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Major asteroid sample brought to Earth in NASA first

By - Sep 27,2023 - Last updated at Sep 27,2023

This shot off a NASA live feed shows NASA safety team members prepare the Osiris-Rex asteroid sample return craft sitting in the Utah desert at Dugway, Utah, on Sunday (AFP photo)

DUGWAY, United States — A seven-year space voyage came to its climactic end on Sunday when a NASA capsule landed in the desert in the US state of Utah, carrying to Earth the largest asteroid samples ever collected.

Scientists have high hopes for the sample, saying it will provide a better understanding of the formation of our solar system and how Earth became habitable.

When they learned that the capsule's main parachute had deployed, "I literally broke into tears," the Osiris-Rex mission's principal investigator Dante Lauretta told a press conference.

"That was the moment I knew we made it home... For me the real science is just beginning."

The 6.21-billion-kilometre journey marked the United States' first sample return mission of its kind, the US space agency said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

NASA chief Bill Nelson hailed the mission and said the asteroid dust "will give scientists an extraordinary glimpse into the beginnings of our solar system".

The Osiris-Rex probe's final, fiery descent through Earth's atmosphere was perilous, but NASA managed to engineer a soft landing at 8:52 am local time (14:52 GMT), in the military's Utah Test and Training Range.

Four years after its 2016 launch, the probe had landed on the asteroid Bennu and collected what NASA estimated is roughly 250 grammes of dust from its rocky surface.

Even that small amount, NASA says, should "help us better understand the types of asteroids that could threaten Earth".

The sample return "is really historic", NASA scientist Amy Simon told AFP. "This is going to be the biggest sample we've brought back since the Apollo moon rocks" were returned to Earth.

Osiris-Rex released its capsule early Sunday from an altitude of more than 107, 826.05 kilometres.

The fiery passage through the atmosphere came only in the last 13 minutes, as the capsule hurtled downward at a speed of more than 43,452 per hour, with temperatures of up to 2,760ºC.

NASA images showed the tire-sized capsule on the ground in a desert wash, with scientists approaching the device and taking readings.

Eventually they concluded the capsule was not breached, meaning its all-important air-tight seal remained intact, avoiding any contamination of the sample with desert sands.

 

The team then lifted the capsule by helicopter to a nearby "clean room".

Meanwhile, the probe that made the space journey fired its engines and shifted course away from Earth, NASA said, "on its way" for a date with another asteroid.

 

Japanese samples 

 

On Monday, the sample heads to Johnson Space Centre in Houston for additional study, and NASA plans to announce its first results at a news conference October 11.

Roughly one-fourth of the sample will be immediately used in experiments, and a small amount will be sent to mission partners Japan and Canada.

But most of it will be saved for future generations — a "treasure for scientific analysis for years and years and years to come, to our kids and grandkids and people that haven't even been born yet", Lori Glaze, director of NASA's Planetary Sciences division, said.

Japan had earlier given NASA a few grains from asteroid Ryugu, after bringing 5.6 grammes of dust to Earth in 2020 during the Hayabusa-2 mission. Ten years before, it had brought back a microscopic quantity from another asteroid.

But the sample from Bennu is much larger, allowing for significantly more testing, Simon said.

Earth's origin story 

 

Asteroids are composed of the original materials of the solar system, dating back some 4.5 billion years, and have remained relatively intact.

They "can give us clues about how the solar system formed and evolved", said Osiris-Rex programme executive Melissa Morris.

"It's our own origin story."

By striking Earth's surface, "we do believe asteroids and comets delivered organic material, potentially water, that helped life flourish here on Earth", Simon said.

Scientists believe Bennu, about 500 metres in diameter, is rich in carbon — a building block of life on Earth — and contains water molecules locked in minerals.

Bennu surprised scientists in 2020 when the probe, during its brief contact with the asteroid's surface, sank into the soil, revealing an unexpectedly low density, like a children's pool filled with plastic balls.

Understanding its composition could come in handy, for there is a slight — but non-zero — chance (one in 2,700) that Bennu could collide catastrophically with Earth, though not until 2182.

NASA last year successfully deviated the course of an asteroid by crashing a probe into it in a test, and it might at some point need to repeat that exercise — but with much higher stakes.

 

Family friendly supercars

By - Sep 26,2023 - Last updated at Sep 26,2023

 

Evolving as a cross between performance coupes and family estates since the 1990s, the compact executive super estate segment brings together sporty high performance driving with family-friendly hauling ability and premium cache, but without high-riding SUV drawbacks. Absent high performance wagon versions of the Alfa Romeo Giulia, Jaguar XE and other, the super estate segment is highly specialised, almost extinct, and now almost exclusively German. 

 

Audi RS4 Avant (Competition Plus Package)

 

Ever since it married a Porsche-tuned version of the iconic Quattro’s engine and four-wheel-drive to the practical 80 Avant estate as the 1994 RS2 Avant, Audi has been the pre-eminent purveyor of high performance estates. Its current compact executive RS4 Avant super wagon is the most accomplished in its segment as one of the fastest, most practical and sure-footedly safest ways to travel.

Downsized from its gloriously high-revving naturally-aspirated 4.2-litre V8 powered predecessor, the current RS4’s 2.9-litre twin-turbocharged V6 engine nevertheless remains as powerful as any “dad racer” needs, with 444BHP at 5,700-6,700rpm and a brawnier 442lb/ft at 1,900-5,000rpm. Civil and sedate when cruising, but viscerally volcanic when pushed, the RS4 rockets through 0-100km/h in 3.9-seconds and onto a derestricted 290km/h maximum with the optional Competition Plus package. 

Elegantly aggressive without being overstated, the RS4 is stylish and well-equipped inside, with minimum 495-litres luggage capacity. But more pertinent to a super car that ostensibly remains a family car, is its thoroughly proven Quattro four-wheel-drive. Driving with slight rear bias to off-set a nose-heavy configuration and provide enhanced agility, the Quattro system nevertheless provides huge levels of reassuring and user-friendly road-holding in low traction conditions. 

 

 

Specifications

  • Engine: 2.9-litre, twin-turbocharged V6-cylinders
  • Gearbox: 8-speed automatic, four-wheel-drive, locking centre differential
  • Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 444 (450) [331] @5,700-6,700rpm
  • Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 442 (600) @1,900-5,000rpm
  • 0-100km/h: 3.9-seconds
  • Top speed: 290km/h (derestricted)
  • Fuel consumption, combined: 9.6l/100km
  • Length: 4,782mm
  • Width: 1,866mm
  • Height: 1,438mm
  • Wheelbase: 2,826mm
  • Weight: 1,820kg
  • Luggage volume, min/max: 495-/1,495-litres
  • Suspension: 5-link, anti-roll bars
  • Tyres: 275/30R20

 

 

BMW M3 Competition Touring xDrive

 

Expected to be the most driver-oriented car in its class — even if 120kg lardier than the Audi RS4 Avant — the M3 Competition Touring xDrive is the first ever estate variant of BMW’s often sublime compact executive saloon, since its 1986 inception. Its long-winded name , meanwhile, indicates that this practical body style is only available with the more powerful M3 engine variant mated to an all-wheel-drive system. 

Overtly aggressive with complex lines and sharp angles, the M3’s controversial design incorporates a vast and snouty interpretation of BMW’s signature twin kidney grille. Its long bonnet and visually rear weighted design meanwhile indicate a sporting potential derived from its classically balanced rear-wheel-drive based architecture and silky smooth “straight six” 3-litre twin-turbocharged engine configuration, developing a mighty 503BHP at 6,250rpm and 479lb/ft throughout 2,750-5,500rpm.

Sensationally swift with 3.6-second 0-100km/h acceleration and 280km/h derestricted top speed, the M3 Touring’s expectedly premium cabin meanwhile proves unexpectedly spacious with 500-litre minimum luggage volume. Utilising all-wheel-drive to more reassuringly channel its massive output for enhanced traction and grip, the M3 wagon’s standout characteristic is however its agile sports car handling traits, which includes a rear-drive only mode and limited-slip rear differential.

Specifications

  • Engine: 3-litre, twin-turbocharged in-line 6-cylinders
  • Gearbox: 8-speed automatic, all-wheel-drive, limited slip rear differential
  • Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 503 (510) [375] @6,250rpm
  • Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 479 (650) @2,750-5,500rpm
  • 0-100km/h: 3.6-seconds
  • Top speed: 280km/h (derestricted)
  • Fuel consumption, combined: 10.l/100km
  • Length: 4,794mm
  • Width: 1,903mm
  • Height: 1,436mm
  • Wheelbase: 2,857mm
  • Weight: 1,940kg
  • Luggage volume, min/max: 500-/1,510-litres
  • Suspension, F/R: MacPherson strut / 5-link, anti-roll bars
  • Tyres, F/R: 275/35R19 / 285/30R20

 

 

Mercedes-AMG C63 E Performance Estate (Driver’s Package)

 

Understatedly assertive, stylishly classy and packed with technology and brutal performance levels, the Mercedes-AMG C63 E Performance Estate’ name may be a word salad, but it is a tour de force that significantly outpowers segment competitors. That said, a question mark hangs as to whether this overkill approach compromises its role as both a rewardingly agile and sporty driver’s car and as a practical family estate.

The E63 Estate is powered by a small prodigious 2-litre turbocharged 4-cylinder engine developing 469BHP at 6,750rpm and 402lb/ft at 5,250-5,500rpm, complemented with a 201BHP and 236lb/ft electric motor for a total of 670BHP for short 10-second bursts. The result is warp-like 3.4-second 0-100km/h acceleration, derestricted 280km/h top speed, and comparatively moderate fuel consumption. However, synthetic engine noises replace its predecessors’ gloriously authentic V8 soundtrack.

Heaviest on this list at 2,145kg, the E63 wagon is some 900kg heavier than its Cosworth-tuned 1985 Mercedes-Benz 190 2.3-16 spiritual predecessor. Expected to be too heavy to be a truly nimble driver’s car, it employs all-wheel-drive, all-wheel-steering, limited-slip differential and adaptive dampers to manage weight. Its large battery pack meanwhile restricts minimum luggage capacity to just 320-litres, not including a spare tyre, while EV range is only 13km. 

Specifications

  • Engine: 2-litre, turbocharged in-line 4-cylinders and electric motor
  • Gearbox: 9-speed automatic, all-wheel-drive, limited slip rear differential
  • Combined power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 670 (680) [500] @6,750rpm
  • Combined torque, lb/ft (Nm): 638 (865) @5,250-5,500rpm (estimate)
  • 0-100km/h: 3.4-seconds
  • Top speed: 280km/h (derestricted)
  • Fuel consumption, combined: 6.9/100km
  • Length: 4,842mm
  • Width: 1,900mm
  • Height: 1,474mm
  • Wheelbase: 2,875mm
  • Weight: 2,145kg
  • Luggage volume, min/max: 320-/1,335-litres
  • Suspension: Multi-link, adaptive dampers
  • Tyres, F/R: 265/35R20 / 275/35R20

Hollywood writers, studios reach tentative deal to end strike

By - Sep 25,2023 - Last updated at Sep 25,2023

AG-AFTRA members and supporters walk the picket line as members of the Screen Actors Guild strike in New York on July 19 (AFP photo)

LOS ANGELES — Striking writers whose industrial action has paralysed Hollywood said on Sunday they had reached an "exceptional" deal with studios that could see them go back to work.

The apparent breakthrough will raise hopes that striking actors can also reach terms with studios to end a months-long impasse that has seen film and TV production largely halted, costing the California economy billions of dollars.

"We have reached a tentative agreement on a new 2023 [minimum basic agreement], which is to say an agreement in principle on all deal points, subject to drafting final contract language," said a letter the Writers Guild of America sent to members.

"We can say, with great pride, that this deal is exceptional — with meaningful gains and protections for writers in every sector of the membership."

The letter, which AFP has seen, gave no details. It said language was being ironed out and that the final say on whether to accept what was on offer rested with the membership.

"To be clear, no one is to return to work until specifically authorised to by the Guild. We are still on strike until then. But we are, as of today, suspending WGA picketing," it said.

A terse joint statement from the WGA and the AMPTPT, the umbrella group representing studios and streamers confirmed an agreement.

Thousands of film and television scribes downed their pens in early May over demands including better pay for writers, greater rewards for creating hit shows, and protection from artificial intelligence.

They have manned picket lines for months outside offices including Netflix and Disney, and were joined by striking actors in mid-July, leaving normally busy Hollywood lots all but vacant, in an ebullient and united show of force.

Actors' union SAG-AFTRA congratulated the WGA, praising the "incredible strength, resiliency and solidarity on the picket lines".

"While we look forward to reviewing the WGA and AMPTP's tentative agreement, we remain committed to achieving the necessary terms for our members," it said.

Negotiations between studios and writers had been moribund for weeks until a new sense of urgency appeared to have been injected into the process in the last few days, with the heads of Netflix, Disney, Universal and Warner Bros Discovery personally attending the talks.

Among their demands, writers say their salaries have not kept up with inflation, and that the rise of streaming has diminished the "residuals" they earn when a show they work on becomes a smash hit.

Studios had offered greater transparency in streaming audience numbers, while stopping short of offering to revise the way residual payments are calculated.

Writers have also demanded curbs on the use of AI, which they fear could be used to partially replace them in generating future films or show scripts, and therefore further undercut their pay.

The Financial Times reported Milken Institute research at the start of September that put the cost of the current Hollywood standstill at $5 billion.

At 146 days, the WGA strike is significantly longer than the writers' 2007-08 walkout — which lasted 100 days and cost the California economy $2.1 billion.

Even if the writers deal is finalised, the actors' strike would continue.

There have been no known contract talks between the studios and the actors' 160,000-strong SAG-AFTRA guild since that strike began.

But the two unions share many similar demands, and insiders say that a WGA deal could help to pave the way for a resolution to the actors' strike.

"We remain on strike in our TV/Theatrical contract and continue to urge the studio and streamer CEOs and the AMPTP to return to the table and make the fair deal that our members deserve and demand," SAG-AFTRA said.

 

Turning problems into opportunities

By , - Sep 24,2023 - Last updated at Sep 25,2023

I highly recommend you give it a try no matter what age you are, especially on the days when bad weather forces you to stay indoors. 

You may wonder how good a workout can be if it only lasts 23-25 minutes. Do the workouts and you’ll see what I mean! Pahla also incorporates cardio, strength and balance training. 

The older I get, the more I appreciate the importance of working on balance. It will help you manoeuver safely without injuring yourself while doing daily functions. The strength you will gain in your core and in your balance will be the greatest gift you could ever give yourself. 

Pahla also has a positive way of motivating you during the workouts and who doesn’t need that encouragement! It’s like having your own private fitness coach meet you right at your home but without getting their bills!

Her words of wisdom still buzz in my ears: It’s almost impossible to solve a problem if you’re viewing it as a problem. Your odds of solving any difficult issue goes up when you can mentally refocus and view it as an opportunity instead of a problem. It will automatically make you more curious to look at the different aspects of your challenges. This helps you learn to enjoy the journey and the growth you’ll experience as you try to solve things in a creative and positive way.

 With that in mind, let’s challenge ourselves as desperate dieters to view our food and exercise challenges as opportunities. Opportunities to learn more about our specific situations that are constantly evolving. 

As a simple example, losing weight in our 20’s 30’s and 40’s looks very different from losing it in our 50’s and older. Hence, we must turn into curious detectives to maximise our successes and minimise our failures. 

Let’s subtract negative thinking from that equation and learn to thrive in an absolutely healthy and positive environment that we can create for ourselves.

 Friends, it all starts one step at a time with one positive and helpful thought at a time.

 Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

 

Lachlan Murdoch, the choice of continuity

By - Sep 23,2023 - Last updated at Sep 23,2023

People walk by the News Corp. headquarters in midtown Manhattan on Thursday in New York City (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — Lachlan Murdoch, the heir of the sprawling media empire whose politics skew as conservative as his father Rupert's, is set to take over the family business in November, the choice of continuity.

Lachlan is already president of Fox Corporation, parent company of the Fox News cable television channel, and was long the favourite against his brother James to succeed the family patriarch.

"Lachlan is reportedly the more conservative son of the two, James has more progressive politics," said Reece Peck, New York University professor and author of "Fox Populism", a book about the channel, which is a favourite among American conservatives and the crown jewel of the Murdoch empire.

As the next US presidential election looms — a contest that promises to be a rollercoaster, with Donald Trump leading as the Republican favourite despite multiple indictments — "it would make sense" to choose Lachlan Murdoch, said Peck.

Fox likely aims to "keep their audience strategy, which is an audience that's hungry for conservative partisan content", the analyst told AFP.

"At the end of the day, Fox is a victim of its own success — it cultivated this demand for partisan conservative content," Peck said.

"And now it has this fully formed market and audience that wants that."

 

Fox Corporation CEO 

 

At 52, Lachlan Murdoch appeared the natural successor ahead of his adult siblings James, Prudence and Elisabeth.

Even before his appointment announced Thursday, Lachlan was already the CEO of Fox Corporation, a position he's held since 2019, and chairman of News Corp., the global publishing and media group with a major presence in North America, Australia and Britain.

Under the scion's leadership, Fox Corporation notably purchased Tubi — the free streaming platform with ads, which has allowed Fox to keep its advertising revenue level — for $440 million in 2020.

But recent years were also rife with controversy: Lachlan had an operational role in 2020 during the presidential election, when Fox News both echoed and espoused false allegations of a rigged vote robbing Trump of a second White House term.

The theory culminated in the violent invasion of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, when backers of the former president attempted to stage an insurrection.

In April, Fox News agreed to pay a $787.5 million settlement in a defamation case brought by voting machine maker Dominion. It alleged that the network knowingly and repeatedly promoted Trump's false narrative that the voting machines were part of a conspiracy to rob him of victory against Joe Biden.

Up and down 

 

Lachlan Murdoch was born in 1971 in London but grew up in the United States, where he attended elite schools in Colorado's Aspen and in New York.

With looks to match his prep-school pedigree, he graduated from the Ivy League's Princeton University where he studied philosophy.

But his journey within the family company was rocky.

His father gave him an early leg up by entrusting Lachlan with newspapers in Australia, a path to rise up within News Corp.

The first-born son encouraged investments in the Australian telecoms group One. Tel, which eventually went bankrupt, as well as in a digital real estate advertising company, REA Group, which is now flourishing.

While based in the United States, Lachlan splintered off from News Corp in 2005, a departure precipitated by quarrels with the late Roger Ailes, who was an ultra-conservative power player at Fox News.

Lachlan retreated to Australia, where he still often resides, with his wife Sarah, a model and TV presenter with whom he has three children.

During this period he founded the investment company Illyria Pty.

The eldest boy returned a decade later at the request of his magnate father, as the Murdoch empire was faltering over the infamous phone hacking scandal involving the now-defunct British tabloid News of the World.

Lachlan took over as head of Fox Corporation in 2019, though the empire was thinned after the sale of 21st Century Fox, including studios and catalog of films, to Disney for $66 billion.

Lachlan's rise comes with the departure of his brother James, who resigned from News Corp in July 2020 and who has criticised editorial and strategic decisions, particularly at Fox News.

But even if Lachlan Murdoch takes charge, the succession battle isn't finished.

Many observers have noted that the eventual death of the patriarch will reshuffle the deck, because each of Rupert's first four children will have equal voting rights within the company.

All BTS members renew contracts with HYBE — agency

By - Sep 22,2023 - Last updated at Sep 22,2023

A mural in Goyang depicts BTS member RM. The K-pop juggernaut are on 'hiatus' due to members doing military service but all have renewed their contract (AFP photo)

SEOUL — All seven members of K-pop sensation BTS have renewed their contracts with agency HYBE, the company said on Wednesday, with the group currently on "hiatus" as some of them perform South Korea's mandatory military service.

Since their debut in 2013, BTS have been credited with generating billions of dollars for their country, as well as boosting the image and soft power of South Korea — now a global cultural powerhouse.

The K-pop juggernaut announced a "hiatus" from group activities last year and two members are currently undertaking their some 18 months of military duty.

Local reports have said the band could reunite around 2025, when all of its seven members will have completed their service in the army.

"Our company has completed the Board of Directors' resolution to renew the exclusive contracts of seven BTS members," the band's agency, HYBE, said in a regulatory filing on Wednesday.

"This fact was judged to be a management matter that could affect the company's financial status and investor decision-making, and was therefore disclosed," it added.

Since their debut 10 years ago, the band had previously renewed their contracts with HYBE in 2018, which would have expired in 2024.

The company did not disclose details of how long the new contracts were or when they would expire, but the latest announcement indicates that all seven members of the group will likely remain with the label even after they have completed their military service.

Some male K-pop stars have faced challenges in resuming their careers after fulfilling their duties, in an intensely competitive industry where artists can be easily replaced.

In March, Bang Si-hyuk, chairman of HYBE and the mastermind behind BTS, said making BTS do their military service was slowing the global growth of K-pop.

All able-bodied men in South Korea must serve at least 18 months in the military and, after a years-long debate about whether BTS deserved an exemption, Jin, the oldest member of the group, enlisted last year.

His bandmate J-Hope started his mandatory service in April.

A third member, SUGA, will begin his service on Friday.

HYBE shares closed down 0.82 per cent in Seoul on Wednesday.

K-pop contract renewals can be complex, with shares of BLACKPINK's agency YG Entertainment tumbling last week, after local media reports claimed member Lisa had rejected a renewal offer.

They subsequently bounced back, although the agency has yet to announce details of new contracts for BLACKPINK — one of K-pop's most successful girl groups.

 

All eyes on Gucci as Milan Fashion Week opens

By - Sep 20,2023 - Last updated at Sep 20,2023

A model walks the runway at the Fendi fashion show during the Milan Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2024 on Wednesday in Milan (AFP photo by Gabriel Bouys)

MILAN — Milan Fashion Week opened Wednesday, kicking off six days of shows by the top names in Italian fashion with expectations high for the debut by Gucci’s new creative director.

Almost 70 catwalk shows are scheduled in the northern Italian city, with Fendi, Prada, Versace, Dolce & Gabbana, Bottega Veneta and Giorgio Armani among those showing their women’s spring-summer 2024 collections.

The hottest ticket in town is Friday’s Gucci show, the first under new artistic director Sabato De Sarno.

The Italian, who previously supervised the men’s and women’s collections at Valentino, was named in January to replace star designer Alessandro Michele.

The legendary brand, owned by French luxury group Kering, has also seen the departure of long-time chief executive Marco Bizzarri this year as it grapples with stagnating sales.

There are other new faces this week, with Tom Ford making its Milan debut under the leadership of Peter Hawkings and Simone Bellotti’s first collection as design director at Bally.

First up was Fendi, with a collection that mixed utility and comfort, pragmatism and playfulness, with masculine tailoring combined with more fluid silks and knits in a palette dominated by orange, brown, yellow and grey.

Artistic director Kim Jones said he was inspired by “women who dress for themselves and their own lives... it’s not about being something, but being someone”.

Off the catwalk, 76 presentations and 33 events are planned, including Moschino’s 40th birthday celebrations.

Moncler, known for its puffer jackets, was presenting Wednesday its new collection in collaboration with musician turned designer Pharrell Williams, who made his debut for Louis Vuitton in Paris in June.

And Diesel was repeating an initiative trialled with success last year, with a show Wednesday to which ordinary members of the public were able to obtain tickets.

According to data from Italy’s national fashion chamber, industry sales were up seven per cent over the first six months of 2023.

“We estimate annual sales to increase by 4.5 per cent compared to 2022, at more than 103 billion euros ($110 billion),” said chamber president Carlo Capasa.

Exports are forecast to be up 6 per cent over the year. Between January and May, exports to China and Japan were up more than 18 percent.

Matteo Zoppas, head of Italy’s trade and investment agency, said the “Made in Italy” brand remained strong.

“Compared to general growth in Italian exports of 4.8 per cent in the first five months of 2023, fashion exports rose 7.4 per cent in the same period — and female fashion was up 11.4 per cent,” he said in a statement.

 

Taylor Swift, Beyonce reporting jobs trigger controversy

By - Sep 19,2023 - Last updated at Sep 19,2023

This combination of file photos created on Monday shows US singer-songwriter Beyonce arriving for the world premiere of Disney’s ‘The Lion King’ at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California, on July 9, 2019, and US singer-songwriter Taylor Swift arriving for the MTV Video Music Awards at the Prudential Centre in Newark, New Jersey, on September 12 (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — It’s rare for a news outlet to dedicate a reporter to one personality, but the publication USA Today has decided Taylor Swift and Beyonce are phenomena requiring their own beats.

The recent announcement by Gannett, which owns USA Today, that it was seeking two journalists to cover the biggest names in music as if they were running for president triggered both excitement and eyerolls — and broader conversation about coverage priorities in an increasingly fragmented and financially precarious news media environment.

Gannett, which owns more than 200 daily newspapers, has slashed jobs across local markets over the past several years, laying off six percent of its news division in December.

So news of the Tay and Bey positions struck a nerve.

“I suppose now is a good time to remind Twitter that I’m the only full-time news reporter left at my newspaper that was sold by Gannett in December,” said Brad Vidmar on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

Vidmar, 41, works for The Hawk Eye, a newspaper in Burlington, Iowa that GateHouse, an investment firm-run publishing company, purchased in late 2016.

In 2019 GateHouse acquired Gannett and took its name, becoming the largest newspaper company in the nation — and one with a reputation for scooping newspapers before curtailing their resources.

Gannett resold The Hawk Eye to a family-owned media company in late 2022 — its staff a skeleton of what it once was.

“They just kept cutting and cutting and cutting staff all across the board,” Vidmar told AFP. “What you saw was a situation where there are less reporters, reporters forced to take on multiple beats.”

Losing local content meant filling the paper with wire stories or stories from the broader USA Today network, he explained.

Vidmar said Gannett’s announcement of the Swift job made “my eyes roll”.

“They’ve been downsizing newsrooms for years now, but of course they need somebody dedicated to covering Taylor Swift,” he said.

‘Shaping a generation’ 

 

Gannett said the new positions will be employed by USA Today and The Tennessean, the company’s Nashville-based paper.

The aim of the new jobs — which are in addition to three music reporters The Tennessean now employs — will be to “capture the excitement around Swift’s ongoing tour... while also providing thoughtful analysis of her music and career”, Gannett said. Another position is aimed at similarly analysing Beyonce’s impact.

The NewsGuild’s New York branch was sceptical, writing on X: “Gannett’s strategy to be profitable again: 1) Lay off hundreds of reporters 2) Destroy local news coverage 3) Hire a Taylor Swift reporter”.

Lark-Marie Anton, Gannett’s chief communications officer, said in a statement to AFP that “these roles do not come at the expense of other jobs”, noting that in Gannett’s bid to “grow our audience” the company has hired 225 journalists since March and has more than 100 open roles.

“Taylor Swift and Beyonce Knowles-Carter are artists and businesswomen. Their work has tremendous economic impact and societal significance influencing multiple industries and our culture — they are shaping a generation,” Anton said.

 

Under pressure 

 

Robert Thompson, a media scholar at Syracuse University, said his initial reaction to the new jobs was questioning whether “this is a joke”.

But he said after more reflection “I think it would be silly to categorically dismiss this... There are so few things that everybody really kind of knows whether they’re fans or not, and Beyonce and Taylor Swift are some of the very rare ones.”

The jobs have the potential to allow for “really insightful ways to tell the story of 21st-century America through the lens of its most popular personages”, he said.

On the other hand, Thompson acknowledged that negative reaction to the new jobs in light of dwindling local news coverage is reasonable.

“If you were to get a bunch of people together and say, ‘We’ve got X number of dollars, how should they be spent?’ Most of them would probably not say the Taylor Swift beat,” he said.

“But that doesn’t mean that separate from that context there can’t be some really good things to come of it.”

If performed correctly, the new jobs are not necessarily the “dream” careers some headlines have touted them as, he said.

The fan bases for both Swift and Beyonce are notoriously defensive — music critics who make even the slightest negative comment about their idols can be doxxed or receive death threats.

And along with the “organized wrath” of Swifties and the Beyhive, the worlds these artists have curated are famously guarded.

Plus, Thompson noted, “the eyes of the profession are going to be on these poor folks when they finally get hired”.

“That first piece that they file — it better be really good.”

 

Changan Benni E-Star: Urban EV quickly gaining ground

By - Sep 18,2023 - Last updated at Sep 19,2023

A small, affordable and practical EV city car that is comparatively light and enjoys better than average claimed 301km driving range, it was all but certain that the Changan Benni E-Star would prove a hit in the Jordanian market. A freshened up face-lift in its Chinese home market, the E-Star was first launched locally in 2021 and has been steadily gaining ground, with a noticeable bump in its presence during the last year or so, where its small dimensions makes maneuverable, user-friendly and easy to park on busy Amman roads. 

An updated incarnation of the Benni EV, the E-Star carries both a new name and playfully, yet decidedly, more assertive styling. With a revised front bumper incorporating huge sculpted faux side intakes with wavy bright green gill-like accents and a jutting lower lip, the E-Star also receives a more scowling boomerang-style headlight signature. More purposeful looking than typical for small, tall and narrow city cars, it gains sharply sculpted surfacing, rising waistline, descending roofline and new 5-spoke 15-inch alloy wheels, shark fin style aerial and tailgate spoiler to further emphasise a sportier aesthetic.

 

Pulling potential

 

Situated low behind its textured grille-like front panel but cooled through a wide lower intake, the E-Star’s compact electric motor lends itself to a lower centre of gravity, and is powered by 32.2kWh capacity lithium-ion battery system, which is also mounted low and under the boot at the rear. Producing 74BHP and 125lb/ft torque, the E-Star’s motor drives the front wheels through a single-speed automatic gearbox, with much of its comparatively generous torque output available almost instantly, for confident acceleration from standstill and good responsiveness at low city speeds.

Responsive in urban driving owing to its big torque bias, the E-Star is confident on inclines and when overtaking, if not outright quick, like a hot hatch. Pulling through 0-50km/h in 4.7-seconds, its rate of acceleration is reasonably robust, but with only one gear ratio, it begins to somewhat trail off around 80km/h, as wind resistance becomes a bigger factor. Adequately powered for city driving in its default “D” driving mode, the E-Star however yields its full performance potential in “S” mode, as accessed through an electronic rotary selector.

 

Responsive yet grounded

 

A nippy city car with “S” mode engaged for better power output and more responsive performance — if at the cost of driving range and energy conservation — the E-Star can meanwhile achieve an estimated 130km/h top speed. Driving in near silence, the E-Star however feature an artificial driving sound mode, to alert pedestrians. A byproduct of its synthetic supercharger-like whine is that the E-Star feels more engaging and instinctive to drive as its acoustics rise and becomes more intense to better communicate an increase in power, speed and effort.

Quick to charge through 30-80 per cent when using a high capacity non-domestic charger – where available – but not nearly as convenient as combustion vehicles’ swift refueling time, the E-Star’s standard 0-80 per cent charging time is expectedly longer at eight-hours, 35-minutes. Lightweight by EV standards at 1,180kg, the E-Star is nevertheless somewhat heavier than similar combustion cars. That said, its low centre of gravity reduces body lean despite its tall and narrow dimensions, and lends itself to a grounded ride quality, when not bobbing up and down over lumps and bumps due to a short wheelbase.

 

Fresh and fun

 

Like most EVs, the E-Star requires one to ease, rather than lift, off the accelerator to coast, given its automatically engaging kinetic energy regenerative brakes. Otherwise, it drives with similarly fun adjustability, responsiveness and nimbleness as class contemporaries. Small, agile and manoeuvrable through city streets, tight corners and narrow roads, it parks easily in tight spaces with little need for cameras or sensors. Light and quick, its steering is aided by tall and narrow 175/60R15 to add some measure of road feel, and which also improve ride compliance, durability and running costs.

User-friendly drive with a forgiving ride, the E-Star dispatches imperfections easily and is reassuring and reasonably settled and stable for its class. With good visibility and driving position, it feels alert and more involving than many EVs. Cabin ambiance is fresh and modern, with contrasting glossy black and white panels, green outline accents, touch activated functions, sporty contoured flat bottom steering wheel, and dual instrument and infotainment screen panels. Small, practical and economical, it features generous front headroom, reasonably accommodating rear space, split folding rear seats and 150-litres minimum luggage volume

SPECIFICATIONS

  • Engine: Front-mounted electric motor
  • Battery, capacity: Lithium-ion, 32.2kWh
  • Gearbox: 1-speed automatic, front-wheel-drive
  • Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 74 (75) [55]
  • Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 125 (170)
  • 0-50km/h: 4.7-seconds
  • Top speed: 130km/h (estimate)
  • Range: 301km
  • Charging time (0-80%), 240V at 13.6A / 10.7A: 8h, 35m / 11h, 30m
  • High capacity fat charging (30-80%): 30-minutes
  • Length: 3,770mm
  • Width: 1,650mm
  • Height: 1,570mm
  • Wheelbase: 2,410mm
  • Loading height: 136.5mm
  • Luggage volume, minimum: approximately 150-litres (estimate)
  • Kerb weight: 1,180kg 
  • Steering: Electric-assisted rack & pinion
  • Suspension: MacPherson struts, / torsion beam
  • Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs / discs, regenerative
  • Tyres: 175/60R15

Boosting Brain Development

By , - Sep 17,2023 - Last updated at Sep 17,2023

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

By Dina Halaseh,
Educational Psychologist

Many parents think the newborn stage is the hardest stage of parenting, while others tend

to believe the toddler years are much more challenging. Last year, as our son Sanad turned

one, I shared with you some of the practices I focused on to help promote his intelligence.

Turning two!

You may already know that 90 per cent of your child’s brain development occurs by the age of five years. This is the time of significant wiring and growth that

maps out your child’s brain for life. 

This shows us the importance of including brain promoting activities and practices.

During the second year of life we seehuge jumps in what a child can do, a 22-month-old is definitely capable of more than a 13-month-old which gives us a wide range of things to cover.

A pruning process

As your child grows, a pruning process occurs that helps us understand the importance of experiences and the environment, and the role they play in the development of young brains.

At three, your child’s brain has approximately 1,000 trillion connections, or synapses. Once a teenager, the pruning process results in almost half or 500 trillion synapses, which are carried into adulthood.

Your child’s experiences and relationships during the early years are what continuously grow the brain and construct the neural circuits. Positive early childhood experiences lead to optimal brain development, which serve as the basis for other skills and abilities children require for academic and life successes.

A healthy environment

In our “turning one” article we mentioned safety, building secure attachments with parents, lowering stress and its negative long-term effects on the brain, keeping up with good sleep habits, food intake and exposing your child to fresh air. As hard as it sounds, these all are still important and applicable for our second year.

We also mentioned keeping your child’s brain stimulated. This may look different in the second year, but the main idea remains the same. Keeping your

child’s brain stimulated might even look different during the span of the year.

At this point, as parents, you can try building blocks, puzzles, role play, songs and movement, sorting shapes and colours, counting and introducing numbers, giving them independence and instructions, drawing and play-dough.

Keep your child active with an activity where your child repeats the skill until it is mastered is key!

The important thing is to keep your child mentally active and spending time building skills and exploring new ones too!

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

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