Tag Archives: biting

Kevin Spacey Praised & Defended By Liam Neeson, Sharon Stone, & Stephen Fry In Wake Of Biting UK Documentary & New Trial; “Our Industry Needs Him,” Says ‘Taken’ Star – Deadline

  1. Kevin Spacey Praised & Defended By Liam Neeson, Sharon Stone, & Stephen Fry In Wake Of Biting UK Documentary & New Trial; “Our Industry Needs Him,” Says ‘Taken’ Star Deadline
  2. Kevin Spacey receives star support as he fights to get his career back CNN
  3. Sharon Stone, Liam Neeson and More Defend Kevin Spacey After Misconduct Allegations: ‘Our Industry Needs Him’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Spacey Unmasked: Season 1 Rotten Tomatoes
  5. Liam Neeson and Sharon Stone demand Kevin Spacey be returned to Hollywood’s warm embrace The A.V. Club

Read original article here

The debauched world of Ozzy Osbourne – biting bats to Sharon finding him in bed with the nanny – Daily Mail

  1. The debauched world of Ozzy Osbourne – biting bats to Sharon finding him in bed with the nanny Daily Mail
  2. STEEL PANTHER’s MICHAEL STARR On OZZY OSBOURNE’s Retirement: ‘It Comes To An End For Everybody Eventually’ BLABBERMOUTH.NET
  3. Ozzy Osbourne vows to ‘get back on stage as soon as possible’ in first interview since retiring from tou… The US Sun
  4. Zakk Wylde offers Ozzy Osbourne support in his retirement: “When you are ready to roll – we roll” Louder
  5. Zakk Wylde tells Ozzy Osbourne: “When you are ready to roll, we will roll” Guitar World
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Robert Townsend on making biting satire Hollywood Shuffle: ‘It was hard back then to make a movie’ | Film

Robert Townsend moved to Los Angeles in the early 80s, determined to become a Hollywood star. And though he had quickly emerged as a draw on the standup circuit, the Chicago native struggled to reckon with the structural racism he encountered while auditioning for bit parts on film and TV – the vast majority of them ham-fisted stereotypes, from snitch to slave.

Before long, Townsend’s casting call stories – some of them humiliating, most of them hilariously tone deaf – became too overwhelming for his regular postmortems with Keenen Ivory Wayans, who was going through the exact same thing.

Even as he landed meaty supporting roles in Cooley High and A Soldier’s Story, Townsend tried roping Wayans into a film project about their career heartbreaks, but Wayans was skeptical. Townsend never went to film school, much less had shot or written anything. Townsend didn’t have much money either. What he did have was training with a Chicago theater group called the Experimental Black Actors Guild, starting at age 14. “I was around technicians who were Black – writers, directors, producers, set designers,” Townsend says to the Guardian. “I was telling Keenen, We can do this. There’s nothing mystical or magical about it.”

In 1987, a year after Spike Lee announced himself with She’s Gotta Have It, Townsend released Hollywood Shuffle – a 78-minute comedic allegory about the compromises the industry forces on Black actors in exchange for honest work. Townsend shows impressive range as hero Bobby Taylor, a hungry young actor who daydreams of roles in slave dramas and blaxploitation flicks – at once parodying familiar tropes while yearning to play them seriously. His off-screen hustle left a mark, too.

Townsend maxed out a handful of credit cards, or $60,000 in debt, to make Hollywood Shuffle – which went on to gross more than $5m at the box office. Roger Ebert called it “a logistical triumph”. It heralded Townsend as a multitalented star and indie film world darling, and established on-screen careers for co-stars Wayans (In Living Color), John Witherspoon (Friday), Anne-Marie Johnson (In the Heat of the Night) and even introduced Damon Wayans. This month it was announced that the film will be added to the Criterion Collection list in February. Its impact on independent film-making has been understated for far too long. “There’s probably a 20-year period where people are saying, ‘I’m gonna make my movie on credit cards,’” notes renowned film scholar Elvis Mitchell. “That’s Hollywood Shuffle.”

Thirty-five years later, Hollywood Shuffle still rates among the most scathing indictments of the industry. One especially withering aside, called Black Acting School, in which Bobby imagines himself endorsing a method that teaches Black actors how to be even blacker, even anticipated the rise of Black Brits in disguise as Black American characters. Did Townsend know? “No, I did not,” he says. “When I first started as a standup, all these Black comedians came on with a similar kind of, ‘Wuzzup I’m from the ghetto, baby’ thing.” To stand out, he’d do the same lines, but in a posh accent. “But I gotta say, I don’t know if Black British actors are trained differently or they’re hungrier, but there’s something to be said. But there’s a wave that came, and those are some really strong actors. Like, John Boyega is a beast.”

Townsend’s towering ambition would’ve been obvious to any of his Hollywood Shuffle collaborators. He cut Wayans from a Siskel & Ebert-style spoof after the latter kept missing rehearsals. “I knew he was out chasin’ some honey,” Townsend jokes. “I got mad. I’m takin’ this real serious. I started in theater in Chicago. I learned my manners there: be on time. Be well rehearsed. Warm up the actors. Talk through the beats of the scene. I was really taking time. When it’s your money and you only have a little bit of it, you gotta be really smart.”

Altogether, Hollywood Shuffle was shot in two years over 12 days. To help keep the project on budget, he collected unused film from his regular gigs. “Back in the day, a film magazine was like 10 minutes long, and a scene might be six and a half minutes,” he explains. “So whatever was left over they’d either throw away or give away. When I finished A Soldier’s Story, I called [director] Norman Jewison and [the producers] and said, I’m gonna make my own movie. Can I have the leftover film? They said, ‘Take as much as you want.’

A still from Hollywood Shuffle. Photograph: British Film Institute

“Film-makers now, they don’t understand how hard it was back then to make a movie. You gotta put it together, rip it apart, dig for clips in a bin, splice it together.” What’s more, most of that editing happened at a post-production studio for porn movies. “Keenen came up with the idea,” Townsend says. “There were 16 different editors in the different suites. I had never heard anyone direct porno. And it was like, ‘Put your head down! Put your head back! Join! Join!’ Everybody wound up coming down to my suite. They were like, ‘Oh, you’re working on a real movie.”

In the end Samuel Goldwyn Jr bought Hollywood Shuffle from Townsend for $100,000. And when it was released in the spring of ’87, it was the talk of the town. But when Eddie Murphy called to see for himself while on tour in Europe, Townsend and Wayans hesitated. In another aside in the film, Bobby fantasizes about a casting call for an Eddie Murphy-type and wins the part upon arriving in blackface. And as it approached during a private screening Townsend and Wayans set up for Murphy in Burbank, the co-screenwriters swallowed hard.

“Hey Eddie!” one member of his entourage shouted when the scene finally arrived. “They talkin bout you!” A hush fell over the theater, as Townsend and Wayans contemplated the repercussions of offending a dear friend who just happened to be the biggest entertainer on the planet. But when the scene was over, Murphy’s honk-laugh filled the room. As the final credits rolled, Townsend sought out Murphy to apologize. “No man, I love this,” he told Townsend, before asking if he’d be up for directing a concert film he had in his head. That turned out to be Eddie Murphy Raw. “Eddie was living in a whole ’nother stratosphere,” Townsend says. “He wasn’t gonna hear from actors, ‘Hey, man, went on another audition where they wanted me to be you.’ I think there was a beautiful truth that he discovered. But I was sharing my truth. Back then it was, ‘We want you to be like Eddie! Can you laugh like Eddie?’ All of that stuff was real.”

After that Townsend could do no wrong. He directed more features, perhaps none more beloved than his Temptations-inspired Five Heartbeats. He headlined an HBO comedy special, Robert Townsend’s Partners in Crime, that not only set a template for Wayans’s In Living Color, he even nailed Black people on soapy TV – which, again, was decades from becoming Andy Cohen and Tyler Perry’s thing. His imaginative sitcom, The Parent ’Hood, ran for five seasons.

A still of Meteor Man. Photograph: Cinetext Collection/Sportsphoto/Allstar

At 65, Townsend works at a comfortable pace. He was prepared to tour a one-man stage production, Living the Shuffle, three years ago, but then the pandemic hit; some of his stories are wild (Frank Sinatra inviting him to a 77th birthday bash in Vegas after seeing the Five Heartbeats), others more poignant (having Sidney Poitier for a career mentor); probably, the yarns will ultimately become part of another comedy special. Townsend doesn’t act as much as he used to. But when he did turn up in the pulp comic book TV series Black Lightning, fans couldn’t help but be reminded of his early work directing and starring in Meteor Man. Mostly, he’s kept busy directing TV series like Netflix’s upcoming scam drama Kaleidoscope and Peacock’s reboot of the ensemble romcom The Best Man.

Hollywood has come a long way since Townsend’s directorial debut. Some stereotypes have gone away, while others have evolved. For all of Hollywood Shuffle’s biting satire, you wonder: did the industry really learn the lesson? “I’ve had people from the Indian community, the Mexican community go, ‘You know that’s our story too, man,” Townsend says. “There was even a cat that was Italian that went, ‘For me it’s mobsters.’ It’s been a source of inspiration.

“Has it made a difference? I think it has. You can’t put it on paper and say because of Hollywood Shuffle, these things changed. But I think because Hollywood Shuffle exists, those things are always in conversation.”

Read original article here

Beyond Meat suspends operating chief Doug Ramsey after arrest for alleged nose biting

Douglas Ramsey

Source: Washington County, Arkansas

Beyond Meat said its operating chief Doug Ramsey has been suspended, effective immediately, after he was arrested Saturday evening for allegedly punching a man and biting his nose.

The company said in a statement on Tuesday afternoon that Jonathan Nelson, the company’s senior vice president of manufacturing operations, will oversee Beyond’s operations activities on an interim basis.

Ramsey, 53, was charged with terroristic threatening and third-degree battery and booked in the Washington County jail after allegedly assaulting a driver in a parking garage near Razorback Stadium.

Ramsey allegedly punched through the back windshield of a Subaru after it made contact with the front tire of Ramsey’s car, according to a preliminary police report obtained by CNBC. The Subaru owner then got out of his car, and Ramsey allegedly started punching him and bit his nose, “ripping the flesh on the tip of the nose,” according to the report. The victim and a witness also alleged that Ramsey told the Subaru owner he would kill him.

Ramsey has been Beyond Meat’s chief operating officer since December. The news of his arrest after a University of Arkansas football game brought more scrutiny to the vegan food company, which has been struggling with disappointing sales and investor skepticism over its long-term growth prospects. The stock has fallen 75% this year, dragging its market down to $1.02 billion. Just three years ago, the company was valued at $13.4 billion.

Prior to joining Beyond Meat, Ramsey spent three decades at Tyson Foods, overseeing its poultry and McDonald’s businesses. Beyond Meat was relying on his experience to help the company successfully pull off big launches, particularly with fast-food companies like Taco Bell owner Yum Brands and McDonald’s.

Ramsey did not respond to a request for comment from CNBC.

Read original article here

Japanese city alarmed by biting, clawing, attacking monkeys

TOKYO (AP) — People in a southwestern Japanese city have come under attack from monkeys that are trying to snatch babies, biting and clawing at flesh, and sneaking into nursery schools.

The attacks — on 58 people since July 8 — are getting so bad Yamaguchi city hall hired a special unit to hunt the animals with tranquilizer guns.

The monkeys aren’t interested in food, so traps haven’t worked. They have targeted mostly children and the elderly.

“They are so smart, and they tend to sneak up and attack from behind, often grabbing at your legs,” city official Masato Saito said Wednesday.

When confronted by a monkey, the instructions are: Do not look them in the eye, make yourself look as big as possible, such as by spreading open your coat, then back away as quietly as possible without making sudden moves, according to Saito.

A woman was assaulted by a monkey while hanging laundry on her veranda. Another victim showed bandaged toes. They were taken aback and frightened by how big and fat the monkeys were.

The monkeys terrorizing the community are Japanese macaque, the kind often pictured peacefully bathing in hot springs.

One male monkey, measuring 49 centimeters (1.6 foot) in height and weighing 7 kilograms (15 pounds), was caught Tuesday by the team with the tranquilizer gun. It was judged by various evidence to be one of the attacking monkeys and put to death.

But more attacks were reported after the capture.

No one has been seriously injured so far. But all have been advised to get hospital treatment. Ambulances were called in some cases.

Although Japan is industrialized and urban, a fair portion of land in the archipelago is mountains and forests. Rare attacks on people by a bear, boars or other wildlife have occurred, but generally not by monkeys.

No one seems to know why the attacks have occurred, and where exactly the troop of monkeys came from remains unclear.

“I have never seen anything like this my entire life,” Saito said.

___

Yuri Kageyama is on Twitter https://twitter.com/yurikageyama



Read original article here

Surprise! Complex Decision Making Found in Predatory Worms With Just 302 Neurons

As scientists continue to discover more about the brain and how it works, it can help to know just how much brain matter is required to perform certain functions – and to be able to make complex decisions, it turns out just 302 neurons may be required.

 

That’s based on a new study looking at the predatory worm Pristionchus pacificus. To snack on its prey or to defend its food source, the worm relies on biting; this gave researchers an opportunity to analyze its decision-making.

Instead of looking at actual neurons and cell connections for signs of decision making, the team looked at the behavior of P. pacificus instead – specifically, how it chose to use its biting capabilities when confronted with different types of threat.

“Our study shows you can use a simple system such as the worm to study something complex, like goal-directed decision-making,” says neurobiologist Sreekanth Chalasani from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California.

“We also demonstrated that behavior can tell us a lot about how the brain works.”

In experiments, Chalasani and his colleagues observed P. pacificus taking two different strategies – biting to devour and biting to deter – with the Caenorhabditis elegans worm, both its prey and competitor.

With larval C. elegans that are easy to overpower, P. pacificus chose to bite to kill. With the adults, P. pacificus worms tended to bite to force C. elegans away from food sources. That’s evidence of a switch in strategy and a deliberate choice.

 

By observing where P. pacificus worms laid their eggs, and how their behavior changed when a bacterial food source was nearby, the scientists determined that bites on adult C. elegans were intended to drive them away – in other words, they weren’t simply failed attempts to kill these competitors.

While we’re used to such decision making from vertebrates, it hasn’t previously been clear that worms had the brainpower to proverbially weigh up the pros, cons, and consequences of particular actions in this way.

“Scientists have always assumed that worms were simple – when P. pacificus bites we thought that was always for a singular predatory purpose,” says neuroscientist Kathleen Quach from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.

“Actually, P. pacificus is versatile and can use the same action, biting C. elegans, to achieve different long-term goals. I was surprised to find that P. pacificus could leverage what seemed like failed predation into successful and goal-directed territoriality.”

Having 302 neurons at your disposal isn’t many, really – human beings have somewhere in the region of 86 billion of them. But it seems the fundamentals of decision-making are quite simple to code, biologically speaking.

 

One of the fields that this new research could help with is in the development of artificial intelligence: figuring out how to teach computer software to make independent decisions with as little programming and neural networking as possible.

Future research is planned to look at how much of this decision-making is hardwired into the brains of P. pacificus, and how much is flexible. Again, that will have implications when it comes to understanding how we make our own choices.

“Even simple systems like worms have different strategies, and they can choose between those strategies, deciding which one works well for them in a given situation,” says Chalasani.

“That provides a framework for understanding how these decisions are made in more complex systems, such as humans.”

The research has been published in Current Biology.

 

Read original article here

Squirrel from hell injures 18 during 48-hour biting spree

It went completely nuts.

UK residents were left reeling after a crazed gray squirrel went on a wild Christmas rampage in Buckley, Wales, injuring a staggering 18 people in two days. Facebook posts detailing Rocky’s reign of terror are going viral.

“Warning, vicious squirrel that attacks,” wrote Nicola Crowther in the Buckley Residents Facebook Group on Dec. 26 along with a grainy photo of the furry culprit on a fencepost. “Has bitten me, attacked my friend . . . and multiple other people.”

“It’s also attacked my two Bengals, who fear nothing, and my neighbors’ Bengal cats,” she added. “Dare not go out of my house, as it’s lurking.

Another bite recipient, Sheree Davidson, told SWNS that she was taking out the recycling when the “psycho” squirrel jumped out at her from behind the bins and chomped her on the hand.

Buckley resident Corinne Reynolds with the crazed gray squirrel.
Corinne Reynolds / SWNS

“I’ve got teeth marks on the top and bottom of my finger,” she lamented. “It proper latched on and I had to shake it off. He’s taken the top layer off my knuckle. His teeth are like pins.”

Davidson also uploaded pics of her bloody finger to the Facebook group with the caption “it had me good an proper little s – – t.”

The nutty critter, which has since been dubbed “Stripe” after the evil character from “Gremlins,” reportedly didn’t discriminate in its attacks, lashing out at the elderly, children and pets alike, and biting them everywhere from the heads to legs, SWNS reported.

Nowhere was safe, as the critter would launch at people in the gardens and even chase them down the road.

Corinne Reynolds decided to act after getting chomped on the finger.
Corinne Reynolds / SWNS

Many victims had to receive tetanus shots after getting savaged.

“After arriving at the hospital, I had to have a tetanus jab because the squirrel broke my skin,” said technician Scott Felton, 34, who was ambushed by the psychotic treehopper while smoking on his patio.

He added, “I know of someone else too who had to have a tetanus jab because theirs didn’t stop bleeding.”

During the course of its two day biting spree, the bloodthirsty squirrel reportedly injured 18 people with a staggering 21 attacked since Dec. 23.

Stripe injured a whopping 18 people in two days.
Jane Harry / SWNS

Salvation finally came on Monday after 65-year-old Buckley resident, Corinne Reynolds decided to trap the hairy hellion.

Locally known as the “bird lady,” the mom of seven had been feeding the squirrel since the summer, but decided to act after getting bitten on the hand herself, and seeing “all the Facebook posts” regarding the attacks.

“To be honest, he was giving me cause for concern with his unusual behaviour,” said Reynolds, who wondered if Stripe had “something going on inside his head like a tumour.”

Reynolds said she especially worried about the animal’s violent tendencies as she had “an elderly lodger on blood-thinning drugs and a 2-year-old grandson playing in the garden too.”

In order to protect them, Reynolds snared the rogue rodent by putting out a cage in her garden filled with peanuts, Stripe’s favorite snack. The senior then handed him over to the RSPCA, who euthanized the critter as it’s illegal to release them into the wild in the UK.

The injuries inflicted by the squirrel on Jane Harry.
Jane Harry / SWNS

Reynolds had mixed emotions about Stripe’s death. While reportedly “relieved” that she was able to protect her loved ones from the bloodthirsty critter, the senior was also “sad because I’m an animal lover and because of me this squirrel lost his life,” she told the Evening Standard.

“I know people don’t like gray squirrels but they are all god’s creatures to me,” Reynolds insisted.

According to the British Pest Control Association, gray squirrels are an invasive species that was introduced to the UK from North America in the 1870s to enhance the aesthetics of upper-crust estates, the ES reported.

They continued to be introduced until the 1930s, when the government finally recognized the environmental havoc they caused and banned people from releasing these problem animals into the wild.

Reynolds had mixed emotions about Stripe getting euthanized.
Corrinne Reynolds / SWNS

Stripe’s biting spree isn’t the first instance of a cutesy critter going completely nuts. Earlier this month, a Singapore resident was hospitalized after getting accosted by a gang of otters, who reportedly bit him 26 times and left him thinking he “was gonna die.”

Read original article here

Meat-Eating “Vulture Bees” Sport Acidic Guts and an Extra Tooth for Biting Flesh

A little-known species of tropical bee has evolved an extra tooth for biting flesh and a gut that more closely resembles that of vultures rather than other bees.

Typically, bees don’t eat meat. However, a species of stingless bee in the tropics has evolved the ability to do so, presumably due to intense competition for nectar.

“These are the only bees in the world that have evolved to use food sources not produced by plants, which is a pretty remarkable change in dietary habits,” said UC Riverside entomologist Doug Yanega.

Honeybees, bumblebees, and stingless bees have guts that are colonized by the same five core microbes. “Unlike humans, whose guts change with every meal, most bee species have retained these same bacteria over roughly 80 million years of evolution,” said Jessica Maccaro, a UCR entomology doctoral student.

Given their radical change in food choice, a team of UCR scientists wondered whether the vulture bees’ gut bacteria differed from those of a typical vegetarian bee. They differed quite dramatically, according to a study the team published on November 23, 2021, in the American Society of Microbiologists’ journal mBio.

Raw chicken baits attracting vulture bees in Costa Rica. Credit: Quinn McFrederick/UCR

To track these changes, the researchers went to Costa Rica, where these bees are known to reside. They set up baits — fresh pieces of raw chicken suspended from branches and smeared with petroleum jelly to deter ants.

The baits successfully attracted vulture bees and related species that opportunistically feed on meat for their protein. Normally, stingless bees have baskets on their hind legs for collecting pollen. However, the team observed carrion-feeding bees using those same structures to collect the bait. “They had little chicken baskets,” said Quinn McFrederick, a UCR entomologist.

For comparison, the team also collected stingless bees that feed both on meat and flowers, and some that feed only on pollen. On analyzing the microbiomes of all three bee types, they found the most extreme changes among exclusive meat-feeders.

“The vulture bee microbiome is enriched in

Individual from the Trigona family of stingless bees, some of which eat meat. Credit: Ricardo Ayala

The researchers noted that these bees are unusual in a number of ways. “Even though they can’t sting, they’re not all defenseless, and many species are thoroughly unpleasant,” Yanega said. “They range from species that are genuinely innocuous to many that bite, to a few that produce blister-causing secretions in their jaws, causing the skin to erupt in painful sores.”

In addition, though they feed on meat, their honey is reportedly still sweet and edible. “They store the meat in special chambers that are sealed off for two weeks before they access it, and these chambers are separate from where the honey is stored,” Maccaro said.

The research team is planning to delve further into vulture bee microbiomes, hoping to learn about the genomes of all bacteria as well as fungi and viruses in their bodies.

Ultimately, they hope to learn more about the larger role that microbes play in overall bee health.

“The weird things in the world are where a lot of interesting discoveries can be found,” McFrederick said. “There’s a lot of insight there into the outcomes of natural selection.”

Reference: “Why Did the Bee Eat the Chicken? Symbiont Gain, Loss, and Retention in the Vulture Bee Microbiome” by Laura L. Figueroa, Jessica J. Maccaro, Erin Krichilsky, Douglas Yanega and Quinn S. McFrederick, 23 November 2021, mBio.
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02317-21



Read original article here