhenses are a protected area “where the desert meets the sea, creating a unique landscape,” Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in a letter sent in early 2023 to UNESCO to urge the site’s inscription as a World Heritage Site.

The park has also hosted several Hollywood film shoots.

Lady Gaga, Celine Dion add sparkle to star-studded Olympic show

By - Jul 27,2024 - Last updated at Jul 27,2024

Singer Aya Nakamura perfoms on the Pont des Arts footbridge during the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in Paris on Friday (AFP photo)

PARIS — Lady Gaga, Celine Dion and French-Malian singer Aya Nakamura joined dancers, an opera diva and even a heavy metal band in an opening ceremony for the Paris Olympics that sought to proudly showcase French culture with a modern twist. The first-ever opening ceremony held outside a stadium - on the River Seine - had to battle driving rain that cast a pallid gloom over the City of Light.

The fast-moving and multi-location ceremony masterminded by acclaimed French theatre director Thomas Jolly was aimed at impressing the global TV audience as much as those who braved the weather and intense security to watch live.

“It is now. The world is watching us. Let’s open the Games in style!” French President Emmanuel Macron, who watched the ceremony in a VIP stand with other leaders, wrote on X.

In a nod to her passion for French culture, US pop star Lady Gaga appeared from behind a fan of pom-poms held by her dancing troupe to sing “Mon truc en plumes” (“My Thing With Feathers”), an iconic French music hall hit by the legendary Zizi Jeanmaire.

“It is my supreme honor to sing for you and cheer you on,” Gaga wrote on her social media channels after the performance, saying she always “felt a very special connection with French people and singing French music”.

Franco-Malian R&B superstar Aya Nakamura, the most listened-to French-speaking singer in the world, performed a medley with two of her hits “Pookie” and “Djadja” and a classic by Charles Aznavour, “For me Formidable”, one hundred years since his birth.

Rumours she was to perform had sparked a backlash from the extreme right in France and a torrent of racist abuse on social media. But in a striking symbol, she was accompanied in her performance by musicians from France’s Republican Guard.

Canadian singer Celine Dion, who had been battling a rare illness, made a spectacular comeback by singing from the Eiffel Tower at the climax of the ceremony with a rousing version of the “Hymn to Love” by Edith Piaf.

According to Jolly, the 12 different phases of the ceremony told the story of a country rich in its “diversity”, “inclusive”, “not one France but several Frances”, and celebrating “the whole world united”.

He has been backed by a writing team including famed novelist Leila Slimani and screenwriter Fanny Herrero, who penned the smash-hit casting agency comedy “Dix pour cent” (“Call My Agent”).

In another highlight, the star “etoile” dancer of the Paris Opera, Guillaume Diop, performed on a Paris rooftop.

For many French spectators, the highlight was the surprise appearance of the heavy metal group Gojira, who burst out onto platforms constructed on the Conciergerie, a key building in the French Revolution, where deposed queen Marie-Antoinette was held.

With a mannequin of a headless Marie Antoinette after her guillotine execution for good measure, they belted out the revolutionary chant “Ah! Ca ira”.

In an unlikely collaboration, they were joined by the French-Swiss mezzo-soprano Marina Viotti, who makes no secret of her taste for metal as well as classical.

Jakub Jozef Orlinski, a Polish counter-tenor who is also a break-dancer, interpreted an aria from the opera “Les Indes Galantes” by Jean-Philippe Rameau combining both of his talents.

The ceremony, which lasted just over four hours, had got under way with a clip of French actor Djamel Debbouze carrying the Olympic torch into the national stadium, the Stade de France, only to realise he should have gone to the river.

Helped by French football great Zinedine Zidane, he then takes the torch on an underground odyssey through Paris and hands it to a group of children who are then guided by a mysterious masked individual who then eventually passed on the flame towards the final relay for the cauldron.

New Japan film camera aimed at ‘nostalgic’ young fans

Jul 26,2024 - Last updated at Jul 26,2024

This photo taken on June 29 shows Yuriko Yamada (right), a participant of a film photography tour in Kamakura, skimming through her prints with her friend at a camera shop in Yokohama, Kanagawa prefecture (AFP photo)

TOKYO — Keita Suzuki leads a group of young analogue photography fans around a coastal city in Japan, stopping to snap pastel hydrangea blooms with bulky vintage film cameras.

The participants later share their lush retro-looking snaps online — a trend a top Japanese camera brand wants to capture with its first new film model in two decades.

Instead of pressing a smartphone button, more and more young people “want to experience the original act of taking a photograph: Winding the film up, looking through the viewfinder and releasing the shutter”, Suzuki told AFP.

Another “beauty” of film photography is that with limited physical film, you must think carefully about which memories to “lock in” to each photograph, he said.

Suzuki advertises his tours on social media and has seen a growing interest from teens and 20-somethings loading 35mm film and taking it to be developed for the first time.

Yuriko Yamada was one of around 20 people who joined a recent gathering in Kamakura near Tokyo.

“Digital photos are clear and clean, but film ones have faint, soft colours, which I prefer,” the 34-year-old said.

“It takes time to see the final product, but I really enjoy the process,” she added. “It feels nostalgic.”

Japan’s biggest camera brands stopped making analogue film models in the 2000s as digital ones became dominant.

Countless camera sellers in Japan’s big cities have since stepped up to fill the void, refurbishing old models for a new generation of analogue enthusiasts.

Despite the surge in popularity, many of those on the photo tour said they still find it difficult to repair their old cameras because the parts are no longer being produced.

‘Many hurdles’

To meet rising demand from new film fans, the $500 Pentax 17 — the brand’s first analogue model in 21 years — was launched in Europe and the United States in June, and Japan this month.

The camera has a classic black appearance but takes half-frame photos, meaning a 24-exposure film yields 48 shots, which are portrait-orientated like phone photos.

It has been so popular in Japan that pre-orders sold out, according to manufacturer Ricoh Imaging Company.

Product planner and designer Takeo Suzuki, nicknamed TKO — a revered figure among photography fans — said Ricoh had been “surprised” by the “huge” global response.

Plans to release a new analogue camera were hatched around 2020, but weren’t easy to realise.

“This was a completely new project, so it was like groping in the dark,” Suzuki said.

“There were so many hurdles, but we received a lot of support from many people.”

Pentax engineers used archive drawings of past cameras, some on paper, to try and make manual winders and other analogue technology.

But they struggled, so the company asked retired colleagues to come back to help.

“They taught us tips and tricks that were not on the blueprints, but were really recipes in the engineer’s head,” Suzuki said.

By doing so, they “revived the old technology little by little”.

‘Spark conversations’

Instant and disposable film cameras made by Ricoh’s rival Fujifilm have also become popular as the trend for sharing old-fashioned photos on social media grows.

Sales of the palm-sized Instax, launched in 1998 as a competitor to Polaroid, stagnated for several years in the 2000s due to the shift to digital cameras.

But they are rising again in part thanks to an expanded range including sleek, classic designs made to appeal to men and older customers, the company says.

“People enjoy prints as a communication tool, because they spark conversations,” said Senior Fujifilm Manager Ryuichiro Takai, who is responsible for the Instax business.

Young customers at Popeye Camera, a specialist film photography shop in Tokyo’s Jiyugaoka district, seem to agree.

Yoshinobu Ishikawa took over the family business in 2000, when the rise of digital cameras had nearly forced the shop’s closure.

Back then, “young people found it difficult to enter” as mostly older male customers would be having “intimidating, technical conversations” with staff, he said.

But now Ishikawa actively courts them with fun items such as stickers to decorate photos and leather camera straps, as well as a custom developing service — speaking to customers beforehand about the style they want.

“Young people see film photography shared on social media, and they want to try it themselves,” he said.

Yamada, the photo tour participant, says she feels “more and more into film photography”.

“It’s inconvenient, but I feel it’s something new.”

UK blues legend John Mayall dead at 90

By - Jul 24,2024 - Last updated at Jul 24,2024

From left to right: John Mayall, Hughie Flint, Eric Clapton and John McVie (AFP photo)

LOS ANGELES, United States — John Mayall, the British blues pioneer whose 1960s music collective the Bluesbreakers helped usher in a fertile period of rock and brought guitarists like Eric Clapton to prominence, has died at 90, his family said Tuesday.

Mayall, a singer and multi-instrumentalist who was dubbed “the godfather of British blues”, and whose open-door arrangement saw some of the greats in the genre hone their craft with him and his band, “passed away peacefully in his California home” on Monday, according to a statement posted on his Facebook page.

It did not state a cause of death.

“Health issues that forced John to end his epic touring career have finally led to peace for one of this world’s greatest road warriors,” it said. “John Mayall gave us 90 years of tireless efforts to educate, inspire and entertain.”

Mayall’s influence on 1960s rock and beyond is enormous. Members of the Bluesbreakers eventually went on to join or form groups including Cream, Fleetwood Mac, the Rolling Stones and many more.

At age 30, Mayall moved to London from northern England in 1963. Sensing revolution in the air, he gave up his profession as a graphic designer to embrace a career in blues, the musical style born in Black America.

He teamed up with a series of young guitarists including Clapton, Peter Green, later of Fleetwood Mac, and Mick Taylor who helped form the Rolling Stones.

Stones frontman Mick Jagger said Mayall was “a great pioneer of British blues”.

He “had a wonderful eye for talented young musicians, including Mick Taylor — who he recommended to me after Brian Jones died — ushering in a new era for the Stones”, Jagger wrote on social media platform X.

In the Bluesbreakers’ debut album in 1966, “Blues Breakers With Eric Clapton,” John Mayall enthralled music aficionados with a melding of soulful rock and gutsy, guitar-driven American blues featuring covers of tunes by Robert Johnson, Otis Rush and Ray Charles.

The blues music he was playing in British venues was “a novelty for white England,” he told AFP in 1997.

That album was a hit, catapulting Clapton to stardom and bringing a wave of popularity to a more raw and personal blues music.

Mayall moved to California in 1968 and toured America extensively in 1972.

He recorded a number of landmark albums in the 1960s including “Crusade”, “A Hard Road”, and “Blues From Laurel Canyon”. Dozens more followed in the 1970s and up to his latest, “The Sun Is Shining Down”, in 2022.

Mayall was awarded an OBE, an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, in 2005.

UK fines TikTok over child safety data reporting

By - Jul 24,2024 - Last updated at Jul 24,2024

Ofcom accused TikTok for spreading inaccurate information (AFP photo)

LONDON — British telecommunications regulator Ofcom said on Wednesday it had handed video sharing platform TikTok a 1.9 million pound ($2.4 million) fine for failing to timely make available safety data.

Ofcom criticised the platform, which is owned by Chinese group ByteDance, saying it communicated inaccurate information last year and failed swiftly to address that.

“Ofcom has today fined TikTok £1.875 million for failing to accurately respond to a formal request for information about its parental controls safety feature,” the regulator said in a statement.

In a statement to AFP, TikTok recognised it had furnished Ofcom with inaccurate data on the use of a parental controls tool that underestimated “considerably” the number of people using the tool.

“While we subsequently provided the correct information, we fell short of our obligations by not reporting the error sooner, and apologise for any disruption this caused.

“We are committed to fully cooperating with all of Ofcom’s requests and have implemented improvements to our internal processes,” a TikTok spokesperson said, adding that Ofcom had recognised the oversight was not deliberate.

Noting the breach was a first for the platform, bringing a fine 25 percent below its maximum, Ofcom said “significant weight was also given to the fact that, notwithstanding its failings, TikTok proactively self-reported the error to us and has since taken steps to improve its internal processes.”

But the regulator said the failing had forced it to remove details on the effectiveness of TikTok’s parental controls in an upcoming transparency report.

Ofcom said it received only partial, if accurate, information data seven months after a deadline last year.

It added it believed that the penalty was appropriate for a company of TikTok’s size, given its resources and awareness of regulatory obligations.

The move comes a week after TikTok lost an appeal to escape new EU digital rules that seek to rein in the power of big tech after a court rejected its challenge.

Baby flamingos saved from drought-decimated lake in Algeria

By - Jul 23,2024 - Last updated at Jul 23,2024

OUM EL BOUAGHI, Algeria — Around 300 pink flamingo chicks were rescued by volunteers in eastern Algeria after the salt lake where they hatched dried up following years of high temperatures and drought.

Thousands of flamingos migrate each year to nest in Lake Tinsilt, located around 450 kilometres southeast of the capital Algiers.

It is one of the largest wetlands in the country, with an area of more than 20 square kilometres.

“Barely a month ago there was water here,” volunteer Mourad Ajroud told AFP on Friday, pointing to what is now a vast expanse of cracked earth littered with the carcasses of dead birds.

The disappearance of the lake, which locals and Algerian media attribute to high temperatures and a years-long drought, has driven the adult flamingos away.

They left behind their unhatched eggs and defenceless chicks, dozens of which have died from hunger, thirst, poaching and wolf attacks.

A group of volunteers provided their cars and trucks to transfer 283 pink flamingos about 50 kilometres away to Lake Mahidiya, about 50 kilometres away.

The wetland near Ain Mlila remains flush thanks to a steady flow of water from nearby rivers and lakes.

The rescue operation was initiated by local amateur photographer Tarek Kawajlia, who documents the wildlife in his area, and noticed the decrease in the size of the lake and the flight of birds.

The volunteers carry out “morning and evening patrols to follow the chicks until they recover and are able to fly, so that they can return next year to the sabkha [marsh] and life can resume its normal course”, Kawajlia told AFP.

Ajroud, 53, said the group was not able to save all the birds.

“We couldn’t transport them all,” he said sadly, as another volunteer takes an injured bird to a veterinary clinic.

A few hours after the chicks were released at their new habitat, some adult birds joined them.

“The operation was successful and the parents found their little ones in a magnificent scene,” Kawajlia said in a comment on one of his photos posted to Facebook.

Lake Tinsilt is one of the around 50 bodies of water in Algeria declared wetlands of international importance under the Ramsar international environment treaty to protect wetlands.

 

Greenland arrests anti-whaling activist on Japan warrant

By - Jul 23,2024 - Last updated at Jul 23,2024

Japan’s new whaling mother ship, the Kangei Maru, arrives at Ariake pier in Tokyo on May 23 (AFP photo)

STOCKHOLM — Police in Greenland arrested prominent anti-whaling environmentalist Paul Watson under an international warrant issued by Japan, detaining him until August 15, authorities and his foundation said.

His ship had just docked on Sunday in Nuuk to refuel on its way to “intercept” Japan’s new whaling factory vessel in the North Pacific, the Captain Paul Watson Foundation (CPWF) said.

Video posted by CPWF on social media showed officers handcuffing Watson on the bridge of the John Paul DeJoria ship, putting him inside a police van on the dockside and driving him away.

Watson was then brought before a district court that ruled to detain him until a decision is made on his potential extradition to Japan, Greenland’s police said in a statement.

Nuuk district court in Greenland “decided that Paul Watson would be detained until August 15 and the decision has been appealed in the high court of Greenland”, judge Stig Norskov-Jensen told AFP.

Denmark’s justice ministry will decide whether or not to extradite Watson to Japan, according to the police statement.

“Japan’s arrest warrant is illegal. It violates every international treaty on human rights”, said Francois Zimeray, one of Watson’s lawyers, adding that by extraditing his client, Denmark “would violate its own constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights”.

Watson, who featured in the reality TV series “Whale Wars”, founded the Sea Shepherd and the CPWF organisations, and has drawn attention for direct action tactics, including confrontations with whaling ships at sea.

CPWF said it believed his arrest was in connection with an Interpol Red Notice related to Watson’s previous anti-whaling activities in the Antarctic.

The group added that the arrest was a “surprise” since its lawyers had reported that the Red Notice had been withdrawn.

“However, it appears that Japan had made the notice confidential to facilitate Paul’s travel for the purpose of making an arrest,” a statement said.

 

Mothership 

 

Japan’s government made no comment on Monday but a spokeswoman for the Japanese coastguard told AFP it was aware of the arrest.

“The coastguard will continue to take appropriate steps based on coordination with related entities,” the spokeswoman said.

CPWF said the ship was en route to the Northwest Passage in its campaign of “intercepting Japan’s newly-built factory ship, the Kangei Maru, in the North Pacific”.

The 9,300-tonne “mothership”, which set off from Japan in May, butchers whales caught and killed by smaller vessels.

It boasts a powerful winch that can haul carcasses weighing as much as 70 tonnes up a ramp, as well as 40 freezer containers, each with a capacity of 15 tonnes of whale meat.

Tokyo argues that eating whale is part of Japanese culture and an issue of “food security” in the resource-poor country, which imports large amounts of animal meat.

But consumption of whale has fallen to around 1,000 or 2,000 tonnes per year compared to around 200 times that in the 1960s.

 

‘Scientific’ 

 

Activists aggressively pursued the Kangei Maru’s predecessor when, prior to 2019, Japan hunted whales in the Antarctic and North Pacific for what it said were “scientific” purposes.

That year Japan quit the International Whaling Commission and nowadays conducts commercial whaling, but only in its own waters, and on what it calls a sustainable scale.

The CPWF said however that it suspects Japan intends to resume high-seas whaling in the Southern Ocean and North Pacific by 2025.

It added that it believes the reactivation of the Red Notice against Watson is “politically motivated, coinciding with the launch of the new factory ship”.

The Red Notice was issued in 2012, with an Interpol statement at the same saying Watson was wanted by Japan on charges of causing damage and injury in two incidents in the Antarctic Ocean in 2010 against a Japanese whaling ship.

 

Billionaire Ken Griffin revealed as $44.6m dinosaur fossil buyer

By - Jul 22,2024 - Last updated at Jul 22,2024

The skeleton, nicknamed Apex, is estimated to be 150 million years old and is the largest stegosaurus ever found, according to the auction house (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — The buyer who spent a record $44.6 million to buy a stegosaurus fossil at auction was Ken Griffin, CEO of the Citadel hedge fund, according to a person familiar with the acquisition.

The skeleton, nicknamed Apex, is estimated to be 150 million years old and is the largest stegosaurus ever found, according to the auction house.

Griffin placed his bid over the phone to beat six others in a 15-minute-long bidding war on Wednesday, a live audience cheering as the price jumped.

“Apex was born in America and is going to stay in America,” he said after the sale, according to The Wall Street Journal, which broke the news that Griffin was the buyer.

A regular donor to the Republican Party, the hedge fund chief has a net worth of approximately $37.8 billion, according to Forbes.

He intends to explore loaning the specimen to a US institution, the source told AFP.

The executive has collaborated with museums in the past. In 2021, he paid $43.2 million for a first-edition copy of the US Constitution, later loaning it to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas.

He also helped fund a dinosaur exhibit at Chicago’s Field Museum in 2018 with a $16.5 million donation.

His latest purchase measures 3.3 metrest all and 8.2 metres long, and is near complete, with 254 bones out of an approximate total of 319.

Dinosaur remains have become a hot-ticket item in recent years, with paleontologists voicing concern that museums are losing out to private bidders.

The previous record for a dinosaur skeleton sale was set in 2020, when a Tyrannosaurus Rex nicknamed “Stan” went for $31.8 million.

Apex is 30 per cent larger than “Sophie”, the most complete stegosaurus ever put on public display, which is housed in the Natural History Museum in London.

Green is the new black

Embracing green living with 10 eco-friendly family practices

By , - Jul 21,2024 - Last updated at Jul 21,2024

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

By Heba Nazer 
Green Buildings and Sustainability expert

 

We’ve all heard about green living, green products, green trends and green behaviours as this

colour has been attached to environment-related-matters.

 

But what are the practical steps that we can take to join the green movement? Why is it crucial to adopt green behaviours in our day-to-day activities and why do we need to set them as our new norm and, indeed, our new black? Green living involves making conscious decisions to adopt environmentally-friendly-practices in every aspect of our lives.

 

Three pillars of Sustainabilty

 

Adopting green practices Celebrating World Environment Day can be enjoyable and educational for your entire family. It’s a great chance to adopt green practices and emphasise the importance of sustainability to save the environment and ensure that “green will be your new black”.

Here are three main pillars for sustainability:

1. Environmental sustainability focuses on the preservation of natural resources and ecosystems, ensuring that our planet caters for future generations.

2. Social sustainability ensures social equality, cohesion and well-being.

3. Economic sustainability involves creating systems that balance financial growth and generate profit without a negative impact on the environment and social well-being Together, these elements ensure a healthy sustainable world for coming generations.

Embracing green living Green living is gaining momentum as an essential response to the critical challenges of climate change.

Scientists have linked climate change to a range of human-related activities, including the burning of fossil fuels in factories, transportation, as well as industrial activities.

These activities release greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere, trapping heat and causing global temperatures to rise. This results in the rise of sea levels, more frequent natural disasters, unpredictable weather patterns, loss of biodiversity and increased health risks.

In Jordan For a country like Jordan, these global issues are further compounded by local challenges. Jordan faces a unique set of environmental constraints such as limited energy resources, forcing us to important around 92 per cent of our total energy-we also suffer from water scarcity. By the same token, Jordan is located on the sunbelt of the sun. This means it has an excessive amount of solar energy that can be harnessed to produce electricity and provide energy for all economic sectors.

Our impact on the environment Climate change affects all aspects of our lives, from the food we eat to the air we breathe. It is essential for us to understand our impact on the planet and how we contribute to climate change, compelling us to take action and start reducing our carbon footprint. The carbon footprint is primarily the amount of carbon dioxide emitted in the environment due to our daily activities including the products we purchase, the content of these products and our energy consumption habits in general. You can calculate your carbon footprint online through websites such as carbonfootprint.com.

This is a very helpful tool to manage your practices and reduce your carbon footprint as an essential step to combating climate change. World environment day World Environment Day is celebrated internationally every year by millions of people across the world to raise awareness and praise environmental actions.

This year’s theme is land restoration, desertification and drought resilience. Up to 40 per cent of the planet’s land is degraded which is affecting almost half of the world’s population due to reduced agricultural productivity.

The number and duration of droughts has increased by 29 per cent which may impact over three-quarters of the world’s population by 2050 if no urgent action was taken.

Land restoration helps rebuild soil. Healthy soil is crucial because it:

Purifies water, Protects against flooding, Stores carbon dioxide effectively

Despite it being a renewable resource, it still needs 1,000 years to generate three centimeters of topsoil.

Family-friendly steps

To contribute towards saving the planet, you and your family can adopt several eco-friendly practices. Here are some you can start with:

1. Reducing energy usage through simple actions like turning off lights when leaving the room or unplugging your electronic devices and switch off the sleep mode. It is important to know that your laptop will still consume 40 per cent of its total energy when it is in sleep mode.

2. Gifting a reusable bag to your friend or family members and advise them to use it all the time while shopping instead of plastic bags. Plastic bags take around 300 years to degrade , they break down into tiny toxic particles that contaminate the soil, water and enter the food chain when animals accidentally eat them.

3. Embracing sustainable transportation such as walking, using public transport, or carpooling to reduce emissions. Carpooling can save money from commuting alone and can reduce global carbon emissions by 11 per cent.

4. Supporting local and organic materials: Local products travel shorter distances to reach you. They thus minimise fossil fuel consumption leading to lower greenhouse gas emissions from transportation.

5. Educating and empowering your children with knowledge about our environment in a fun way. You can plan this summer watching documentaries together, reading books and discussing environmental issues and challenges.

6. Community clean-up: Participate in a local clean-up event. Each family member can collect litter for an hour, which can prevent pollution, promote human health and community responsibility.

7. Planting a tree: Planting a tree in your garden helps combat climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide and storing it, as well as releasing oxygen to purify the air

8. Making an upcycling challenge: Upcycling is creating a usable product from waste or unwanted items. Upcycling is a smart way to reuse your items instead of going through the process of recycling, or directly to waste. Be creative and encourage each family member to upcycle a product for reuse at home.

9. Reducing before you recycle: There are almost three million tons of solid waste generated in Jordan whereas only 8-10 per cent of it is recycled. This highlights the importance of reducing the amount of waste at the source, followed by recycling. Sort the waste at home and take it to the closest recycling centre and remember that every bottle matters!

10. Calculating your carbon footprint: to make it more enjoyable and engaging, you can start a carbon footprint contest, rewarding your family member who reduces the most carbon emissions These are only some of many critical changes you can make. By making these conscious choices, families can significantly reduce their carbon footprint and help protect the environment for future generations.

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

Comedy legend Bob Newhart dead at 94 — publicist

By - Jul 20,2024 - Last updated at Jul 20,2024

NEW YORK — Bob Newhart, the American stand-up performer whose comedy made him one of the top TV stars of his era, has died, his publicist announced on Thursday. He was 94 years old.

The decorated Chicago icon was an accountant before striking gold with comedy, acclaimed for his dry, deadpan delivery.

He died at his Los Angeles home after a series of short illnesses, his longtime publicist Jerry Digney said in a statement.

Born September 5, 1929, in suburban Illinois, Newhart studied business management before being drafted into the US army and serving in the Korean War.

He briefly studied law before quitting and getting work as an accountant, while moonlighting as a comedy performer and writer.

“In 1959, I gave myself a year to make it in comedy; it was back to accounting if comedy didn’t work out,” he has said.

It did — he was signed to Warner Bros. Records, and “The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart” became the music industry’s first comedy album to hit the top of the sales charts.

It earned him prestigious Grammys for Best New Artist and Best Album, and helped launch his career in television. The recording is now archived in the Library of Congress.

 

‘The Sound of Laughter’ 

 

Newhart starred in two long-running sitcoms in the 1970s and 1980s, and made guest star appearances into his 90s.

He featured as a recurring guest on “The Big Bang Theory” and also starred as Papa Elf in the Christmas film “Elf”.

The second of his sitcoms — the eight-season “Newhart” — closed in one of the most memorable series finales of all time.

In the final episode, Newhart’s character wakes up in bed with his wife from the first sitcom, telling her about a strange dream — the plot of the second show.

The stunt parodied a famous plot element from the series “Dallas”.

Newhart is survived by four children. His wife of six decades, Virginia, died in 2023.

“Comedy has given me a wonderful life. When I first started out in stand-up, I just remember the sound of laughter,” he once said.

“It’s one of the great sounds of the world.”

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