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I Care a Lot: That ending explained and all your questions answered

Eiza Gonzalez, Dianne Wiest and Rosamund Pike star in I Care a Lot.


Netflix

If you’ve just finished I Care a Lot, you probably need a moment to let it all sink in. This jam-packed thriller is available on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video depending on your region. It has it all: movie characters basically designed to be memorable, a twist-after-twist plot and Rosamund Pike’s invincible Lego haircut. To cap it all off, the story was inspired by real-life events. Let’s go through some of I Care a Lot’s biggest questions and discuss that shock ending.

Warning: Spoilers ahead.

Where can I stream I Care a Lot?

Depending on your region, you can stream I Care a Lot on either Netflix or Amazon Prime Video. Netflix offers it for the US, France, Germany, Latin America, South Africa, the Middle East and India. Amazon Prime has it for Australia, Canada, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.

Is I Care a Lot based on a true story?

J Blakeson wrote (and directed) I Care a Lot after he was inspired by real news stories of professional guardians in America and a “legal loophole” they exploited. “It started when I saw news stories about real-life predatory guardians who game the system and exploit their wards,” he said.

He went down a “Google rabbit-hole” in researching for the film: “I was horrified. Imagine opening your door one day and there is a person standing there holding a piece of paper that gives them total legal power over you.” He added, “This provided a lot of themes that interested me, like ambition, the American Dream, and humans becoming commodities. So the story started there. I sat and wrote it on my own and very quickly it formed into what is now I Care a Lot.”

What’s the guardianship phenomenon?

If you choose to dig deeper into the dark, immoral side of Marla Grayson, The New Yorker has a 2017 essay on the guardianship phenomenon.

What’s with the vaping?

Marla Grayson and her vape pen are never far apart. According to Rosamund Pike, this reflects Grayson’s roots in a vaping company, a part of her backstory that didn’t make it into the film.

“The backstory of Marla is that she had a vape business until she was Walmart-ed out of business by a great big discount vape store opening across the street, which she was furious about,” Pike told Collider. “I think that was her shot at the American dream played fair. She had a small-time business, she was a small-time business owner, she got screwed and then she thought, ‘Right. Chips are down. I’m going all out. I’m gonna play the system like everybody else.’ And I think every time she inhales, it’s bringing that attitude to it. It’s the attitude of having been screwed and now you’re out to screw everybody.”

Does Jennifer Peterson get out of the nursing home at the end?

You might have noticed we don’t see much more of Jennifer Peterson (Dianne Wiest) around the halfway point, once Marla has her committed to a psychiatric ward. So does she ever make it out? Marla and Roman (Peter Dinklage) discuss Jennifer at the end, when Marla again asks for $10 million to have her released. Instead, Roman pulls a wild card and offers to partner up with Marla to build a global nursing home business. In accepting, it’s assumed Marla does see to Jennifer’s release as part of the deal.

Why did Marla have to die?

Not only does Marla’s death come right when she appears to have everything she wanted, but it yanks a happy ending from her love Fran (Eiza González) too. While this comeuppance might be warranted, it leaves a bittersweet taste in the mouth. Rosamund Pike and J Blakeson discussed the ending with USA Today.

“In my head, Marla never believed she was going to die,” Pike told USA Today. “I mean, right until the point that she breathes her last, I think she still thinks she’s going to win and she’s going to get out of it. I really do.”

Blakeson said, “People find the ending satisfying, but it leaves a bittersweet taste in their mouth because we end with the most likable character in the movie screaming in despair.”

What happens to Fran?

While it’s heart-breaking Fran loses her love, Blakeson said she does inherit Marla’s share and role in the nursing home empire. This isn’t necessarily a good thing, because old folks “are going to continue to be screwed over in a real way,” Blakeson told USA Today. “You can chop the head off the hydra, but there’s another one that will keep living.”

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How to find Bulbasaur, Charmander and Squirtle explained • Eurogamer.net

Time to find Pokmon which make their home near Pallet Town. 

The Pallet Town Collection Challenge is one of the Collection Challenges for the Pokémon Go Tour: Kanto event.

This Collection Challenge will task you with catching Pokémon which can be found in and around Pallet Town in the Kanto region.

There are a total of 10 Collection Challenges for you to complete as part of Pokémon Go Tour: Kanto – Pewter City, Cerulean City, Fuchsia City, Pokémon League, Raid, Research, Evolve, Trade and Incense. The latter two are different depending on whether you’re playing the Red or Green version of the event.

Below you can find every Pokémon in the Pallet Town Collection Challenge and, it’s important to know, that you have until Sunday, 28th February at 7:59pm (local time) to complete this challenge.

On this page:

Pokémon Go – Tour: Kanto Collection Challenge in-game preview

List of Pokémon and rewards for Pallet Town Collection Challenge in Pokémon Go

The Pallet Town Collection Challenge is part of the Pokémon Go Tour: Kanto event, though it will be available till Sunday, 28th February at 7:59pm (local time). This Collection Challenge will only be available to you if you’re brought a ticket for the event.

Throughout this challenge you’ll need to hunt down Gen 1 Pokémon which live near Pallet Town in the Kanto region. All of these Pokémon can be found in the wild throughout the event, though they’re spawn rate is increased during the Pallet Town hours.

Here are the 10 Pokémon on the Pallet Town Collection Challenge list:

Pidgey.
  • Bulbasaur
  • Charmander
  • Squirtle
  • Caterpie
  • Weedle
  • Pidgey
  • Rattata
  • Spearow
  • Pikachu
  • Zubat

Remember – Pokémon hatched from eggs and Shadow Pokémon won’t count towards this Collection Challenge.

For completing the Pallet Town Collection Challenge, you’ll receive 151 Stardust, 30 Pokémon and a Spearow encounter.

Tips for completing the Pallet Town Collection Challenge in Pokémon Go

Here are some tips which will help you complete the Pallet Town Collection Challenge in Pokémon Go:

  • If you want to complete the Pallet Town Collection Challenge during the Pokémon Go Tour: Kanto event, then make sure you play between either 9am to 10am or 2pm to 3pm (local time). During these periods, the Pokémon found around Pallet Town will appear more frequently in the wild.
  • You have until Sunday, 28th February at 7:59pm (local time) to complete this Collection Challenge, so don’t feel like you have to rush the experience!
  • If you’re having trouble finding a specific Pokémon, try using Incense to attract Pokémon to your specific location. It’s important to note, however, that during the Tour: Kanto event, the Pokémon attracted to Incense will differ slightly depending on which version you’re playing.
  • You can also attract Pokémon to your location by placing a Lure Module on a PokéStop. There are also three special Lure Modules – Glacial, Magnetic and Mossy – which will attract specific Pokémon types.
  • Don’t forget to use Razz and Nanab berries to make Pokémon easier to catch.
  • If you want to save PokéBalls, try targeting Pokémon with lower CP levels, because they will be easier to catch.
  • Keep an eye on the Pokémon radar in the bottom right-hand corner of the screen and use it to track specific Pokémon to the PokéStop they’re currently hiding by.


The Season of Celebration has arrived! With it comes a level cap increase – including the addition of XL Candy, the Legacy 40 Challenge quest and boosts to some XP sources – Platinum Medals, the arrival of Gen 6 Pokémon such as Espurr and changes to the Go Battle League

We’ve recently seen the addition of ‘Strange’ red eggs and new Arlo, Cliff, Sierra andGiovanni line-ups.


How the Pallet Town Collection Challenge works in Pokémon Go

Collection Challenges in Pokémon Go were released in January 2021 and run alongside certain in-games events. Each Collection Challenge will see you catching a number of Pokémon that, thanks to the event, are appearing more frequently in the wild.

Once you’ve completed the Collection Challenge by catching all of these Pokémon, you’ll be rewarded with a number of items and progress for your Elite Collector medal.

The Pallet Town Collection Challenge is part of the Pokémon Go Tour: Kanto event and is available for a week after the event to ensure you have enough time to complete it. This means it will be available from Saturday, 20th February at 9am (local time) to Sunday, 28th February at 7:59pm (local time).

Collection Challenges can be found on the ‘Today View,’ which is accessed by pressing the field research button (the little binoculars) in the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. Depending on whether you’ve been looking at your current field or special research tasks, you may have to scroll to your left.

After accessing ‘Today View,’ you’ll find a list of the Pokémon you need to catch to complete the Collection Challenge. Catching a Pokémon in the Collection Challenge rooster will tick it off the list to keep track of which ones you’ve caught and which you haven’t.

Pokémon will be ticked off from the Collection Challenge list as you catch them.

It’s important to note that Shadow Pokémon and ones you’ve hatched from eggs won’t count towards the Collection Challenge.

Remember – this Collection Challenge must be completed before Sunday, 28th February 7:59pm (local time) or else you’ll never be able to add it to your Elite Collector medal.

Good luck completing the Pallet Town Collector’s Challenge!

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Bachelor host Chris Harrison steps aside for now: The backlash explained

The Bachelor host Chris Harrison (right) with current series lead Matt James. 


ABC

Everything isn’t coming up roses for Chris Harrison. The longtime host of ABC’s Bachelor franchise on Saturday said he’ll step aside from hosting the The Bachelor “for a period of time” as backlash mounts over his comments about photos showing a current contestant attending an antebellum-plantation-themed party. 

The controversial pictures evoke a painful period in American history before the Civil War ended slavery and have sparked serious, soul-searching discussion among Bachelor fans and former contestants about race, representation and accountability. A Change.org petition calling for the removal of Harrison as host of The Bachelor, The Bachelorette and spinoff shows has gotten more than 39,000 signatures as of Saturday evening. And Rachel Lindsay, the first Black Bachelorette star, says she’s done with the franchise. 

“I have spent the last few days listening to the pain my words have caused, and I am deeply remorseful,” Harrison said in a public apology, the second this week. “My ignorance did damage to my friends, colleagues and strangers alike … Now, just as I have taught my children to stand up, and to own their actions, I will do the same.” 

Here’s the whole brouhaha, broken down. 

What did Chris Harrison say (or not say)?   

During an Extra interview this week with former Bachelorette star and current TV host Rachel Lindsay, Lindsay broached photos that had surfaced of Rachael Kirkconnell, a contestant on season 25 of The Bachelor, airing now. The images show her at an antebellum-plantation-themed college fraternity party in 2018. 

The photos sparked strong reaction on social media, as they evoke the racist history of the South before the Civil War. Matt James, star of the current season, is the show’s first Black lead, and Kirkconnell, a 24-year-old graphic designer from Cumming, Georgia, is rumored to be the one he picks to marry/date/appear on the cover of People magazine with after winnowing down his field of love interests. Kirkconnell has also been accused of liking racist social media posts, including some that show Confederate flags. 

Rachael Kirkconnell, shown on a date with Matt James on The Bachelor, is rumored to be his frontrunner.  


ABC

“We all need to have a little grace, a little understanding, a little compassion,” the 49-year-old Harrison said during the interview with Lindsay. “Because I have seen some stuff online — this judge, jury, executioner thing where people are just tearing this girl’s life apart and diving into, like, her parents, her parents’ voting record. It’s unbelievably alarming to watch this. I haven’t heard Rachael speak on this yet. Until I actually hear this woman have a chance to speak, who am I to say any of this? I saw a picture of her at a sorority party five years ago and that’s it.”

Harrison, host of The Bachelor since 2002, said that while he’s not defending the gathering, people would not have examined an Old South party “under the same lens” in 2018 as they would in 2021, given the heightened consciousness of racial inequality amid the Black Lives Matter movement. Lindsay, an outspoken advocate for diversity in the franchise, disagreed. 

“It’s not a good look ever,” Lindsay said, emphasizing the photos’ implicit connection to slavery and degradation. “She’s celebrating the old South. If I went to that party, what would I represent?” Lindsay — who hosts a Bachelor Nation podcast and sometimes makes cameos on the show — has since said she won’t renew her contract with the franchise when it runs out. “I’m exhausted. I have truly had enough,” Lindsay said on Friday’s episode of her Spotify Original Podcast Higher Learning.  

How did the public react to Rachel Lindsay’s interview? 

Harrison has loyal supporters who are standing behind him and decrying the “woke police” and “cancel culture”: “So sorry you had to apologize,” wrote one Twitter follower. “I can’t believe everyone has become so sensitive.” Read an Instagram response to his announcement of taking time off: “I can’t wait until you’re back and continuing with something millions of us love to see you do!” Still, criticism has continued to mount, including on Twitter and The Bachelor subreddit, where discussion of the controversy has overshadowed all other Bachelor buzz for days.  

A number of high-profile contestants, including Mike Johnson, Taylor Nolan and former Bachelorette stars Tayshia Adams, Kaitlyn Bristowe and Jillian Harris, have expressed disappointment in Harrison and his choice of words and have called on series producers to vet contestants more carefully. Matt James, the star of this season’s show, on Friday expressed his gratitude to Lindsay for continuing to shine a spotlight on representation and responsibility in the franchise, which fans have criticized for its lack of diversity.  

“I am beyond grateful to have Rachel as a mentor during this season,” James wrote on Instagram. “Your advocacy of BIPOC people in the franchise is invaluable, I stand with you and the rest of the women advocating for change and accountability.”

The day before, almost every contestant of The Bachelor Season 25, including Kirkconnell, posted the same message on social media denouncing any “defense of racism.” 

“Any defense of racist behavior denies the lived and continued experiences of BIPOC individuals,” the statement reads. “These experiences are not to be exploited or tokenized.” 

“Rachel Lindsay continues to advocate with ‘grace’ for individuals who identify as BIPOC within this franchise,” the statement concludes. “Just because she is speaking the loudest, doesn’t mean she is alone. We stand with her, we hear her, and we advocate for change alongside her.”

The men of season 16 of The Bachelorette — which preceded Matt James’ season of The Bachelor and featured two back-to-back leads, including Adams, who is Black — also released a statement “denouncing racist behavior and any defense thereof.” 

“We had the opportunity to be a part of one of the most diverse casts in the history of the franchise,” the statement reads. “The addition of more people who identify as BIPOC has opened up the conversation on race, community and who we are as people. A conversation that has been long overdue.”

What about Chris Harrison’s first apology? 

On Wednesday, prior to Saturday’s announcement that he’d be taking time off from hosting duties, Harrison issued the following statement:  

“To my Bachelor Nation family — I will always own a mistake when I make one, so I am here to extend a sincere apology,” it read. “I have this incredible platform to speak about love, and yesterday I took a stance on topics about which I should have been better informed.”

“While I do not speak for Rachael Kirkconnell, my intentions were simply to ask for grace in offering her an opportunity to speak on her own behalf,” he continued. “What I now realize I have done is cause harm by wrongly speaking in a manner that perpetuates racism, and for that I am so deeply sorry. I also apologize to my friend Rachel Lindsay for not listening to her better on a topic she has a firsthand understanding of, and humbly thank the members of Bachelor Nation who have reached out to me to hold me accountable. I promise to do better.”

Bachelor Nation, for those who don’t follow the reality TV franchise, refers to fans and former participants of the long-running romance show. You don’t need a visa to visit Bachelor Nation, just a TV or computer. Bachelor Nation is known dedicated fans with a vocal presence on social media, where weekly episodes spark an amusing run of memes and jokes that can get thousands of likes and comments. Reactions to the show’s drama and fast-tracked relationships are often funny and snarky, and that tone has seeped into the public treatment of Harrison this week. Most of the discussion has a somber tone, however. 

Harrison’s second second apology was even more forceful. 

“To the Black community, to the BIPOC community: I am so sorry,” it reads. “My words were harmful. I am listening, and I truly apologize for my ignorance and any pain it caused you. I want to give my heartfelt thanks to the people from these communities who I’ve had enlightening conversations with over the past few days, and I am so grateful to those who have reached out to help me on my path to anti-racism.”

ABC did not immediately respond to a request for comment Saturday.

Kirkconnell, for her part, issued her own apology following Harrison’s interview, saying that “I was ignorant, but my ignorance was racist. I am sorry to the communities and individuals that my actions harmed and offended. I am ashamed about my lack of education, but it is no one’s responsibility to educate me.”

“I deserve to be held accountable for my actions,” she concluded. “I will never grow unless I recognize what I have done is wrong. I don’t think one apology means that I deserve your forgiveness, but rather I hope I can earn your forgiveness through my future actions.”



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Petition calls for The Bachelor host Chris Harrison’s ouster: The backlash explained

The Bachelor host Chris Harrison (right) with current series lead Matt James. 


ABC

Everything isn’t coming up roses for Chris Harrison. The longtime host of ABC’s Bachelor franchise continues to face backlash after apologizing for comments about photos that show a current contestant on The Bachelor attending an antebellum-plantation-themed party. 

The controversial pictures evoke a painful period in American history before the Civil War ended slavery and have sparked serious, soul-searching discussion among Bachelor fans and former contestants about race, representation and accountability. A Change.org petition calling for the removal of Harrison as host of the popular dating reality show and its spinoffs has gotten more than 37,000 signatures as of Saturday morning. And Rachel Lindsay, the first Black Bachelorette star, says she’s done with the franchise. 

Here’s the whole brouhaha, broken down. 

What did Chris Harrison say (or not say)?   

During an Extra interview this week with former Bachelorette star and current TV host Rachel Lindsay, Lindsay broached photos that had surfaced of Rachael Kirkconnell, a contestant on season 25 of The Bachelor, airing now. The images show her attending an antebellum-plantation-themed college fraternity party in 2018. 

The photos sparked strong reaction on social media, as they evoke the racist history of the South before the Civil War. Matt James, star of the current season, is the show’s first Black lead, and Kirkconnell, a 24-year-old graphic designer from Cumming, Georgia, is rumored to be the one he picks to marry/date/appear on the cover of People magazine with after winnowing down his field of love interests. Kirkconnell has also been accused of liking racist social media posts, including some that show Confederate flags. 

Rachael Kirkconnell, shown on a date with Matt James on The Bachelor, is rumored to be his frontrunner.  


ABC

“We all need to have a little grace, a little understanding, a little compassion,” the 49-year-old Harrison said during the interview with Lindsay. “Because I have seen some stuff online — this judge, jury, executioner thing where people are just tearing this girl’s life apart and diving into, like, her parents, her parents’ voting record. It’s unbelievably alarming to watch this. I haven’t heard Rachael speak on this yet. Until I actually hear this woman have a chance to speak, who am I to say any of this? I saw a picture of her at a sorority party five years ago and that’s it.”

Harrison, host of The Bachelor since 2002, said that while he’s not defending the party people would not have examined an Old South party “under the same lens” in 2018 as they would in 2021, given the heightened consciousness of racial inequality amid the Black Lives Matter movement. Lindsay, an outspoken advocate for diversity in the franchise, disagreed. 

“It’s not a good look ever,” Lindsay said, emphasizing the photos’ implicit connection to slavery and degradation. “She’s celebrating the old South. If I went to that party, what would I represent?” Lindsay — who hosts a Bachelor Nation podcast and sometimes makes cameos on the show — has since said she won’t renew her contract with the franchise when it runs out. “I’m exhausted. I have truly had enough,” Lindsay said on Friday’s episode of her Spotify Original Podcast Higher Learning.  

How did the public react to Rachel Lindsay’s interview? 

Harrison has loyal supporters who are standing behind him and decrying the “woke police” and “cancel culture”: “People, lighten up a little,” wrote one Twitter supporter. Wrote another: “So sorry you had to apologize. I can’t believe everyone has become so sensitive.” Still, criticism has continued to mount, including on Twitter and the bachelor subreddit, where discussion of the controversy has overshadowed all other Bachelor buzz for days.  

A number of high-profile contestants, including Mike Johnson, Taylor Nolan and former Bachelorette stars Tayshia Adams, Kaitlyn Bristowe and Jillian Harris, have expressed disappointment in Harrison and his choice of words and have called on series producers to vet contestants more carefully. Matt James, the star of this season’s show, on Friday expressed his gratitude to Lindsay for continuing to shine a spotlight on representation and responsibility in the franchise, which fans have criticized for its lack of diversity.  

“I am beyond grateful to have Rachel as a mentor during this season,” James wrote on Instagram. “Your advocacy of BIPOC people in the franchise is invaluable, I stand with you and the rest of the women advocating for change and accountability.”

The day before, almost every contestant of The Bachelor Season 25, including Kirkconnell, posted the same message on social media denouncing any “defense of racism.” 

“Any defense of racist behavior denies the lived and continued experiences of BIPOC individuals,” the statement reads. “These experiences are not to be exploited or tokenized.” 

“Rachel Lindsay continues to advocate with ‘grace’ for individuals who identify as BIPOC within this franchise,” the statement concludes. “Just because she is speaking the loudest, doesn’t mean she is alone. We stand with her, we hear her, and we advocate for change alongside her.”

The men of season 16 of The Bachelorette — which preceded Matt James’ season of The Bachelor and featured two back-to-back leads, including Adams, who is Black — also released a statement “denouncing racist behavior and any defense thereof.” 

“We had the opportunity to be a part of one of the most diverse casts in the history of the franchise,” the statement reads. “The addition of more people who identify as BIPOC has opened up the conversation on race, community and who we are as people. A conversation that has been long overdue.”

Has Chris Harrison apologized? 

He has. On Wednesday, he posted an apology to social media. 

“To my Bachelor Nation family — I will always own a mistake when I make one, so I am here to extend a sincere apology,” it read. “I have this incredible platform to speak about love, and yesterday I took a stance on topics about which I should have been better informed.”

“While I do not speak for Rachael Kirkconnell, my intentions were simply to ask for grace in offering her an opportunity to speak on her own behalf,” he continued. “What I now realize I have done is cause harm by wrongly speaking in a manner that perpetuates racism, and for that I am so deeply sorry. I also apologize to my friend Rachel Lindsay for not listening to her better on a topic she has a firsthand understanding of, and humbly thank the members of Bachelor Nation who have reached out to me to hold me accountable. I promise to do better.”

Bachelor Nation, for those who don’t follow the reality TV franchise, refers to fans and former participants of the long-running romance show. You don’t need a visa to visit Bachelor Nation, just a TV or computer. Bachelor Nation is known for its vocal presence on social media, where weekly episodes spark an amusing run of memes and jokes that can get thousands of likes and comments. Reactions to the show’s drama and fast-tracked relationships are often funny and snarky, and that tone has seeped into the public treatment of Harrison this week. Most of the discussion has a somber tone, however. 

Kirkconnell, for her part, issued her own apology, saying that “I was ignorant, but my ignorance was racist. I am sorry to the communities and individuals that my actions harmed and offended. I am ashamed about my lack of education, but it is no one’s responsibility to educate me.”

“I deserve to be held accountable for my actions,” she concluded. “I will never grow unless I recognize what I have done is wrong. I don’t think one apology means that I deserve your forgiveness, but rather I hope I can earn your forgiveness through my future actions.”



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WandaVision episode 5 ending and surprise cameo explained

WandaVision episode 5 spoilers follow.

In one of WandaVision’s most heartbreaking moments, Wanda tells her twin boys that, “We can’t reverse death, no matter how sad it makes us.” That’s not great news for all the Sparky stans out there, whether you’re a fan of cute dogs or the Tom King ‘Vision’ comics this little critter was inspired by.

However, what Wanda says isn’t entirely true. Sure, the mechanics of Vision’s resurrection are yet to be determined, but we do know that Maximoff is somehow responsible for his return, reanimating his robot corpse like a creepy puppeteer.

And then of course, there’s that ending. We’ve suspected for a while that Pietro would return to life in the MCU, because if Wanda’s husband can come back, why not her dead brother too?

YouTubeMarvel Studios

What we didn’t necessarily expect — internet leaks aside — was that this version of Pietro wouldn’t be the one that Wanda fought alongside in the Avengers. In fact, this Quicksilver hasn’t even appeared in the MCU until now, something which was only made possible very recently thanks to the Disney/Fox merger.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. First of all, who is this “long-lost brother” and why does he look like Evan Peters? Wanda sure did look confused, and plenty of viewers probably shared that sentiment too.

As Marvel fans will remember, Aaron Taylor-Johnson played Pietro Maximoff in Avengers: Age of Ultron, but the speedster’s time on screen went by pretty quickly because Ultron killed him before the credits rolled.

The Pietro who shows up here in WandaVision instantly claims to be Wanda’s brother, and he seems to recognise her too, so why hasn’t Aaron Taylor-Johnson been recast in the role? A year before Marvel brought the silver-haired speedster to life on screen, Fox’s X-Men introduced their own version played by American Horror Story’s Evan Peters.

For years, the MCU and Fox’s X-Men universe were unable to cross over with each other for boring legal reasons, keeping apart characters who regularly hang out together in the comics.

Things were mostly kept separate on screen because of this, but Quicksilver was an unusual case, because in the source material, he’s both a mutant and an Avenger. As this complicated things, these blurry lines enabled Marvel and Fox to both create their own unique versions of the same character.

DisneyMarvel Studios

However, that all changed a couple of years ago when Disney and Fox merged, allowing Marvel to finally integrate long-lost characters like the X-Men into their world. Fans have been speculating about this for quite some time, but finally, WandaVision has now confirmed that mutants are officially part of the MCU. Or has it?

More on that later, but for now. the question remains: why would Wanda resurrect a different version of her brother? Did she just “recast him”, as Darcy suggests? Was Aaron Taylor-Johnson just busy that day?

Right now, there are two prevailing theories, both more bewitching than even Wanda herself. The first possibility is that this isn’t actually Pietro and Marvel are just messing with us by casting someone who once played this character for a different studio. And if that’s the case, we don’t imagine that this “Pietro’s” intentions are good.

WandaVision’s latest episode does a lot of heavy lifting to suggest that Wanda is the MCU’s new Big Bad, and yes, the way she manipulates innocent people is unforgivable, but it still feels like someone else is also manipulating her in the same way. After all, Agnes clearly knows more than she’s letting on, and although Vision thinks Wanda is fully in control, even she was surprised by Pietro’s arrival.

This suggests that Evan Peters is playing someone else external to all this who isn’t under Wanda’s spell. When she brought Vision back to life, this was an intentional move on her part, but that’s not the case here, and wouldn’t she need to focus in order to bring Pietro back? Sure, he could just be another manifestation of her subconscious, but if that were true, wouldn’t he look like Aaron Taylor-Johnson?

For some time now, fans have suspected that someone else is pulling the strings here, and an obvious choice from the comics is Mephisto, Marvel’s version of Satan. This demonic entity has manipulated comic book Wanda before in a bid to harness her power, and the story of her children is inextricably tied up with his. Then there’s also Master Pandemonium, a former Hollywood star who now does Mephisto’s bidding using demons for limbs. Yep, really.

DisneyMarvel Studios

Both characters have caused Wanda untold suffering in the comics, destroying her hopes for a happy ending to call her own, so it’s entirely possible that Evan Peters is actually playing one of these villains in disguise. And the actual devil’s arrival in the MCU would be a big game-changer, right?

But then, that still doesn’t explain why Evan Peters appears instead of Aaron. If this isn’t just stunt casting, it seems the most likely explanation for all this is that he really is playing Pietro, but the one we first met in the X-Men films.

DC’s Flash can use his super-speed to race between alternate realities, but Quicksilver hasn’t been known to his use his powers this way, whether you’re talking Marvel’s Pietro, Fox’s Pietro, or even comic book Pietro. With that in mind, what seems more likely is that Wanda has actually pulled this version of her brother directly out of the X-Men universe and into the MCU.

This episode goes out of its way to confirm that Wanda can rewrite reality, so it’s possible that she may have subconsciously dragged a different version of Pietro into Westview. Wanda can only bring Vision back to life because he’s synthetic and they both share a connection to the Mind Stone. Resurrecting an actual human could exist outside the realms of even Wanda’s power set, so instead of bringing her Pietro back to life, she may have (subconsciously) scoured the multiverse for a different Pietro who survived.

Multiverse shenanigans have been on the cards for a while. Not only do we know for certain that Deapool 3 will bring Ryan Reynolds into the MCU, but it’s also been confirmed that previous Spider-Men from the Sony universe will meet Tom Holland’s Spidey too. And it’s no coincidence that Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness will arrive before then…

Marvel StudiosDisney

Knowing that Wanda has been confirmed to appear in that film too, it stands to reason that all of Wanda’s meddling with reality could disrupt the fabric of reality at large, forcing Doctor Strange to step in and help fix the multiverse before it’s too late.

With multiple Spider-Men and a confirmed Fantastic Four film heading our way, the X-Men are definitely going to start rubbing shoulders with the Avengers sooner rather than later, and it looks like WandaVision is the key to unlocking all that.

If that’s true, it’s too early to tell if Evan Peters will stick around for long as a “new” Pietro. And honestly, we’re a bit worried about Vision’s future beyond this show too. After Sparky’s death, Billy and Tommy tell their mother that “Family is forever,” but we’re not so sure that Wanda will get the happy ending she deserves…

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Lil Uzi Vert’s $24 million diamond forehead piercing explained

Lil Uzi Vert debuted a new accessory on Wednesday with a video showing off a pink diamond attached to his forehead. Now, people are wondering how the rapper got the stone in place and if the seemingly major body modification is safe.

The 26-year-old rapper received a mixed response to his new look from people who called it a third eye or referred to Uzi as a Sims character after he shared the new accessory to Instagram. “Beauty is pain,” he wrote in the caption.

While many assumed Uzi had the stone implanted into his forehead, according to Luis Garcia, the vice president of the Association of Professional Piercers, it’s simply a piercing.

“It looks like he has what we would call a vertical bridge piercing, as in the bridge of the nose. That would be an actual piercing with a staple shape barbell that enters at one point, exits at another, and then the big diamond attaches to that bar on the front,” Garcia tells Yahoo Life. “It’s a piercing, while obviously not super common in typical circles, it’s fairly common in piercing circles. …Definitely not with a giant $24 million diamond on it. But it’s something that gets done.”

With three decades of experience under his belt, Garcia says that the style of piercing is “not dangerous.” However, the nearly 11-carat diamond that Uzi attached to it does pose some risk.

“With such a big piece, the weight of it, day to day life like washing your face, sleeping, rolling around, wearing a hoody, it’s just gonna be so easy to get that thing snagged. That’s really where the main concern is,” Garcia explains. “The chances of it working out are slim.”

It seems that Uzi has been waiting a long time to get the piercing done.

On Twitter, the Penn. native shared that he had been paying for the stone from a jeweler at Eliantte and Co. since 2017.

He then went on to answer questions about the stone and why he didn’t just attach it to a ring, claiming that he is “literally tryna turn into a diamond.”

Garcia admits that while he can imagine that the piece appears “scary” to those who don’t know a lot about piercings, it’s likely the overwhelming appearance of the diamond is what’s leading people to raise questions and criticize the rapper.

“Sure, it’s ostentatious and it’s in your face but so is a grill to a lot of people, which Uzi wears,” Garcia says. “It’s fashion.”

Still, he wouldn’t necessarily recommend that Uzi’s fans and followers run out to get a surface piercing of their own to match.

“We’ve already had a couple of calls about people wanting it done. In one sense it incites interest, which is always good, getting more people that aren’t normally exposed to these trends seeing it and maybe gaining acceptance,” Garcia says. “The hard thing, I would say, you have responsible piercers who would say no to doing something like that. But at the same time, just like in any other business, you have people that aren’t as responsible or businesses that don’t necessarily care that much about quality. So you’re gonna have piercers that are gonna do stuff like that no matter what because they think it’s cool, they want that money. So there’s a downside to it at that sense.”

As for any health risks that Uzi might face for the piercing he got done and the quality of it, Garcia says the worst that can happen is an infection as the skin begins to reject the piece, pushing it out of place.

“Overall, not super risky,” Garcia says. “Worst case, he’s gonna end up with a scar when the piercing rejects or fails, depending on how long he keeps it in.”

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The coronavirus pandemic explained, one year on

On Jan. 19, 2020, CNET posted its first guide to a mystery coronavirus discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan. Dozens of cases and two deaths had been recorded, but as we wrote at the time, little was known about “how destructive the new virus might be.” The coronavirus — and the disease it causes — hadn’t even been named. It hadn’t officially been found in the US. 

Today we call the mystery pathogen SARS-CoV-2. It’s responsible for COVID-19, a respiratory illness that has infected over 100 million people. In just one year, we’ve gone from two deaths to 2 million, across the world. 

Reading our original article, it’s immediately obvious that everyone — virologists, epidemiologists, journalists — was flying blind in those very early days. We were oblivious, perhaps even shortsighted. No one predicted exactly what would occur over the next 365 days, though there were those who tried to sound the alarm early.

Back then, research had only just begun to uncover how we might combat COVID-19. In those early days, new data came quickly, but there were significant gaps in our knowledge that allowed a deluge of misinformation, conspiracy and fear to fester. 

We attempted to answer six questions on Jan. 19, 2020. They were fundamental questions about the new virus, its symptoms and how it spread. A year on, we are revisiting them. This updated guide reveals how much we’ve learned and charts how science was able to provide certainty and hope in the face of the biggest public health crisis in a century. 

Science and technology have provided clarity where there was none — but much remains unknown as we face the second pandemic year. 

What is a coronavirus?

There is no better-known virus on Earth than the coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, which was first detected in Wuhan in December 2019. In a landslide victory, the coronavirus beats out Ebola, influenza, HIV and the panoply of viruses that cause the common cold for Earth’s Most Renowned Virus. But it’s not the only coronavirus. 

Coronaviruses belong to a taxonomic family known as Coronaviridae, which includes dozens of different species. First described in 1968, coronaviruses are shaped like soccer balls wrapped in a blanket of spikes. Under an electron microscope, these spikes look like the sun’s corona — hence their name. Only a handful are known to cause disease in humans. 

World famous.


Alissa Eckert, MSMI/Dan Higgins, MAMS

The SARS epidemic of 2002-03 and the MERS epidemic of 2012 showed coronaviruses have the capability to cause significant outbreaks of deadly disease. The epidemics launched an international effort to understand the pandemic potential of coronaviruses. 

In 2020, 65,000 papers were published and listed on PubMed under the term “coronavirus.” A year prior, that number was 885. The lessons we’re learning about SARS-CoV-2 are relevant to this particular virus but also revealing more and more about coronaviruses in general. “It is the fastest-moving field I have ever seen in my life,” says Stuart Turville, an immunovirologist at the Kirby Institute in Australia. 

Among the defining characteristics of the coronavirus are the numerous “spikes” on its surface. These proteins function like keys, allowing a coronavirus to enter a cell. Spikes are able to unlock entry by binding to a “lock,” a cell surface protein in humans (and other animals) known as ACE2. The two pieces of molecular machinery have been the focus of thousands of researchers around the world since January 2020. 

During the SARS epidemic, scientists had learned that the spike elicits an immune response, stimulating cells and antibodies to fight the virus. This gave them a headstart on building vaccines against SARS-CoV-2. “Labs could download the [genetic] sequence of the spike protein and start developing vaccines as soon as the scientists in China had sequenced it,” says Larisa Labzin, an immunologist at the University of Queensland, Australia. By the end of 2020, several vaccines had already been rolled out. 

But the spike in SARS-CoV-2 appears to be changing. 

We’re seeing new variants of the virus emerge across the world, with slight changes to the spike proteins. Scientists are watching these changes occur in real time by analyzing the genome of virus samples faster than ever before. We don’t yet understand a lot about why they are changing. The virus is evolving in a way that may help it evade our immune system, and similar variants seem to be cropping up across the globe — a development that may affect vaccines.

Where did the virus come from?

Of the six questions posed in January 2020, this remains the most difficult to answer — and investigations into the origins of the pandemic have become a tangled mess of conspiracy and politicking.

In our initial report, we said the virus “appears to have originated in the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market” in Wuhan. A majority of the early cases were linked to the market in December 2019, but further investigation revealed COVID-19 infections in people who had no known contact with the market at all.

The market was shut down on Jan. 1, 2020, and hundreds of environmental samples from the site were analyzed. Traces of SARS-CoV-2 were found, but there was no definitive link between animals in the market and the virus. The World Health Organization and China’s CDC have both suggested that the coronavirus may have been circulating in Wuhan prior to the outbreak and that the market merely helped amplify the spread. A year on, we still don’t have a clear answer about the market’s role in the pandemic.

Bats are reservoirs of coronavirus — did this pandemic begin in a bat?


Getty

Scientists have not yet discovered a direct progenitor to SARS-CoV-2, but they have found several bat coronaviruses that share genetic similarities. One, known as RaTG13, shares 96.2% of its genome with SARS-CoV-2. Another, RmYN02, shares 93.3%. Both highlight how viruses like SARS-CoV-2 can arise in nature. Some scientists argue this shows clear evidence for a natural origin. 

But the origin puzzle has not been solved. While natural origin seems likely, an accidental leak from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, scientists say, cannot be dismissed. The so-called “lab leak theory” has become intricately tied to conspiracy theories in the past, but it’s important to separate the more extreme, debunked ideas about COVID-19’s emergence (it’s created by Bill Gates or it’s a bioweapon, for instance) from a legitimate investigation into an accidental leak.

In January 2021, a 10-person investigative team convened by the WHO arrived in Wuhan to carry out examinations of the Huanan market by mapping supply chains and testing frozen sewage samples for hints about the virus. The investigation’s terms of reference don’t mention investigating a lab leak. Some scientists are concerned the investigation doesn’t focus on this area of inquiry enough and has a significant conflict of interest. “I have zero confidence left in the WHO team,” Alina Chan, a scientist at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, told CNET in January.

How many cases have been reported?

Over 100 million cases have been reported, with COVID-19 infections now found on every continent, including Antarctica. Over 2 million people have died.

Over half of these deaths have happened in just six nations: the US, Brazil, India, Mexico, the UK and Italy. In the US alone, over 400,000 deaths have been recorded.

When the history of the pandemic is written, these nations will be considered failures. Mismanagement, misinformation and misapprehension inhibited an effective response from their governments, leading to uncontrolled spread and overwhelmed health care systems. 

On the other end of the scale are great success stories. Australia’s and New Zealand’s efforts to aggressively suppress or outright eliminate the virus with hard, fast lockdowns and strict border controls have helped to stop outbreaks throughout the year. 

In Sydney, life feels like it has settled into a “COVID normal” — the ubiquity of face masks at the supermarket and on public transport, and the need to sign in with a QR code at every venue we visit, is a reminder that the virus still poses a serious threat. Complacency crept in, particularly over the holiday period, but outbreaks are dealt with swiftly and lockdowns are mandated as soon as cases begin to spike. There’s been a wide public acknowledgement and acceptance that the situation changes daily — we’ve had to adapt to that in order to prevent the virus from spreading uncontrollably.

How does the coronavirus spread?

We did not have the answer to this question on Jan. 19, 2020. Initially, there were limited reports of health officials and health care workers being infected. With only 60 known cases, it seemed SARS-CoV-2 was not highly contagious. We now know that was wrong. 

Scientists understood from early on that the virus predominantly spread through the air, moving from person to person via coughing, sneezing and talking. Such expulsions would produce large droplets ferrying viral particles between people. This idea informed early attempts to slow down the virus, focusing on social distancing, because large droplets do not carry far. 

But some scientists were convinced that large droplets were not the only form of transmission for COVID-19. Perhaps small droplets — aerosols, as they’re known — were also contributing to the spread. Because of their size, these droplets spent a lot longer in the air and may accumulate over time. This led to heated discussion around the airborne transmission of SARS-CoV-2.

The debate came to a head in July 2020, when 239 scientists co-signed an invited commentary piece in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases calling on national and international health and regulatory bodies to “recognize the potential for airborne spread of coronavirus disease 2019.” Clashes with the World Health Organization followed. The WHO argued that the science wasn’t “definitive” enough and urged further study. 

In October, the WHO (and other agencies, like the US CDC) updated transmission advice, stating aerosols could spread COVID-19 in “specific settings” that are poorly ventilated and crowded, such as restaurants or nightclubs. How much infection is caused by aerosol transmission is still an open question, but there is a clear and obvious way to reduce your risk: masks.

WHO technical lead Maria Van Kerkhove speaks at a March 11 press briefing on COVID-19, at which WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced that the coronavirus outbreak could be characterized as a pandemic. 


Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

We won’t relitigate all the arguments against mask wearing here, and it’s an area of public health where misinformation has been rampant. The vast majority of scientific research now shows masks are an essential component of the COVID-19 response. Alone, they’re not enough, but combined with distancing, hand hygiene, cough etiquette and a range of other measures, they will limit the spread of disease. 

Infection via contaminated surfaces was a concern early, with all manner of objects and materials being tested to see how long SARS-CoV-2 would survive on them. Money, packages and door handles were all considered potential hotspots. In May, the CDC specified that this type of transmission was not likely to be “the main way the virus spreads.”

What are the symptoms?

SARS-CoV-2 has proven to be a much more canny virus than we predicted. Like previous coronaviruses, it chiefly affects the respiratory tract. Mild symptoms, like a dry cough and a fever occur commonly and can resolve without hospitalization. Some patients will have lethargy and a sore throat. 

More severe symptoms see infected individuals experience a shortness of breath and chest pain. The lungs are compromised and become inflamed and the tiny air sacs within fill with fluid. In the most severe cases, patients require mechanical ventilation to assist breathing. These characteristics have been seen since the first cases appeared in Wuhan. 

Reports began to surface in March that some coronavirus patients were experiencing anosmia — a loss of smell. Research has shown the virus is able to enter and impair the activity of specialized cells in the human olfactory system responsible for our sense of smell. Loss of taste has also been reported.

Although the respiratory tract is where SARS-CoV-2 gets a foothold in the body, the virus has far-reaching and long-lasting effects on the human body. “Originally we thought that COVID-19 was primarily a respiratory illness,” says Adrian Esterman, an epidemiologist at the University of South Australia. “We now know that it can affect just about every organ, with the potential to cause long-term health problems.”

The most severe cases of COVID-19 are characterized by inflammation. “An overexuberant immune response is what wreaks havoc with your body,” Labzin says. Some COVID-19 cases see the body’s white blood cells produce a lot of cytokines, small proteins that fight infections. They can also recruit more cells to defend against a virus. However, generating too much cytokine can do real damage — and research has shown an abundance of cytokines can damage the cells lining blood vessels. 

This full-body response can even be damaging to the brain. In some patients, blood vessels in the brain are damaged indirectly — SARS-CoV-2 doesn’t necessarily infect brain cells (it may be able to), but the body’s overactive immune response can cause the vessels to thin or leak and may result in lasting neurological damage. 

Scientists are learning that bodies don’t just bounce back to full health after infection. A variety of disparate symptoms seem to stick around long after patients leave the hospital or no longer test positive for the disease. The long-term prognosis for recovery from a COVID-19 infection will be an intense area of study in 2021 as scientists try to understand how negative effects linger in patients known as “long haulers.” Sometimes these symptoms last for weeks, other times they are still with patients eight months later — the impact will only truly come to light as the year progresses.

Is there a treatment for the coronavirus?

A year ago, this section was three sentences long. It called coronaviruses “notoriously hardy organisms” (they are) and stated “we have not developed any reliable treatments or vaccines that can eradicate them” (we hadn’t.). By the end of 2020, multiple biotech firms had built vaccines that can protect against coronaviruses, in an incredible feat of scientific research and spirit. “To develop a safe and efficacious vaccine in 12 months is unheard of,” Esterman says.

Vaccine rollouts have been occurring across the world. Different candidates, using a variety of different biotechnologies, have been approved for emergency use in places like the US, UK, Canada, Israel and a handful more nations. Many others will approve jabs in the months to come and begin to vaccinate their populations.

The first two vaccines across the finish line are built around mRNA, the instructions cells use to build proteins. The technology has been in development for over two decades, but the pandemic accelerated research into this vaccine strategy. 

The vaccines contain a synthetized strand of mRNA that tells human cells to make spike proteins, similar to those on the surface of SARS-CoV-2. The cells oblige, and when the spikes are shown to the immune system, the body’s defenses kick into gear. The vaccines then simulate a real infection without the nasty symptoms — and help provide lasting immunity. If a patient comes into contact with the real coronavirus, the body knows to destroy it before it can cause any harm. 

Having coronavirus vaccines approved for emergency use in less than a year is remarkable.


Sarah Tew/CNET

While two mRNA vaccines, from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna, have been approved for use, there are still questions over how long they might provide immunity and whether they can stop disease transmission. The data shows they are safe and can prevent severe disease, but do they stop a person from being infected? That’s still unclear.

So we’re not quite out of the woods — we’re still stuck in a thicket. New variants of the coronavirus have evolved in the past three months, evading some of our immune defenses. Ensuring our vaccines will still be effective against them is one of the major challenges for 2021. Early research looks good, but there are multiple mutations in the new variants that will require further examination.

More vaccines are showing promise, too, with the New York Times’ tracker currently showing eight in limited or early use. The Sinopharm vaccine, approved for use in China, has not published results from its Phase III trial but reportedly has an efficacy of around 80%. It uses inactivated pieces of SARS-CoV-2 to generate immunity. 

A year on

At the end of the original piece, we linked to a WHO thread on Twitter from Jan. 17, 2020. It provided rudimentary advice on protecting yourself against coronavirus that focused on hand hygiene and respiratory hygiene. Maria Van Kerkhove, from the WHO’s emerging diseases unit, recommended washing hands with soap and water and sneezing or coughing into your elbow.

Those recommendations the WHO still stand today. Washing your hands and sneezing into your elbow are extremely important. But we’ve added additional layers of protection as we’ve learned more about SARS-CoV-2 and its transmissibility.

Ian Mackay, a virologist at the University of Queensland, highlights these additional layers in the “Swiss Cheese Model” of pandemic defence, an infographic that went viral toward the end of 2020.

“The real power of this infographic,” Mackay told the New York Times in December, “is that it’s not really about any single layer of protection or the order of them, but about the additive success of using multiple layers, or cheese slices.”

We’ve learned the best ways to defend against COVID-19, but cases continue to rise in many parts of the world. Is it likely we’ll be able to control the pandemic in 2021? There’s reason for hope, but we need only look at some of 2020’s great failures to see how quickly the virus can become unmanageable. 

In our second pandemic year, science will continue to probe and refine the answers to these six fundamental questions. And it must. Doing so is critical to prepare for — or ultimately, to prevent — the next pandemic.

The information contained in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as health or medical advice. Always consult a physician or other qualified health provider regarding any questions you may have about a medical condition or health objectives.



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Who is Doug Emhoff? Kamala Harris’s husband and the second gentleman, explained

It was Inauguration Day, and, let’s be honest, few eyes were on Doug Emhoff.

The former entertainment lawyer was there to support his wife, Kamala Harris, the first woman, first Black American, and first South Asian American to become vice president of the United States. He was there to celebrate the inauguration of President Joe Biden, the first president who is not Donald Trump in four very long years. He was there alongside luminaries from the Obamas to inaugural poet Amanda Gorman, and his and Harris’s blended family, including his daughter Ella Emhoff in sparkling Miu Miu tweeds and adorable great-nieces Amara and Leela Ajagu, who wore matching leopard coats in an homage to Harris and her sister Maya.

Emhoff wore an overcoat and a gray suit. Ralph Lauren, if you were wondering.

It’s okay if you weren’t. Emhoff has made clear that he’s comfortable being a supporting player; his Twitter in recent days has been full of sweet shoutouts to Harris, making Emhoff the subject of countless “wife guy” jokes (while the meme originated to describe husbands trying to gain fame by talking about their spouses, it’s evolved to encompass guys who, like Emhoff, just really like their wives).

The day before the inauguration, Emhoff wrote at GQ about the experience of joining the Biden-Harris campaign: “Virtually overnight, I went from being a lawyer to being a member of a team fighting for justice and trying to turn the page on a dark chapter in our nation’s history.”

But he must have known this day might come from the moment he met the woman who is now his wife. After all, on their first date, Harris was already attorney general of California and widely seen as a rising star in the Democratic Party. Indeed, theirs is a kind of political marriage Americans haven’t seen before, at least at this level of government.

It’s an example of “professionals who have come together later on in life and are there to support one another,” Farida Jalalzai, a political science professor who studies women leaders, told Vox.

For Emhoff, that’s meant researching former second ladies to figure out how to approach his role. And for America, it’s going to mean watching a professionally successful white man step back from his career during his peak earning years to help his wife achieve her goals — and, at least according to his recent statements, to devote himself to public service. Doug Emhoff isn’t the center of attention right now, and in a way, that’s important too.

When they met, Harris was already a powerful politician

Emhoff and Harris first met in 2013, set up on a blind date by a mutual friend. Harris had been serving as attorney general for two years, after spending six as the district attorney of San Francisco. She was already well known on the national stage, discussed as a potential replacement for Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and drawing praise from then-President Barack Obama (who drew some criticism for calling her “the best-looking attorney general”).

Emhoff was successful in his own right, a partner at the law firm DLA Piper. His past clients included, amusingly, the ad agency behind the Taco Bell chihuahua, and, less amusingly, a club owner accused of sexual battery and a company that sold AK-47s. Divorced since 2009, he had two children, Cole and Ella, then in their teens.

He must have known from the very beginning that a relationship with the attorney general of his state would lead to intense scrutiny of his personal and professional life. But by his account, he was all in.

“I didn’t want it to end,” he told CNN of their first date. “And so the next morning, I pulled the move of emailing her with my availabilities for the next four months, including long weekends.”

The two married in 2014 and have, reportedly, been very happy. “Doug and Kamala together are like almost vomit-inducingly cute and coupley,” Cole Emhoff recently told the New York Times. “I’m like, ‘When is this going to wear off?’”

They’re also a different kind of political couple from the Obamas, Bushes, or Clintons, all of whom married relatively young when the men in question were still building their political careers. (Donald and Melania Trump married when she was 35 and he was a 59-year-old reality TV host.)

Norms are changing: Michelle and Barack Obama met when she was his mentor at a law firm, and she maintained her own highly successful career for many years, quitting only when her husband entered the White House. Hillary Clinton, of course, became a senator and secretary of state after her husband’s presidency. Still, there’s an expectation that politicians’ family lives should follow a kind of 1950s model — early marriage, 2.5 kids, everybody supporting the politician’s career. And usually, that politician is Dad.

Harris and Emhoff, by contrast, were both about 50 when they married. Harris did not have children. They formed a blended family, with kids who now call her “Momala.” Both spouses kept their respective last names.

“This is a snapshot of America,” Jalalzai said. “We don’t all look the same.”

Now Emhoff could be a new role model for men

And for Emhoff, being married to Harris has meant stepping back so his wife can shine. He took a leave of absence from DLA Piper in August, to help with the campaign and, presumably, to avoid concerns about conflicts of interest. He left the firm in November and has said he will teach at Georgetown Law School this spring. That will make two teachers in the executive branch, as Jill Biden has said she will continue her education career as first lady.

And while Jill Biden is breaking down some barriers by keeping her job while previous first ladies have quit theirs, Emhoff is also breaking new ground by scaling back his career for his wife’s.

In his GQ essay, he makes clear that her campaign for the vice presidency was a team effort in which he was happy to play his part. “It quickly became clear that this wasn’t just about my love for my wife, but also about my love for this country,” he writes. “Stepping back from my career as an entertainment lawyer was a decision that we made together—this was about something bigger than either of us.”

He reportedly threw himself into campaigning, becoming a major asset for his ability to adapt to a variety of environments. “Of all people, Doug was like randomly born for this,” Cole Emhoff told the Times.

And while Emhoff and Harris may be a team, she’s the one who just became vice president — and he has been graceful about his supporting status. It extends to jokes about his title. “Look at where we are right now,” he said in September. “It’s gonna be a lot of work for President Biden, Vice President Harris, First Lady Jill Biden and whatever-my-title-will-be Douglas Emhoff.”

Since announcing that he’ll use the title second gentleman, he’s rolled with the fact that “first second gentleman” doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue. “You can call me Doug,” he reassured CBS Sunday Morning’s Jane Pauley in a recent interview.

And rather than in any way disparage the contributions of second ladies who came before him, he’s taken time to learn about them, visiting the Library of Congress to research second spouses of the past.

Emhoff has said he hopes his time in the role will be a model for his family and for the country. He wants his kids “to grow up in a world where it isn’t news that a loving partner—of any gender—supports them in everything they do,” he wrote at GQ. And, he concluded, “I may be the first Second Gentleman, but I know I won’t be the last.”

Harris and Emhoff’s marriage challenges not just the stereotype that a wife has to take a supporting role to her husband, but the idea that one person in a marriage has to dominate in career pursuits, Jalalzai said. Of course, Harris continues to be in the spotlight, now as vice president, but her marriage appears to be a partnership of equals. That was true of the Obamas to a large degree as well, Jalalzai noted, but “over the last four years, we haven’t had that kind of healthy relationship being modeled” in the executive branch.

Only time will tell how well Emhoff inhabits his new position. If previous administrations have taught us anything, it’s that we don’t always know what’s going on in the private lives of public figures. But for now, he and Harris are setting a new standard.

America still struggles with the assumption that it’s emasculating for men to be with powerful women — even the jokes about Bill Clinton potentially becoming “first dude” in 2016 are testament to this fact. Emhoff, if nothing else, is showing the whole country what it’s like to be a man who goes on a date with a female attorney general and, far from being scared off, sends her his calendar for the next four months. In defining the role of second gentleman, he’s off to a good start.



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