Tag Archives: Diverse

PHOTOS: Seven Dwarfs Become Diverse Group of ‘Magical Creatures’ for Snow White Live Action Movie – WDW News Today

  1. PHOTOS: Seven Dwarfs Become Diverse Group of ‘Magical Creatures’ for Snow White Live Action Movie WDW News Today
  2. Rachel Zegler slams ‘nonsensical discourse’ on her ‘Snow White’ casting: ‘Do not want to see it’ USA TODAY
  3. Disney’s ‘Snow White’ dwarf changes are a lose-lose scenario Insider
  4. SNOW WHITE: Disney’s Controversial Remake Reportedly Reimagines Seven Dwarfs As Group Called The “Bandits” CBM (Comic Book Movie)
  5. Dylan Postl AKA Hornswoggle Blasts The Walt Disney Company’s ‘Snow White’ Film For Scrapping Dwarf Characters Bounding Into Comics
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Charles Barkley rewriting his will to make Auburn ‘more diverse’ in wake of affirmative action ruling – Yahoo Sports

  1. Charles Barkley rewriting his will to make Auburn ‘more diverse’ in wake of affirmative action ruling Yahoo Sports
  2. Charles Barkley Donating $5 Million to Auburn After SCOTUS Affirmative Action Ruling TMZ
  3. Fans React To Charles Barkley Making $5 Million Change To His Will The Spun
  4. Charles Barkley changing his will to ensure Auburn is ‘more diverse’ after affirmative action ruling AL.com
  5. Charles Barkley says he’s changing his will to help Black students after Supreme Court affirmative action ruling Awful Announcing
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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PlayStation Studios boss insists upcoming live service games will target diverse ‘genres and scale’ | VGC – Video Games Chronicle

  1. PlayStation Studios boss insists upcoming live service games will target diverse ‘genres and scale’ | VGC Video Games Chronicle
  2. PlayStation: Our live-service games will target different genres, release schedules and audiences GamesIndustry.biz
  3. Sony: We’re Not Just Creating 10 Live Service Destiny or Fortnite Games Push Square
  4. PlayStation’s 10 Live Service Games Will Be From ‘Different Genres’ and For ‘Different Audiences’ IGN
  5. PlayStation Boss Teases New Live-Service Projects GameSpot
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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SNL: Dave Chappelle spoofs diverse casting on House of the Dragon

Dave Chappelle spoofed House of the Dragon during his Saturday Night Live tenure this weekend.

The controversial comedian began by asking the crowd: “Anyone out here watching this new show, ‘House of Dragons’ [sic]?

“I am the biggest Game of Thrones fan, I love their new show. And I got to tell you, I love that they’re including Black characters. But to be honest, the Black characters… they take me out of it a little bit. It’s that blonde hair and old timey accents. It’s a little jarring, where are these people from?”

Chappelle then teed up the SNL sketch by saying that executive producer Lorne Michaels had managed to secure a “sneak peek” of the show’s second season.

The comedy spoof was littered with characters and references to the host’s Noughties sketch show, Chappelle’s Show, including original cast member Donnell Rawlings.

In the SNL scene, Kenan Thompson as Lord Corlys Velaryon introduces “new allies” including Ice-T as Larry Targaryen.

The Game of Thrones prequel series faced criticism from some fans of George RR Martin’s original work over the diverse castings, which were not accurate to the book descriptions.

Speaking to Entertainment Weekly, series co-creator Ryan Condal said on the issue: “The world is very different now than it was 10 years ago when [Game of Thrones] all started. It’s different than 20 years ago when Peter Jackson made The Lord of the Rings. These types of stories need to be more inclusive than they traditionally have been.

“It was very important for [co-creator Miguel Sapochnik] and I to create a show that was not another bunch of white people on the screen, just to put it very bluntly.”

Elsewhere on SNL, Chappelle went on a wide-ranging, 15-minute monologue that featured risqué jokes about the Jewish community in light of Kanye West’s recent controversies.

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Parton unleashes her inner rock star, Mellencamp declares ‘f*** antisemitism,’ Eminem gives hip-hop history lesson at diverse Rock Hall ceremony

Dolly Parton performs at the 37th Annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at Microsoft Theater on Nov. 5, 2022 in Los Angeles. (Photo” Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)

Back in March of this year, just a little over a month after it was announced that Dolly Parton was among the 17 nominees on the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s Class of 2022 ballot, the 76-year-old country legend made the shocking and unprecedented announcement that she was “respectfully” withdrawing from nominations — because she didn’t feel “worthy” of the honor. However, two-thirds of the ballots had already been mailed out to Hall voters, so she remained in the running — and while Parton’s issue with her eligibility seemed to stem from her concern that she wasn’t “rock ‘n’ roll” enough, many of those voters thought otherwise. Parton was voted into the Hall anyway, and so, when she appeared at Saturday’s induction ceremony, she wanted to make sure she truly qualified — announcing plans for a rock album and even debuting a new rock song.

“I’m sure a lot of you know that back when they said they were going to put me in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I didn’t really feel like I had done enough to deserve that and I didn’t understand it at the time,” Parton told the audience (shortly after being inducted by Pink, who praised Parton’s “sheer genius”). “When I always thought about the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I thought that was just for people in rock ‘n’ roll. And I thought, ‘Well, if I’m going to be in the Rock & Roll Hall Fame, I’m gonna have to do a rock album — because my husband of 56 years is a huge rock fan… and he’s always said, ‘You should do a rock album.’ And I thought about it a few times, but timing is everything. And then when this all came up… I thought, ‘Well, since I am gonna be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I’m gonna write a song for tonight’ — which I’m gonna sing in a minute.”

With that, Parton excused herself to change out of her sequined minidress, almost leaving her trophy behind at the podium and joking, “See what this means to me? I almost forgot it!” But when she returned to the stage, she was in serious rocker mode, looking like she’d borrowed an outfit from Rob Halford of fellow Class of 2022 inductees Judas Priest. “I’m a rock star now!” she declared, rocking a figure-hugging, bellbottomed, black patent leather catsuit dripping with metal chains. “I figure if I’m gonna be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, I have to earn it,” she explained.

Accompanied by Kent Wells (who Parton said will be producing her rock record) and the Zac Brown Band, Parton proceeded to debut her new rock single, simply and aptly titled “Rockin’,” which shouted out many of the rock ‘n’ roll architects who entered the Hall via the inaugural Class of ’86. “I grew up lovin’ Elvis, and wild-man Jerry Lee/Chuck Berry, Little Richard/They all cast a spell on me/Carl Perkins and those blue suede shoes had no place on the farm… I was just a child, but I went hog-wild/For the rhythm and the beat,” she sang. “I’ve been rockin’, rockin’, rockin’ since the day I was born/I’ll be rockin’ till the day I’m gone/I still got rock ‘n’ roll down in my country soul/And I’ll be rockin’ till the cows come home.”

“And you thought I couldn’t rock!” she quipped, punctuating her statement with a Pete Townshend-like windmill strum across her electric guitar.

Parton’s Rock Hall tribute, which closed Saturday’s ceremony, also included Pink and Brandi Carlile dueting on “Coat of Many Colors” and Sheryl Crow and Brown singing “9 to 5.” But the epic closer was a group number of “Jolene” — certainly a bona fide rock classic, considering that it has been covered by the White Stripes, Miley Cyrus, and even post-punk/gothic bands the Sisters of Mercy and Strawberry Switchblade. The all-star performance featured Brown, Carlile, Crow, and fellow 2022 inductees Eurythmics (with Annie Lennox in a red cowboy hat), Simon Le Bon of Duran Duran, and Halford. (Halford seemed especially delighted to share the stage with Parton, as he cuddled up to the country legend, beaming.) “That was fun!” Parton gushed enthusiastically, hardly seeming like an artist who just announced that she’s retiring from touring.

Dolly Parton and Rob Halford perform onstage during the 37th Annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at Microsoft Theater on Nov. 5, 2022 in Los Angeles. (Photo: Amy Sussman/WireImage)

“We’ve got a star-studded stage! I feel like a hillbilly in the city,” Parton giggled. Earlier, during her acceptance speech, she asked the A-list audience, “Any of you rock stars gonna help me out on [my rock album]? Well, good — ‘cause I’m gonna hold you to it!” Surely everyone who shared the stage with her Saturday would be eager to volunteer their services.

Saturday’s ceremony featured other surprise guests, like Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler and Ed Sheeran accompanying Class of 2022 inductee Eminem on the “Dream On”-interpolating “Sing for the Moment” and “Stan,” respectively; Sara Bareilles singing “Nobody Does It Better” and Olivia Rodrigo doing “You’re So Vain” to honor inductee Carly Simon, who skipped the event because she is mourning the recent deaths of her two sisters; Dave Grohl, who joined his inductee pal Lionel Richie for a Faith No More-like rendition of the Commodores’ “Easy”; and Bruce Springsteen and John Mellencamp, who played “one last one for the Killer” and paid tribute to the late Jerry Lee Lewis with “High School Confidential” and “Great Balls of Fire.”

Inductee Lionel Richie and Dave Grohl perform onstage during the 37th Annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. (Photo: Kevin Kane/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

While many of the speeches, including obviously Parton’s, were lighthearted and fun, there were more serious moments at the podium. The night began on a somber note with Duran Duran announcing that their original guitarist, Andy Taylor, was unable to attend the ceremony because he is battling stage 4 metastatic prostate cancer. Later, Richie got slightly political during his speech, recalling instances in his career when he was told by people in the industry that he “wasn’t Black enough” and stating, “Rock ‘n’ roll is not a color. It’s a feeling. It’s a vibe.”

And when Mellencamp presented high-powered entertainment attorney Allen Grubman with the Hall’s industry-focused Ahmet Ertegun Award, he mentioned that Grubman is Jewish and said, “I’m a gentile whose life has been enriched by countless Jewish people. … Guys, I cannot tell you how f***ing important it is to speak out, if you’re an artist, against antisemitism, against all forms bigotry, all forms of hatred. Whenever you hear hate speech, whenever you hear saying someone derogatory about someone else, we’re all human beings. I don’t give a f*** if you’re Jewish, Black, white, tutti-frutti. I don’t care. Here’s the trick: Silence is complicity. Can I say that again? Silence is complicity. I want to say I’m standing here tonight loudly and proudly, and in solidarity with Allen, his family, and all of my Jewish friends, and all the entire Jewish people of the world. F*** antisemitism, and f*** anybody who says anything in that manner.”

John Mellencamp, next to a photo of Allen Grubman, speaks onstage during the 37th Annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. (Photo: Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images)

On the lighter side, perhaps the funniest one-liner of the night was when Priest’s Halford introduced himself with “Hello, I’m the gay guy in the band,” or when Robert Downey Jr., who surprisingly inducted Duran Duran, recalled a “surreal moment” at his 50th birthday party when Duran Duran “played a short set and I shit you not, halfway through ‘Rio,’ a prominent Hollywood director’s wife tore off her bra and tossed it onstage.” But the most entertaining speech overall had to be by Eminem, who — after mentioning his near-fatal 2007 overdose and instructing his daughter Hailie in the audience to “plug your ears” as he admitted, “Drugs were f***ing delicious” — proceeded to spend at least three solid, breathless minutes rattling off a long, alphabetical list of the rap artists who inspired him, from 2 Live Crew and 3rd Bass to the Wu-Tang Clan. “I know that this induction is supposed to be me, like, talking about myself and shit, but f***that,” he said. “I would not be here without them. I’m a high school dropout with a hip-hop education, and these are my teachers and it’s their night just as much as it is mine.” (In a related funny but much less humble moment, Dr. Dre, who inducted Eminem, claimed that Eminem had wanted Dre to mention that Eminem has “a huge penis.”)

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s Class of 2022 included Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo (who were inducted by Sheryl Crow), Duran Duran, Eminem, Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie (inducted by Lenny Kravitz), Carly Simon (inducted by Sara Bareilles), and Eurythmics, who were inducted by U2’s the Edge and gave the most fiery performance of the night with “Would I Lie to You,” “Missionary Man,” and “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This).” The Musical Excellence Award went to Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis (inducted by Janet Jackson) and Judas Priest (inducted by Alice Cooper). Along with Grubman, Sylvia Robinson and Jimmy Iovine also received the Ahmet Ertegun Award, the latter presented by Springsteen. The Early Influence Award went to Harry Belafonte and Elizabeth Cotten.

Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart of Eurythmics perform onstage during the 37th Annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. (Photo: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)

The 2022 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony took place Nov. 5 at Los Angeles’s Microsoft Theater — the first time the event had been staged in L.A. since 2011. The show will be broadcast on HBO on Nov. 19.

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Meet the International Space Station’s new diverse crew

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When astronauts venture aboard the International Space Station, they see a world without borders. They work together while orbiting Earth, and no boundaries are visible between them, even as member countries contend with geopolitics on the planet below.

This week, a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft with a diverse crew lifted off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The capsule carried NASA astronauts Nicole Mann and Josh Cassada, astronaut Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, and cosmonaut Anna Kikina of Roscosmos — the first Russian to travel on a SpaceX spaceflight.

“We live in the same world, we live in the same universe,” Cassada said. “Sometimes we experience it in a very different way from our neighbors. We can all keep that in mind … and continue to do amazing things. And do it together.”

The NASA SpaceX Crew-5 mission, now safely ensconced on the space station, is one of firsts.

Nicole Aunapu Mann is the first Native American woman to go to space as well as the first woman to serve as mission commander for a SpaceX mission.

Mann grew up in Northern California and is a registered member of the Wailacki tribe of the Round Valley reservation. She has been a pilot and colonel in the US Marine Corps. But it wasn’t until her mid-20s that she realized she wanted to be an astronaut and that it was even possible.

“I realized that being an astronaut was not only something that was a possible dream but actually something that’s quite attainable,” Mann said. “I think as a young girl, I just didn’t realize that that was an opportunity and a possibility.”

A monster tsunami rippled across the planet when a dinosaur-killing asteroid crashed into Earth 66 million years ago.

The impact caused 75% of animal and plant life to go extinct and created a chain of cataclysmic events.

Waves more than a mile high pushed away from the impact crater near Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and scoured the ocean floor thousands of miles away from the asteroid strike. The tsunami was thousands of times more energetic than those generated by earthquakes.

Sediment cores also showed that the tsunami’s powerful force even disturbed coasts of New Zealand’s islands halfway around the globe.

We get by with a little help from our friends.

The James Webb Space Telescope recently teamed up with two other space observatories to produce dazzling new images of the cosmos. By working together, these telescopes can provide a more complete portrait of the universe.

The Chandra X-ray Observatory added X-ray data to some of Webb’s first images to reveal previously hidden aspects. The X-rays pinpointed exploded stars, a shock wave and superheated gas, all highlighted in glowing pinks, purples and blues.

Additionally, astronomers combined Webb and Hubble data to showcase a pair of galaxies about 700 million light-years away from Earth. Webb scientists also spied a celestial surprise, in the form of a distant galaxy, within the image.

Composting your produce scraps can be great for the environment, but there’s an art to this environmentally friendly practice.

Food waste creates harmful greenhouse gases inside a landfill — and little to none of it is composted. Composting means mixing food and yard waste with nitrogen, carbon, water and air to help scraps decompose and turn into fertile soil that your garden will love.

A compost pile that stinks isn’t getting enough oxygen and is emitting methane. To prevent the formation of this harmful gas, and the smell, turn your compost pile every two to five weeks.

Learn more about lifestyle changes to minimize your personal role in the climate crisis and reduce your eco-anxiety in our limited Life, But Greener newsletter series.

Swedish geneticist Svante Pääbo won the Nobel Prize for medicine this week for his pioneering use of ancient DNA to answer questions about human evolution.

In 2010, Pääbo sequenced the first Neanderthal genome and discovered that Homo sapiens interbred with them. Pääbo was also able to extract DNA from fossil fragments, which revealed Denisovans, a new kind of extinct human.

His work has allowed researchers to compare human genetics with the DNA of Neanderthals and Denisovans.

Meanwhile, the Nobel Prize for chemistry was awarded to scientists who discovered how to snap molecules together, and the Nobel Prize for physics went to quantum physicists for unlocking the eerie behavior of particles.

Check out these new finds:

— Archaeologists have uncovered the pieces of a nearly 2,000-year-old classical statue depicting the mythical hero Hercules in northeastern Greece.

— The Pacific Ocean is shrinking and making way for a new supercontinent, called Amasia, that will likely form in about 200 million to 300 million years.

— A new image from a telescope in Chile may look like a comet, but it’s actually an incredibly long debris trail created when the DART spacecraft slammed into an asteroid last month.

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The diverse race to be U.K. prime minister, with Rishi Sunak, Suella Braverman, Kemi Badenoch

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LONDON — In the race to become the next leader of the Conservative Party, and thereafter the next British prime minister, there is a Rishi, Suella and Kemi — running against a Tom, Penny and Liz — to replace a Boris.

The Tory contestants for leadership are the most ethnically diverse in British history — though not so much in ideology.

It is a topic of pride, and some boasting, from center-right Conservative leaders, who seem almost giddy that their field is more diverse than previous contests within the opposition Labour Party, a movement of the center-left, which seeks to represent minorities in Britain.

This year’s Conservative field is also far more diverse than the last Tory leadership contest, won by Boris Johnson in 2019. Then, of the 10 candidates to begin the race, nine were White. Now, half the contenders are minorities.

Whether Britain is evolving into a “post-racial” society, or remains mired in institutional racism and colonialist attitudes, remains a subject of debate here, with evidence for all sides.

What’s clear is that this diverse field of candidates did not happen by accident, but design. It’s the result of nearly two decades of political recruitment and promotion efforts.

The candidates running to be the next U.K. prime minister

British demographers have traditionally used a kind of clumsy term to describe nonwhites in Britain — BAME, for “Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic,” a catchall that has come under considerable criticism, and may soon be phased out.

The United Kingdom’s population is predominantly White (87 percent), with the second and third largest racial groups Asian (6 percent) and Black (3 percent), according to the Office of National Statistics.

But four of eight candidates who qualified for the leadership contest fall into the BAME category: Rishi Sunak, Suella Braverman, Kemi Badenoch and Nadhim Zahawi. When the first-round votes were counted on Wednesday, Sunak was on top and Zahawi had been knocked out — along with Jeremy Hunt, who ran and lost to Johnson in 2019.

Two other prominent Tories with ethnic minority backgrounds — Home Secretary Priti Patel and former health secretary Sajid Javid — decided last-minute not to run.

Of those still in, all are squarely Conservative — though they differ somewhat on tax cuts and social spending. All three of the minority candidates voted for Brexit in the 2016 referendum, despite a campaign propelled in large part by anti-immigrant sentiments. And all three chafe at identity politics.

Making her pitch to Conservative activists and lawmakers, Braverman said: “Don’t vote for me because I’m a woman. Don’t vote for me because I’m brown. Vote for me because I love this country and would do anything for it.”

Braverman, who serves as Attorney General for England and Wales, was born in London, to parents of Indian origin who emigrated to Britain in the 1960s from Kenya and Mauritius.

Announcing her bid on ITV, Braverman said she wanted to cut taxes, cut public spending, stop migrants illegally crossing the English Channel and also “get rid of all this woke rubbish.” Sunak also criticized “clumsy, gender neutral language.” At the launch for Badenoch, supporters saw unisex toilet signs replaced by signs for “men” and “ladies.”

How the next U.K. prime minister will be chosen

This field of candidates can trace its political origins to 2005 and the election of David Cameron as Conservative Party leader, after a general election drubbing by Labour. At the time, Conservatives had only two minority lawmakers in Parliament. In 2001, the Tories had none.

“Cameron was the modernizing leader of the Conservatives, a party then seen as traditionalist and hidebound,” said Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. “He was young, still in his 30s. Essentially, he argued that the Tories needed to change their sales force.”

In a 2005 speech, Cameron said he planned to “change the face of the Conservative Party by changing the faces of the Conservative Party.”

Bale said Cameron understood that many first- and second-generation immigrants were good targets for the party’s messaging: They operated small businesses and were family-focused, but wary of government and resistant to high taxes.

So Cameron pushed his party’s local associations to find and promote younger, more diverse candidates to stand for parliamentary seats in secure Conservative Party constituencies.

Badenoch, 42, represents the Saffron Walden constituency, considered “a safe seat” for Tories since 1922. Bale described it as “old Tory and whiter than White.” Upon being elected to Parliament in 2017, Badenoch praised the U.K. for giving her a chance to live the “British dream.”

Badenoch was born in London, to parents of Nigerian origin and spent most of her childhood in Lagos and the United States.

Tanya Gold, a columnist for the Daily Telegraph, wrote that the Conservative Party’s ethnic diversity might be “confusing and irritating for some Leftists, who think these people should be Leftists because anything else is mad.”

Labour still dominates as a vote-getter among minorities. In the last general election in December 2019, age was the dominant predictor of preference: older voters went for Conservatives and younger voters for Labour. Defining support by race and ethnicity is harder to do in Britain, but based on polling data, the survey group Ipsos MORI estimated that in 2019, Labour performed far better than the Conservatives among ethnic minority groups, taking 64 percent of all Black and minority ethnic voters, while 20 percent voted for the Conservatives and 12 percent for the Liberal Democrats.

Still, Conservatives note that they — and not Labour — were the first party to see a woman, Margaret Thatcher, as prime minister, and then to promote another, Theresa May, to the highest office.

Among the six candidates today for the prime minister’s job are four women — and so the Tories could put a third woman in 10 Downing Street by September.

For his part, Johnson continued the diversity push, appointing what he called “a cabinet for modern Britain.” The Economist noted, “Boris Johnson is such a vivid embodiment of white privilege that it is easy to forget how diverse his cabinet is.”

Politics being politics, two of those diverse cabinet ministers — Sunak and Javid — initiated the government exodus last week, which led to Johnson’s resignation announcement.

Sunak, the former chancellor and finance minister, was born in Southhampton, England, to parents of Indian origin who had emigrated from East Africa. He went to some of the most elite, most expensive schools in Britain, including Oxford. He is married to British-Indian fashion designer Akshata Murty, a billionaire daughter of the founder of the Indian IT company Infosys. The couple were the subject of a recent mini-scandal that revealed that Murty was filing as a “non-domiciled” resident of the U.K., meaning she was not paying British taxes on almost all of her phenomenal wealth.

Right now, Sunak is a top contender to replace his former boss.

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Some Surprising Good News: Bookstores Are Booming and Becoming More Diverse

Many stores have also seen a bump in profits. In a survey of booksellers earlier this year, the association found that some 80 percent of respondents said they saw higher sales in 2021 than in 2020, and nearly 70 percent said their sales last year were higher than 2019, Ms. Hill said.

At Blue Willow Bookshop in Houston, revenue was up by 20 percent in 2021, and the store made more money last year than it did in 2019, according to the owner, Valerie Koehler. Mitchell Kaplan, the founder of Books & Books, an independent chain in South Florida, said sales were up more than 60 percent in 2021 compared to 2020.

Many of the new stores that opened during the pandemic are run by nonwhite booksellers, among them The Salt Eaters Bookshop in Inglewood, Calif., which specializes in books by and about Black women, girls and nonbinary people; the Libros Bookmobile, a Latina-owned mobile bookstore in a converted school bus in Taylor, Texas, which stocks fiction in Spanish and English, and Reader’s Block, a Black-owned bookshop in Stratford, Conn.

Terri Hamm decided to open Kindred Stories in Houston, when her daughter, who is now 14 years old, said she was bored by the books her mother was bringing her home to read. An avid reader, she gravitates toward books about Black girlhood.

“It dawned on me that she didn’t have a space in Houston to discover and explore all the amazing works in the market that are written by Black voices,” Ms. Hamm said. “There wasn’t a space curated with her in mind.”

The rapid growth of physical bookshops is especially surprising at a time when brick and mortar stores face crushing competition from Amazon and other online retailers. Many bookstore owners are also confronting new uncertainty from a grim outlook for the overall economy — labor shortages, supply chain snafus, rising rents and interest rates, higher costs of goods, and a looming recession that could drive down consumer spending.

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Australia PM Albanese appoints record number of women to diverse cabinet

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese attends the Quad leaders’ summit, in Tokyo, Japan, May 24, 2022. Yuichi Yamazaki/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

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SYDNEY, June 1 (Reuters) – Australia’s new federal ministry was sworn into office on Wednesday, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese appointing a record number of women to a diverse cabinet team that includes religious minorities and Indigenous Aboriginals.

A total of 10 women were included in Albanese’s 23-member cabinet, surpassing the seven in the previous Liberal-National coalition government led by Scott Morrison.

Industry Minister Ed Husic and Youth Minister Anne Aly became Australia’s first Muslim federal ministers at a ceremony in the national capital, Canberra, while Linda Burney, wearing a kangaroo-skin cloak, became the first Aboriginal woman to hold the Indigenous Australians ministry.

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Albanese formed an interim ministry, that included 4 other key members, two days after the May 21 election so he could attend a Quad group meeting in Tokyo, attended by U.S. President Joe Biden and the leaders of Japan and India.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles – who was part of the interim ministry along with Penny Wong in foreign affairs, Jim Chalmers as treasurer and Katy Gallagher in finance – has been assigned the defence portfolio.

Don Farrell is the new trade minister and Tanya Plibersek the environment minister, while Clare O’Neil will be in charge of home affairs and Chris Bowen takes energy.

Former Labor leader Bill Shorten will be minister for government services.

Albanese on Tuesday said Labor will govern in its own right, claiming 77 seats in the 151-seat lower house, letting it form a majority government without the support of climate-focussed independents and Greens. read more

Securing a majority lowers the risk for Labor that it would have to negotiate with 16 crossbenchers to pass legislation, although it will still need to win additional support for legislation in parliament’s upper house.

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Reporting by Renju Jose; editing by Richard Pullin

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Blizzard Hires Its First VP of Culture to Make the Company ‘More Diverse, Equitable, and Inclusive’

Blizzard Entertainment has hired Jessica Martinez as its first Vice President, Head of Culture as part of its “ongoing initiative to create a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive workplace culture where people at every level can learn, grow, and bring their most creative selves to their work.”

Blizzard shared the news in a blogpost, saying that Jessica and other members of the leadership team will be in charge of “implementing our culture strategy, ensuring alignment across all teams and functions, and revamping learning and talent development programs.”

Image Credit: Blizzard Entertainment

“When you create a people-first environment where teams feel safe, valued, and work together toward a shared purpose, everyone thrives–the employees, the players, and the business,” Martinez said. “Making the values of our connections show up in what we do is how we bring humanity back to business.”

Jessica comes to Blizzard with more than 14 years of experience at The Walt Disney Company, where she was a leader in strategy, communications, operations, and employee experience. She served as Chief of Staff and was a key strategic advisor to both the Chief Security Office and the Chief Technology & Digital Officer for Disney Parks & Resorts.

She was also an integral part of Disney’s 21st Century Fox acquisition, and was a champion of “creating a values-driven culture that connected global teams and celebrated diversity.”

Activision Blizzard Lawsuit Timeline: The Story So Far

Martinez joins Blizzard as it is undergoing not only its planned acquisition by Microsoft, but also as the company and the larger Activision Blizzard deals with the fallout of a lawsuit filed by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing that alleged the company fostered a “frat boy” culture in which female employees were subjected to sexual harasssment, unequal pay, and much more.

Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.

Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.



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