Tag Archives: asked

Jennifer Love Hewitt recalls being asked ‘gross’ questions about her body as a young actress

Jennifer Love Hewitt says Framing Britney Spears made her reflect on “incredibly inappropriate” and “gross” questions she was asked by the media as a young star.

Hewitt, 42, was one of the biggest stars in the nineties and aughts, known for both acting and singing — but significant interest was also paid to her appearance and her relationships. That was certainly amped up by her ex John Mayer’s 2002’s hit “Your Body Is a Wonderland,” which she reportedly inspired. In an interview with Vulture, she was asked about the leering in the media about her body.

Jennifer Love Hewittt (Photo by Steve Granitz/WireImage)

“It’s interesting, I just watched the Britney Spears documentary, and there’s that whole section in there talking about her breasts,” Hewitt said, referring to part of a resurfaced interview with a 17-year-old Spears that was in the New York Times doc. “At the time that I was going through it, and interviewers were asking what now would be incredibly inappropriate, gross things, it didn’t feel that way. I mean, I was in barely any clothing the whole movie. For some reason, in my brain, I was able to just go: OK, well, I guess they wouldn’t be asking if it was inappropriate.”

But now a “42-year-old woman with a daughter,” Hewitt, who shares two children with actor Brian Hallisay, said, “I definitely look back on it and go, Ew. And it really started with [1997’s] I Know What You Did Last Summer, because that was the first time that I had worn a low top, and on Party of Five,” the TV show she was on from 1995 to 1999, “my body was very covered. At a press junket for I Know or [1998’s] I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, I remember purposely wearing a T-shirt that said ‘silicone free’ on it because I was so annoyed, and I knew something about boobs was gonna be the first question out of [reporters’] mouths.”

Hewitt continued, “I was really tired of that conversation. With [2001’s] Heartbreakers, that was a big part of it. I was disappointed that it was all about body stuff, because I had really worked hard in that movie to do a good job as an actress. So I remember one specific moment wishing that the acting had overshadowed all that — that for five minutes, they had said I was really great in the movie versus made a body comment. Now that I’m older, I think: Gosh, I wish that I had known how inappropriate that was so I could have defended myself somehow or just not answered those questions. I laughed it off a lot of the time, and I wish maybe I hadn’t.”

Hewitt — who, like Spears, started out on the Disney Channel— said for “a very long time in my career” the narrative about her was “always about [my body] first,” then they’d add, “’Oh yeah, you were really great in the movie, too,” later.” She said she “didn’t get it” when “that’s just what I looked like, and I was doing my job.”

And she recalled mentally preparing for interviews knowing that would be the narrative.

“I know I’m doing an interview today, so I’m pretty sure at least 20 of the 40 minutes is going to be about boobs and body stuff, so we’ll just get that out of the way and then maybe they’ll ask me something else,” she recalled thinking. “When I watched that Britney Spears documentary, it hurt my heart a little bit, because I remember in hindsight having that feeling. I’m really grateful that we’re in a time where, hopefully, that narrative is going to change for young girls who are coming up now, and they won’t have to have those conversations.”

The narrative about Hewitt’s body was fueled by Mayer’s hit song about sleeping with someone with “candy lips” and a “bubblegum tongue.” The couple briefly dated the year it came out, so Hewitt was pegged as the inspiration — which she has been denying for nearly 20 years. For his part, Mayer said it was about a teenage girlfriend.

Framing Britney Spears, which came out in February, looked at the mistreatment Spears faced in her rise to fame in the same era as Hewitt — the 1990s and 2000s. Spears also faced prying questions about her sex life (and jokes about taking her virginity when she was still underage), and after her breakup with Justin Timberlake in 2002, he bragged about having sex with her during a radio interview. (He recently apologized.) Spears was a tabloid fixture, making her a constant target of paparazzi. With that circus plaguing her on top of a divorce and custody battle with her ex, her life spiraled out of control, culminating in back-to-back involuntary hospitalizations in 2008. That was the year her controversial conservatorship was first put in place.

Fellow Mayer ex Jessica Simpson, who also found pop and reality stardom in that same era, said last week that she wouldn’t be watching Framing Britney Spears because she “lived it” and feels it would be too triggering.

Read more from Yahoo Entertainment:



Read original article here

Former top Capitol riot prosecutor says ‘maybe the President is culpable’ when asked about Trump

Michael Sherwin, the former acting DC US attorney, also said he believes sedition could be a charge made against some Capitol riot defendants.

“It’s unequivocal that Trump was the magnet that brought the people to DC on the 6th,” Sherwin said in response to a question from “60 Minutes” about whether Trump is part of the investigation. “We have soccer moms from Ohio that were arrested saying, ‘Well, I did this because my president said I had to take back our house.’ That moves the needle towards that direction. Maybe the President is culpable for those actions.”

Sherwin noted that other rioters have acknowledged they went further than the President’s speech.

Sherwin’s candid comments come as he leaves his Justice Department post leading the Washington, DC prosecutors’ office and its sprawling investigation into violence at the Capitol. He was appointed to the job during the Trump administration. Attorney General Merrick Garland and Sherwin’s successor, acting US Attorney for DC Channing Phillips, have not directly addressed whether Trump will be investigated.

When CBS’ Scott Pelley followed up to ask Sherwin if investigators were looking into Trump’s role, Sherwin responded, “We have people looking at everything, correct. Everything’s being looked at.”

No public officials have been charged with crimes related to the Capitol riot investigation, and prosecutors have focused so far on bringing criminal cases against rioters who breached the Capitol grounds and against members of extremist groups who are alleged to have coordinated before the attack. Several of the defendants have pointed fingers in court at the former President, saying they believed his accusations of election fraud and responded to his call to come to Washington and march to the Capitol to oppose Congress’ certification of the election results.

There’s no indication a formal criminal investigation has been opened against Trump.

The ex-President, through a spokesman, has denied responsibility.

Sherwin didn’t answer when asked why sedition isn’t alleged yet in any of the more than 300 federal criminal cases.

“I personally believe the evidence is trending towards that, and probably meets those elements,” Sherwin said. “I believe the facts do support those charges. And I think that, as we go forward, more facts will support that.”

Sherwin has been saying for weeks that federal investigators were looking at bringing possible conspiracy and sedition cases.
CNN previously reported federal prosecutors have recommended sedition charges, but the move is awaiting approval from senior officials at Justice Department headquarters.

Some of the riot defendants already face conspiracy indictments approved by a federal grand jury.

While conspiracy charges in court would allege coordination between defendants, sedition is a more specific criminal law — similar to treason or rebellion — that is meant to respond to attempts to overthrow the US government. It carries a longer maximum possible sentence than conspiracy.

This story has been updated with additional details from the interview.

Read original article here

A Virginia restaurant is giving away free meals, no questions asked

Last year, they carried the restaurant through the darkest days of the pandemic with donations. Now, they’re carrying each other — with donated meals.

The restaurant, a nearly 16-year staple in Norfolk, Virginia, has begun a free meal initiative to feed the community with meal donations from customers.

Anyone who needs a meal can go to the restaurant, pull a ticket off the “Franks for Friends” bulletin board and exchange it for a menu item.

“Maybe Covid hit them really hard, or they’re in between jobs — or maybe they’re taking a meal for their neighbor,” Tarah Morris, the owner of Perfectly Frank, told CNN. “We don’t ask any questions.”

The initiative began and grew quickly

The idea for “Franks for Friends” began with a single donation.

After reopening the restaurant to in-person dining, Morris said community donations decreased as people felt a sense of normalcy.

But her staff — mainly college students from Old Dominion University — were struggling to make ends meet.

A friend and longtime customer donated $2,000 to the restaurant, asking that $100 went to each staff member and the rest went to feeding the community. With $700 left over, Morris began to give away free meals.

The initiative evolved quickly. Customers began donating, too. A bulletin board was put up. A clipboard was designated.

“I had no idea that was going to happen,” Morris said. “We began collecting meals faster than we were giving them away.”

Morris said approximately five people claim meals per day — a number that barely scrapes the amount that’s available. To get more meals out, Morris’ staff prepares bulk orders for local after-school programs twice a week.

In the restaurant, she tries to keep the meals on the bulletin board different.

Hot dogs, salads and melts populate Perfectly Frank’s extensive menu — but cheeseburgers are the most popular items.

Free meal customers take their ticket to the register to redeem it, where they can customize their order and choose a drink.

‘It’s not even about the money’

Morris said she is getting calls, emails and letters from people across the US who want to support “Franks for Friends.”

One email from Miami, Florida, stood out to her.

“He said, ‘I don’t have much money — I’m actually broke — but I saw your story …’ and he was so filled with joy to know that there are good people out there doing good things in this chaos,” Morris said.

The man later called to donate a meal — $10 — but his card got declined.

The Perfectly Frank’s employee who was on the phone with him put in her card details, donating $20 in his name.

“That story was the most touching and it only involved $20,” Morris said. “It’s not even about the money. It’s about people doing nice things for somebody.”

There’s no end in sight

Morris said that the surplus of donated meals is so large, she can’t foresee an end.

“I’m hoping it goes on forever,” she said. “At the rate the donations are coming in, I feel like it’ll never stop.”

Morris said she hopes to partner with more local organizations to give away bulk meals. But for now, she said everything that’s happened has been a much needed lift in spirits.

“Coming off of Covid and all the hardships — we didn’t know if we were even going to make it,” she said. “We went from ground zero to as high as you can go. It’s been very uplifting, very humbling. We know we’re going to be OK.”

Morris said Perfectly Frank has given away over 100 meals so far. She doesn’t think they’ll run out anytime soon.

Read original article here

Texas police handcuff maskless woman who asked: ‘What are you going to do, arrest me?’ | US news

An arrest warrant was issued for a woman who refused to wear a mask at a Texas bank, saying to a police officer: “What are you going to do, arrest me?”

Police issued a warrant for the arrest of Terry Wright, 65, of Grants Pass, Oregon. The incident on Thursday at a Bank of America in Galveston was captured by the officer’s body camera, the Galveston County Daily News reported.

Police said they had obtained an arrest warrant on resisting arrest and criminal trespassing charges.

Greg Abbott, the Texas governor, has ended statewide orders requiring people to wear face masks in public places, declaring businesses should decide for themselves what Covid-19 precautions to take on their properties. Many businesses have kept their own mask rules in place.

Police said a bank manager called police after Wright refused to wear a mask while inside, and then refused to leave the building when asked.

The police department released the officer’s body camera video footage. In the video, Wright can be seen standing in the middle of the bank’s lobby, surrounded by other customers, all of whom are wearing masks.

Wright told the officer she had come to the bank to make a withdrawal. The officer asked her to go outside or put on a mask. She refused.

“What are you going to do, arrest me?” she asked.

He replied: “Yes, for intruding on premises.”

She said: “That’s hilarious.”

Wright told the officer the law said she didn’t have to wear a mask. As the officer took out handcuffs, she pulled away and began to walk toward the door. The officer stopped her and forced her to the ground. After she was handcuffed, she complained her foot was injured.

“Police brutality right here people,” she said. Replies of “no” and “no, it’s not” could be heard.

Police said Wright suffered minor injuries during the struggle and was taken to a hospital for treatment.

Wright told the Washington Post she has never covered her face inside stores, even when the statewide mandate was in place. She said she lives in an RV park across the bay from Galveston in Hitchcock, Texas.

She told the newspaper she was “attacked” and compared mask requirements to the way that Nazi Germany forced Jewish people to identify themselves with a Star of David.

She also said she believed in a “plandemic” in a reference to a documentary-style video in which an anti-vaccine activist promotes a string of questionable, false and potentially dangerous coronavirus theories.

Read original article here

Man With Prosthetic Leg Asked Why He Parked in Handicap Spot

Read original article here

Ask Amy: Aunt annoyed at friend who had sex with her teenage niece after she asked him not to

Dear Amy. Last summer my niece come to stay with me. She was 18 at the time.

I could tell that one of my adult friends, “Stan,” was attracted to her, so I asked him not to have sex with her.

A few months later, my niece told me that Stan had had sex with her and that she didn’t like it and was uncomfortable with it. She asked me not to mention it to him. Finally, she told me that she had worked it out and that they had stopped.

I was annoyed with Stan because I had specifically asked him not to do this. He said it was unfair of me to ask him, since she was not a minor.

I told him it would have been better if he had spoken to me about it instead of me having to find out about it from my niece, who is upset about it.

It has really affected our relationship, and I’m not sure if it can be repaired.

Stan says that if he had to do it over again, he would do the same, even though I had asked him not to.

– Angry Aunt

Dear Angry: Your tone conveys a sense of ownership, rather than concern, regarding this teenager.

You are not your niece’s sexual gatekeeper. On the other hand, you cast your friend as a predator, and your concern obviously has been well-placed. But shouldn’t you have talked to your niece about this in advance, instead of wasting your breath on him?

Your attention should now be focused entirely on your niece’s well-being. She is quite obviously (and understandably) confused about the nature of this sexual relationship. Is she OK? Is this OK? She might not know, and rather than you dictating to her, you should be as nonjudgmental as possible, so she will feel comfortable talking with you about it.

Accompany her to a health clinic to make sure she has birth control counseling and STD tests.

Talk to her about consent. She has the right to decide what she wants to do, sexually. If she doesn’t consent, her choice must be respected, and if she didn’t consent to whatever transpired last summer, then she has the right to go to the police.

In terms of possibly repairing your relationship with “Stan,” I can’t imagine why you would want to. Even if – strictly speaking – his behavior wasn’t illegal, unethical, or even any of your business – if you don’t like hanging out with an unrepentant horn dog, then there is no reason to maintain the friendship.

Dear Amy: I am 74-year-old happily married woman.

My three adult daughters went in on a birthday gift for me, and what they chose was a (sex toy) vibrator!

I never indicated a need for this, and I am both shocked and insulted. So is my husband.

How should I react to this? The cat “Stanley” likes it and purrs when I place it on his side.

– Upset Mom

Dear Upset: You should contact your daughters, as a group, and ask an open-ended question: “Ladies: What were you thinking? What’s this about?”

They may respond, “Oh, Mom, get it together – it was a joke!” To which you can say, “Really? Please explain to me exactly what the joke is here, because I’m not getting it. On the other hand, it seems to be working for Stanley. He’s never been happier.”

Attach a video of the cat with his new sex toy, which should help to make your point, leavened with some humor.

Dear Amy: My friend and her family help me out with projects around my house.

Recently her husband has developed “wandering hands.”

I give everyone a hug and thank them before they leave, and he has started grabbing my backside when I hug him. I’m disgusted by this. It makes me angry and uncomfortable. I’ve told him numerous times to stop and have threatened to tell his wife.

He says I won’t. It’s a sticky situation, as his wife is ill and I can’t imagine adding more to her already full plate.

I’m also afraid she won’t believe me and that it will be the end of our friendship.

I’ve never given him any reason to believe that I’m even remotely interested in him. How do I stop this unwelcome behavior and maintain my friendship?

– Upset

Dear Upset: Hire someone else to help around the house. Keep your distance from this man.

If he does this again, call him out immediately and in front of others.

You can email Amy Dickinson at askamy@amydickinson.com or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068.

Read original article here

What Gisele Bündchen asked Tom Brady after he won Super Bowl 2021

There was more to Tom Brady’s post-Super Bowl embrace with wife Gisele Bündchen in Tampa Bay last month.

During an appearance Tuesday on “The Late Late Show with James Corden,” Brady — now the owner of seven Super Bowl titles — spoke about the moments after his Tampa Bay Buccaneers topped the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl 2021.

“I was looking for my family,” the 43-year-old quarterback recalled. “All the sudden I see my oldest son [Jack] run over to me, ‘Dad!’ you know, and I gave a big hug. I saw my two little ones [daughter Vivian and son Benjamin], and then all of the sudden I saw my wife, and I gave her a big hug.”

Brady said his wife of 12 years then asked him: “What more do you have to prove?”

“I was trying to figure out a way to change the subject really quick,” Brady said of his response. “I think I moved on to something else pretty quickly.”

Following Brady’s first Super Bowl win with his new team, Bündchen posted a family photo to Instagram that featured their two children, Vivian, 8, and Benjamin, 10, and 13-year-old Jack, whom Brady shares with his ex, Bridget Moynahan.

“Congratulations my love! Over the years I have seen you overcome so much adversity, physically and emotionally. I can for sure say you are the most dedicated, focused and mentally tough person I have ever meet,” Bündchen, 40, posted at the time.

“It has been a challenging year and watching you in a new environment, putting in the extra time to get to know and support your teammates, working with your new coaches with respect and grace, waking up extra early every day to deal with the bumps and bruises of playing football, never complaining, you just kept focusing on your goal to go out there and be the best leader you can be.”

Tom Brady with wife Gisele Bündchen following the Buccaneers’ 2021 Super Bowl win.
Getty Images

Bündchen has broached the retirement subject before. After Brady led the Patriots to a Super Bowl comeback over the Falcons in 2017, Bündchen expressed concern over concussions in an interview with CBS.

“He had a concussion last year. He has concussions pretty much every …” she said, before cutting herself off. “I mean, we don’t talk about it. But he does have concussions. I don’t really think it’s a healthy thing for anybody to go through.”

While this is Brady’s first season in Tampa Bay following 20 seasons in New England, Bündchen was already convinced in late 2018 that any retirement chatter would go in his ear and out the other.

“I haven’t been very successful.” the Brazilian-born model told Saints fan Ellen DeGeneres at the time. “I want him to do whatever makes him happy.”

Last month, Brady said he will “definitely consider” playing past the age of 45. He turns 44 in August.



Read original article here

Priyanka Chopra says a director asked her to go under the knife, fix her ‘proportions’: ‘It’s so normalized’

Priyanka Chopra can still recall when a film director suggested she should undergo plastic surgery to launch a successful film career.

It was 2000 when the then-18-year-old took home the Miss World crown, immediately embarking on acting. And according to the now-38-year-old, the first person she met with insisted she should have a “boob job” and fix her “proportions.” Her then-manager agreed with the assessment.

Chopra revealed her experience in a new autobiography titled “Unfinished.”

“It’s so normalized that it doesn’t come up in conversation,” she told U.K.’s Metro on Monday. “I talked about a movie that I walked out of because of how I was spoken to by the director. It was early in my career, but I never told him why I walked out.

PRIYANKA CHOPRA DETAILS HOW SHE AND NICK JONAS STAY CONNECTED TO FAMILY DURING CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC

Miss World 2000 winner, Miss India, Priyanka Chopra, 18, during the Miss World contest at The Millennium Dome.
(Photo by Michael Crabtree – PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images)

“I never had the courage to stand up for myself, and actually admit it,” Chopra continued. “Because I heard so often, ‘Don’t be a nuisance, you’re new in the industry, you don’t want to have a reputation that you cause trouble or you’re not easy to work with.’ Now on the other side… I know that’s a normalized thing that girls hear so often.

“I fell for it too, even though I considered myself a forward-thinking, smart girl. I learned from that over time, but at that time, I was terrified. Yes, I faced that then, I faced that like everybody else when you’re in patriarchal industries, which ours has been for a very long time.”

According to the outlet, Chopra was first asked to “stand up and twirl” for the director.

“He stared at me long and hard, assessing me, and then suggested that I get a boob job, fix my jaw and add a little more cushioning to my butt,” Chopra wrote in her book. “If I wanted to be an actress, he said, I’d need to have my proportions ‘fixed,’ and he knew a great doctor in LA he could send me to. My then-manager voiced his agreement with the assessment.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Indian actress Priyanka Chopra attends her tribute on Jemaa El Fnaa square during the 18th Marrakech International Film Festival on December 5, 2019, in Marrakech.
(Photo by FADEL SENNA / AFP) (Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images)

“I left the director/producer’s office feeling stunned and small,” Chopra shared. “Was he right that I couldn’t be successful unless I had so many body parts ‘fixed’? I thought of how individuals in the media and others in the industry had referred to me as ‘dusky’ and ‘different-looking’ and I wondered if I was cut out for this business after all.”

Chopra said she didn’t listen to the director’s advice and instead, parted ways with her then-manager.

Today, Chopra is grateful more women are involved in the entertainment industry and banding together. 

“… We are that generation that is hopefully going to see women in leadership roles, that is going to see women in roles of power so that the next generation that comes after us doesn’t have to inherit these issues,” said Chopra.

“… The show I did, ‘Quantico,’ I was the first South Asian to ever [front] a network TV show, in 2015,” she shared. “It was crazy to think about that. To me, if I had had that, maybe I wouldn’t have been so insecure in the hallways of my high school, or felt that I was so different.”

Read original article here

Mario Draghi Is Asked to Form Government in Italy

ROME — Mario Draghi, the former head of the European Central Bank who is largely credited with helping to save the euro, accepted a mandate from Italy’s president on Wednesday to try and form a new unity government that would guide the country out of the pandemic and through economic recovery.

“To overcome the pandemic, to complete the vaccine campaign, to offer answers to the daily problems of the citizens, to relaunch the country are the challenges we face,” Mr. Draghi said after meeting with President Sergio Mattarella for more than an hour at the Quirinal Palace.

Italy, he said, faced a “difficult moment.” And he said he had accepted Mr. Mattarella’s appeal because the emergency “requires an answer equal to the seriousness of the situation.”

Until as recently as Tuesday, the idea of Mr. Draghi replacing Giuseppe Conte as prime minister remained a pipe dream for the many Italians frustrated with a governing coalition that seemed paralyzed by ideological schisms and incompetence, especially as the coronavirus pandemic raged and economic devastation set in.

But on Tuesday evening, Mr. Mattarella summoned Mr. Draghi and appealed to “all the political forces in the Parliament” to support a “high profile government” to meet the historic moment.

He made it clear Mr. Conte’s tenure was over and the new players, potentially political leaders proposed by the parties supporting Mr. Draghi or an all-star cast of politically unaffiliated economists, judges and scientists, was ready to take the stage.

Italy’s stock market rallied on Wednesday in response to the news that Mr. Draghi had been lined up to lead the Italian government. He immediately began consultations with party leaders that will continue in the coming days in an effort to form a new Italian government.

“I am confident that from the exchange with the parties and the groups in the Parliament and from the dialogue with the social forces,” Mr. Draghi said on Wednesday, “there will emerge unity and the capacity to give a responsible answer to the president’s appeal.”

Mr. Draghi is himself no political novice. He has served in past Italian governments, was a director of Italy’s treasury and knows well the machinery of government at both the European and Italian level.

His name has been mentioned for years as a potential candidate to replace Mr. Mattarella as Italy’s head of state in 2022. But now Mr. Mattarella himself has called on Mr. Draghi, whom he has publicly praised in the past, and brought him directly into the fray.

“Now everyone of good will must heed the call of President Mattarella and support the government of Mario Draghi,” Matteo Renzi, the wily former prime minister who engineered the collapse of Mr. Conte’s government by pulling his small party’s support in Parliament. “Now is the time for sobriety.”

Party leaders on the right and left quickly expressed support for Mr. Draghi after it became clear that Mr. Mattarella would ask him to form a government.

Among them were leaders who had made great shows of their loyalty to Mr. Conte. Nicola Zingaretti, the leader of the Democratic Party that Mr. Renzi once led, released a statement that on the one hand referred to the government crisis as a “disaster provoked by the irresponsible choice” of Mr. Renzi, but he then welcomed Mr. Mattarella’s decision. “We will stand ready to discuss the common good for the country.”

A government led by Mr. Draghi could emerge in two different ways. If he succeeds in finding broad parliamentary support, he could govern from a position of strength until the next scheduled elections in 2023.

If he fails to find sufficient political support, Mr. Mattarella could nevertheless make him the head of a transitional government with limited scope — probably focused on the vaccine rollout and managing more than 200 billion euros, or about $240 billion, in relief funds from Europe — before leading the country to early elections.

“We have available the extraordinary resources of the European Union,” Mr. Draghi said on Wednesday in a clear pro-European sign. “We have the chance to do a lot for our country with a careful eye to the future for young generations and to strengthen social unity.”

Mr. Mattarella explicitly said Tuesday evening that he had no interest in new elections. Neither does Mr. Renzi, who is polling at about 2 percent, or the Five Star Movement, which has the largest bloc in Parliament but would likely be decimated in elections by its nationalist opponents.

Leaders of Five Star initially expressed their opposition to Mr. Draghi, but on Wednesday, it became increasingly clear that that was far from a unified position within the party, which appeared to be breaking apart.

Even the political forces that had been clamoring for new elections had suddenly quieted down with the arrival of Mr. Draghi.

“We are a responsible party and we will not say no out of hand,” said Riccardo Molinari, a member of Parliament from the nationalist League party led by Matteo Salvini, who polls suggested would benefit most from early elections.

But Mr. Salvini also needs to protect his right flank. If he is seen as too amenable to Mr. Draghi, who is the personification of the European Union that Mr. Salvini has railed against for years, other right-wing politicians are eager to take his place.

“I don’t think that the solution to the nation’s serious health, economic and social problems is yet another government born in the palace,” Giorgia Meloni, the leader of the post-fascist Brothers of Italy party, wrote on Twitter. “We instead think that it is definitely better to give Italians the possibility to vote.”

In one fell swoop, Mr. Mattarella’s move to bring in Mr. Draghi has the potential to reset Italian politics, which many commentators lamented was not up to the task of governing in a national emergency.

“To think that the most anti-European parliament in the history of Italy could crown Draghi as prime minister today and head of state tomorrow gives a sense of the miracle Sergio Mattarella pulled off in these years,” Claudio Cerasa, the editor of Il Foglio newspaper, wrote on Wednesday.

Read original article here

As 170,000 in NH register for COVID-19 vaccine, officials answer frequently asked questions about process

State health officials say they’re ahead of schedule with the Phase 1B registration process for COVID-19 vaccines. But along the way, there have been some common questions from those signing up.As of Saturday afternoon, about 170,000 people had registered, and 160,000 of them had already received an email to schedule their appointments. But some have been leery of clicking on the link provided in the email to schedule an appointment because the email doesn’t come from the state. Instead, the email comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and its Vaccine Administration Management System, also known as VAMS. State health officials say that is the correct and safe email. “That’s a legitimate email, and that email is going to allow you to create an account in that system, so you can go ahead and take that next step for scheduling an appointment,” said Dr. Beth Daly, chief of the state’s Bureau of Infectious Disease Control.Because of the concerns, the state has sent a separate email with tips to help navigate the process.Another frequent question surrounds registering two people at once. Officials say after you register yourself, you can check the box saying you’re bringing another eligible person. When you write in their name, you will only need to make one appointment and simply bring that person with you.“People are expecting to be able to schedule both persons, but it’s just one appointment,” Daly said. You cannot use the same email address for two separate registrations. So if you separately register for someone else and then later try to register for yourself, you’ll need to use a different email address or call 211 to schedule the appointment. Some senior citizens who have signed up expressed frustration with the registration and scheduling process. “For the folks my age and older who are trying to do it, it needs to be a little bit more user friendly,” said Robert Scheifele of Nashua. But not all experiences have been difficult. James and Barbara Graham registered, successfully booked their appointment for Saturday and have already received their first doses.“I was kind of amazed. I thought it would be longer,” said Barbara Graham.In about a week, the state is expecting to move to a process where registration and scheduling are all done in one step.>> Step by step: How to sign up for the COVID-19 vaccine through New Hampshire’s Phase 1B

State health officials say they’re ahead of schedule with the Phase 1B registration process for COVID-19 vaccines. But along the way, there have been some common questions from those signing up.

As of Saturday afternoon, about 170,000 people had registered, and 160,000 of them had already received an email to schedule their appointments.

But some have been leery of clicking on the link provided in the email to schedule an appointment because the email doesn’t come from the state. Instead, the email comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and its Vaccine Administration Management System, also known as VAMS.

State health officials say that is the correct and safe email.

“That’s a legitimate email, and that email is going to allow you to create an account in that system, so you can go ahead and take that next step for scheduling an appointment,” said Dr. Beth Daly, chief of the state’s Bureau of Infectious Disease Control.

Because of the concerns, the state has sent a separate email with tips to help navigate the process.

Another frequent question surrounds registering two people at once.

Officials say after you register yourself, you can check the box saying you’re bringing another eligible person. When you write in their name, you will only need to make one appointment and simply bring that person with you.

“People are expecting to be able to schedule both persons, but it’s just one appointment,” Daly said.

You cannot use the same email address for two separate registrations. So if you separately register for someone else and then later try to register for yourself, you’ll need to use a different email address or call 211 to schedule the appointment.

Some senior citizens who have signed up expressed frustration with the registration and scheduling process.

“For the folks my age and older who are trying to do it, it needs to be a little bit more user friendly,” said Robert Scheifele of Nashua.

But not all experiences have been difficult. James and Barbara Graham registered, successfully booked their appointment for Saturday and have already received their first doses.

“I was kind of amazed. I thought it would be longer,” said Barbara Graham.

In about a week, the state is expecting to move to a process where registration and scheduling are all done in one step.

>> Step by step: How to sign up for the COVID-19 vaccine through New Hampshire’s Phase 1B

Read original article here