Tag Archives: Cleans

‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ cleans up at box office for second straight week – New York Post

  1. ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ cleans up at box office for second straight week New York Post
  2. If the Mario movie makes a billion dollars, we might really be screwed The A.V. Club
  3. 10 Things The Super Mario Bros. Movie Does Better Than Other Video Game Movie Adaptations CBR – Comic Book Resources
  4. Box Office: ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Keeps Winning With Impressive 45% Projected Drop Yahoo Entertainment
  5. ‘The Super Mario Bros Movie’ Mushrooming To $659M Worldwide Through Sunday – International Box Office Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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New genetically engineered houseplant cleans air as efficiently as 30 air purifiers

A Paris-based startup has created a genetically engineered houseplant that can literally clean the air within your home. The plant builds off the natural purifying properties that houseplants already offer. So, while it adds some color to whatever room you put it in, it’s also actively keeping the air cleaner than 30 air purifiers.

The company, called Neoplants, modified both a pothos plant as well as its root microbiome to pump the plant’s natural air-cleaning properties up quite a bit. Called Neo P1, the genetically engineered houseplant recently hit the market, and you can purchase it right now.

Plants can offer quite a bit to your home. Not only can they boost your mood and help reduce anxiety, according to researchers, but they can also clean the air thanks to their natural air-purifying properties. With this genetically engineered houseplant, though, you’re getting more than that basic level of purifying. In fact, Neoplants say that the Neo P1 is 30 times more effective than the top NASA plants.

But how exactly does this genetically engineered houseplant work better than an air purifier? Well, for starters, plants are better equipped to handle volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which are highly reactive chemicals found in cleaning supplies, building materials, paints, and the list goes on. VOCs are notoriously terrible for human health and can cause irritation in the human body.

Houseplants provide natural air purification qualities to your home. Image source: DimaBerlin / Adobe

While air purifiers can help, they don’t typically tend to completely neutralize these harmful compounds, which means they aren’t ever truly removed from the air. See the problem? But plants like this genetically engineered houseplant are better equipped to neutralize VOCs, which is why having houseplants in your home can help improve the quality of the air within it.

Neoplants started with the pothos because it’s one of the most popular plants in North America. But, the job wasn’t easy, as the company had to completely map the pothos’ genome itself, something that a molecular biologist and the chief technical officer at the company equated to building a plane while flying. (via Inverse) As a result, the genetically engineered houseplant is better equipped to eliminate VOCs.

Additionally, Neoplants say that the air-purifying effectiveness of the houseplant is the only thing the company touched. It doesn’t grow faster, and it isn’t anymore resistant to pesticides than normal pothos plants. The genetically engineered houseplant will retail for $179, making it more expensive than most typical houseplants.

But, considering it also acts as one of the best air purifiers out there, the price is pretty justifiable.



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As Arenado cleans up and rookies seize spots, Cardinals’ ‘best lineup’ takes shape | St. Louis Cardinals

BOSTON — There are many methods a manager will use to write a lineup, from mining data for the right matchups to placing hitters for protection to pulling names out of a hat, as Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol joked this weekend he might do. (He didn’t.)

The best remains when performance guides the pen, and a lineup reveals itself.

That’s what led to Tommy Edman returning to leadoff this season, what crystallized as Tyler O’Neill thrived at the No. 3 spot last season, and what’s happening now as the Cardinals’ lineup looks different than designed but its production looks like they imagined. A show of force early followed by sustained pressure late lifted the Cardinals to a 11-2 victory Saturday night against Boston at Fenway Park. The Cardinals got three homers from the middle of the order, three hits each from two outfielders, and a six-run sixth inning.

Marmol wrote out the same lineup two consecutive games at Fenway, and in their past 10 innings against the Red Sox that group has scored 16 runs.

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“I think that’s our best lineup,” Marmol said.

Back at the cleanup spot, Nolan Arenado homered for the second consecutive game and had three RBIs on Friday. Nolan Gorman and Tyler O’Neill followed with home runs to dead-center field, batting fifth and sixth, respectively. All three are in different lineup spots than when they started this season. What’s helped unlock this look of the lineup is rookie Brendan Donovan’s movement to No. 2, stacking one more hitter with a knack for getting on base ahead of Paul Goldschmidt and Arenado.

From there the lineup’s evolution radiates to Gorman at fifth and O’Neill at sixth, giving the Cardinals a left-right combo of a light-tower power when they connect. Combined, they had 850 feet of home runs Friday to the view-askew seats in center at Fenway. Length follows with switch-hitter Dylan Carlson and, hitting eighth or ninth, Harrison Bader. He saw 20 pitches in his five at-bats, connected on three of them for hits.

“Guys earn their spot, where they are,” assistant hitting coach Turner Ward said late Saturday at Fenway. “When the offense is starting to click together and run on all cylinders, making pitchers work – really that’s what you want to do. Hits are hard. But wearing them down, fighting off good pitches, battling. That’s been a common (theme). We want to make those pitchers earn every pitch and I see us getting better and better at that.

“Lineups start building character on their own.”

The Cardinals began the game with the fifth-most runs in the majors and a top six offense by other measures, such as on-base percentage and average. They had the second-lowest strikeout rate in the majors. Goldschmidt was the engine that drove the offense to those heights, but to stay there they’ll need to depth peeking through the box scores from Boston.

The newest look for the lineup was clear Friday afternoon when Arenado took the field with a tighter, shorter haircut. He let the flow go. It was too hot and uncomfortable in the near-100-degree temps in St. Louis, so he buzzed it. All that’s heating up now is his swing. Frustrated by his June and enthusiastic in his praise for teammate Goldschmidt, who won the league’s Player of the Month award in June, Arenado has gone green in back-to-back games at Fenway. He launched a home run that would have left the ballpark completely if not for a billboard rising above the Green Monster.

In the first inning Friday, Goldschmidt laced a two-out single and Arenado followed with a two-run homer – again over the 37-foot tall wall in left field.

Carlson added an RBI double in the second inning for the first of five runs scored by the back half of the Cardinals’ lineup. And in the fourth, Gorman led off with a home run against Red Sox starter Kutter Crawford. The bolt left Gorman’s bat at 107 mph, cleared the 17-foot wall in center, and traveled an estimated 440 feet from home plate.

“You don’t see that a whole lot,” Ward said. “I can remember the last time I saw a ball out there. It was John Olerud off of Roger Clemens. You just don’t see that often. It’s rare to go out there. To go up there up there up there – that is a feat.”

Said Arenado: “Gorman has got juice.”

The win was the first time both Nolans homered in the same game and a gave as sense of how they’ve gravitated toward being back-to-back in the lineup. Arenado has been candid as a Cardinal about his preference hitting cleanup, and the offense had its late-season surge in 2021 when he returned to cleanup and O’Neill found a home bookended between Goldschmidt and Arenado. Marmol could plant Gorman at No. 2 and get him more at-bats against right-handed pitching because teams will be reluctant to use a lefty with a three-batter minimum that assures either Edman or Goldschmidt get a swing.

But with Donovan batting .326 after going zero-for-five Friday and starting the day with as many walks (22) as strikeouts (22) in the majors, the Cardinals want him to get as many chances ahead of Goldschmidt as possible.

That puts Gorman in the spot to clear the table, not set it.

“As a guy in the five hole,” the rookie said, “you’re going to have some pop.”

In the past two games, the Cardinals have had innings of five and six runs, and combined they featured a solo home run. The Cardinals’ five-run rally in the ninth inning Friday fell shy of tying the game, but all of the runs and all four extra-base hits came with two outs. Edman and Donovan atop the lineup had back-to-back doubles and three RBIs. In the sixth inning, Saturday the Cardinals exploited three walks and one error to send 12 batters the plate.

Eight had a run or an RBI.

O’Neill got both with his 410-foot mash to center field. But the back end of the lineup kindled the runs to come with two walks and Bader’s infield single. Edman, Goldschmidt, and Arenado followed with RBI singles, widening the Cardinals lead from two runs to eight.

“That is the depth that we talked about,” Marmol said. “A lot of the guys are putting it together at the right time.”

The burst of offense came immediately after Dakota Hudson finished his fifth and final inning. The Cardinals’ right-hander allowed a season-high five walks, three of them going to the bottom three batters in Boston’s lineup to load the bases. Hudson teed up the football for the Red Sox to kick off a rally – and then yanked it back. He had walked two batters on four pitches, three in the span of 16 pitches before landing a sinker to get an inning-ending groundout.

By the end of the sixth inning, every spot in the Cardinals lineup had scored at least a run.

Andrew Knizner drove home O’Neill with a ground-rule double in the ninth to give O’Neill three runs in the game and seven spots in the order at least one RBI.

The 11 runs were the most a Cardinals team scored in a regular-season game at Fenway, one shy of the dozen the Swifties scored in Game 4 of the 1946 World Series. That game was the first in a World Series that three teammates had at least four hits each. Stan Musial was not one of them. That’s some depth.

“It’s good to see it come together,” Arenado said. “We have great baserunning – not just steals, but turning bases, the little things. We have a little bit of power, not as much power as all teams, some of the really good teams, like the Yankees. We’re starting to have those really quality at-bats, working counts, making pitchers work a little harder, and we do that with the pitching and defense we have – that’s a really good team.”

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Madison Cawthorn Cleans Gun During Veterans Affairs Hearing

The House Veterans’ Affairs Committee took Wednesday as an opportunity to hold a virtual hearing on how toxic chemicals are killing U.S. soldiers. Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) took the hearing as an opportunity to clean his gun.

Cawthorn, the youngest current member of Congress, fiddled with his black pistol while one witness explained how university medical researchers could help the government examine how burn pits are harming military service members.

“It was immature. He’s a child. He lacks common sense. I think the congressman was overcompensating for something that he lacks and feeling inadequate among the heroes on that call,” said John Feal, a 9/11 first responder who was at the virtual meeting.

Feal was one of at least two people at the Veterans’ Affairs meeting who noticed what Cawthorn was doing. Both were infuriated. But the general public couldn’t see it, because the two-hour virtual hearing was held over Zoom—which meant that those tuning in could only see the person speaking.

Cawthorn worked on his pistol out of sight for several minutes, two people told The Daily Beast, but it became plainly visible during the testimony of Jen Burch, a veteran who spent six years in the Air Force serving in Japan and Afghanistan.

From the layout of the office behind him, Cawthorn appeared to be in his congressional office at the time, but The Daily Beast could not immediately confirm his location. (Although firearm possession is generally illegal in the District of Columbia, members of Congress have carved out a special rule that allows them to maintain guns in their offices.)

The Daily Beast asked Cawthorn’s office if the congressman thought this an appropriate time to clean his firearm. His communications director, Luke Ball, responded: “What could possibly be more patriotic than guns and veterans?”

During the live recorded meeting, which ran close to three hours, politicians listened to veteran advocacy groups discuss how uniformed military personnel have been exposed to dangerous toxins when ordered to stand by burn pits—an ill-conceived method of burning trash at military sites in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere.

That grimy duty usually fell to low-ranking soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines, some of whom developed heart, lung, and digestive ailments after hours of standing over smoke from the burning plastics, rubber, and paper envelopes from families back home.

Rosie Lopez Torres, the cofounder of Burn Pits 360, told The Daily Beast that she did not notice that Cawthorn was working on his gun. She only recalled that he seemed distracted at times. But when she saw the picture of what he was doing, she was livid.

“Oh wow,” she said. “That is insane. Total disregard and disrespect to America’s war fighters. He was so bored with the topic. Those that are sick and dying and the widows in his district should see how much he cares about the issue.”

Some may find that criticism particularly notable, given that Cawthorn has made a name for himself by constantly singing praises about the nation’s military personnel. The glory of military service is also at the core of the public persona he built: he rose to prominence with a heart wrenching story about how a car crash took away his ability to walk and left him permanently in a wheelchair before he could enter the United States Naval Academy and begin a life of military service.

Journalist Tom Fiedler would eventually uncover how that story was built on a lie, because the Naval Academy had already rejected Cawthorn before his crash. And the friend Cawthorn claimed had left him for dead, in fact, pulled him from the wreckage.

Cawthorn’s behavior would have gone unnoticed on Wednesday were it not for Lindsay Church, the cofounder of Minority Veterans of America, who also spoke during the meeting. They tweeted out a picture of the congressman holding his gun backwards and wrote, “Imagine you showed up for a Zoom meeting and a colleague decided that was when he needed to clean his gun. Because that’s what happened today in a Congressional roundtable on toxic exposure. We’re better than this.”

Church later told The Daily Beast that Cawthorn’s behavior was “misguided and lacking the dignity of his office.”

“He was doing this while the ranking member of his own party was conducting actual business. I’d be mad as hell if I was Bost,” Church said.

The office of Rep. Michael Bost (R-IL), the top Republican on that committee, did not immediately respond to questions Thursday afternoon.

This isn’t the first time the 26-year-old congressman has been irresponsible with this gun.

In February 2021, he tried to board a plane in his home state of North Carolina while he still had his 9mm Glock pistol inside his bag. Cawthorn was not arrested, and his spokesman at the time chalked it up to a simple mistake—though federal airport security guards regularly detain and fine average Americans for doing the same thing.

According to CBS, the Transportation Security Administration confiscated a record 5,674 guns at airport checkpoints last year.



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Super awkward exit on ‘The Bachelor’ after Matt James cleans house due to bullying

On The Bachelor Monday night, Matt James made it clear that he does not stand for bullying.

Following last week’s episode, in which fan-favorite Katie Thurston brought to Matt’s attention the “mob mentality” and toxicity within the house, Matt immediately took action. The Bachelor first took contestant Anna Redman aside to confront her about spreading the rumor that Brittany Galvin is an escort.

“Anna said something that was out of character, but the damage has been done. I’ve seen how words can affect people, and I owe it to these women to create a safe space for them, and that’s what I’m gonna do,” stated Matt after sending Anna home before the rose ceremony.

However, the biggest bully in the house has been this season’s “villain,” Victoria Larson. The self-proclaimed “Queen” has been behind almost all of the drama thus far, and has been dragged by viewers since day one for her delusion and for completely lacking self awareness.

“I hope I don’t get sent home for this,” said Victoria to an off-camera producer. “Literally, there’s no one in here he can marry besides me. Like, I’m literally the best option for him, and, like, I’m the only one with a working brain in this room, and I’m not even being rude. I’m being serious. If he’s gonna believe some idiot over me, he’s not my person, and, like, if that does happen, that’ll really suck, because that’s not the way I wanted to leave this situation, and, like, you know I’ll be so heartbroken, and I’m, like, trying to be positive, but, like, if that happens, I’ll literally die.”

During the rose ceremony, Victoria stated, “I’m not malicious. I have a good heart. Does Matt really want a wife that’s constantly creating drama? Or does he want a wife like me?”

Bachelor Nation was absolutely thrilled when Matt did not give Victoria a rose during the ceremony and instead sent her home.

“I honestly feel so sorry for you that you would listen to hearsay and not all of the facts behind a situation. So goodbye,” Victoria told Matt as the two awkwardly stared at each other for an uncomfortable amount of time.

Later, Victoria shared in her exit interview, “You think I’m gonna go hug him goodbye? No. And he just stared at me. Like, how dare you? He is not my king, and I am still a queen. Matt is a jester. The fact that, like, he chose Katie over me, ugh. Yeah, Matt, I feel sorry for you with your choices. I would be very surprised if the girls are, like, okay that I left. The whole house is gonna feel like s*** that I’m gone. Like, I brought so many people joy. Whatever. Matt’s not the guy for me. I’m never dating another Matt as long as I live. Ever. I hate that name now.”

The eliminations didn’t stop there. On top of Matt cleaning house with Anna and Victoria, MJ Snyder’s fate also remains in question after Matt found out she had coined the term “Varsity” vs. “J.V.” in reference to the original contestants and the new girls. But we’ll have to wait until next week’s episode to find out if she fesses up to it.

The Bachelor airs Mondays at 8 p.m. on ABC.

Watch Katie Thurston being praised for standing up to bullying from other women on ‘The Bachelor’:

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Jimmy Fallon Busts In and Cleans Steve Kornacki’s Office

In the wake of Steve Kornacki’s energetic election night analysis, Jimmy Fallon visited the MSNBC wonk to drop off a thank-you gift (a $5 Subway gift card and an airplane bottle of whiskey, to be exact), only to learn that Kornacki’s office, also in 30 Rock, is the physical manifestation of all the chaos Steve Kornacki actively battles against every day as a journalist. While Marie Kondo would have wept with joy at the amount of mess Steve has collected, our boy deserves better, which is why Fallon stopped by Monday to clean up Steve Kornacki’s filthy-ass office himself.

“We’re in khaki country now,” he muses as he wanders the empty MSNBC offices. “This feels like I’m in a horror video game.” Of course, Steve Kornacki’s filth is less unwashed coffee mugs and pistachio shells and more pre-tied neckties and an American National Election Studies Data Sourcebook 1952 – 1978. And if you thought he’d gush in appreciation over Fallon’s gesture, you’ve misunderstood the source of Steve Kornacki’s enthusiasm. “This is long overdue. It’ll probably last about a day or two, but it looks great right now,” Kornacki says by way of reaction when he gets the big reveal. “I feel like I had more stuff before.”

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