Tag Archives: grows

Oregon wildfire updates: Bedrock Fire, Flat Fire spread grows – Statesman Journal

  1. Oregon wildfire updates: Bedrock Fire, Flat Fire spread grows Statesman Journal
  2. Public asked to avoid Big Fall Creek Road due to Bedrock Fire activity KEZI TV
  3. “Civil Authorities have issued an Evacuation Immediate for All of Oregon.” Emergency Alert notification sent out by error bigcountrynewsconnection.com
  4. Golden Fire destroys dozens of homes in S. Oregon; firefighters rescue missing dog Fox 12 Oregon
  5. 2,000-acre Golden Fire destroys 43 southern Oregon homes, crews work to contain blaze in Klamath Co. KATU News
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Netflix Outlines $2.5 Billion Korean Bet as K-Drama Mania Grows – Bloomberg

  1. Netflix Outlines $2.5 Billion Korean Bet as K-Drama Mania Grows Bloomberg
  2. Netflix’s Ted Sarandos Touts the “Power of Korean Storytelling,” Says K-Content Views Are Up Sixfold Hollywood Reporter
  3. Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos Says $2.5BN Korean Investment Won’t Exploit Local Industry, Amid Pushback From Lawmakers Deadline
  4. [Reporter’s Notebook] Netflix co-CEO barely scratches surface of Korea investment details The Korea Herald
  5. Netflix’s Ted Sarandos says Korean content “catches the American audience by surprise” NME
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S.F. budget grows to record high. Here’s how much Mayor Breed wants to spend on homelessness, crime – San Francisco Chronicle

  1. S.F. budget grows to record high. Here’s how much Mayor Breed wants to spend on homelessness, crime San Francisco Chronicle
  2. San Francisco Mayor Breed unveils $14.6B budget, vows fight for changes that will be unpopular KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  3. San Francisco’s Mayor Boosts Police, Homelessness Funds to Lure Companies Back Bloomberg
  4. SF Mayor unveils record high budget proposal to combat massive $780 million deficit KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  5. Mayor Breed announces SF budget for next 2 years, revealing key city priorities ABC7 News Bay Area
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A woman who grows and donates food to those in need said someone dumped salt on her garden, destroying her harvest. TikTokers rushed to offer money and support. – Yahoo News

  1. A woman who grows and donates food to those in need said someone dumped salt on her garden, destroying her harvest. TikTokers rushed to offer money and support. Yahoo News
  2. Food campaigner giving out free meals has allotment ‘destroyed’ overnight The Independent
  3. I will keep feeding hungry after sick vandals killed my charity garden New York Post
  4. Gary Lineker among donors to appeal after charity allotment vandalised The Guardian
  5. She fed hundreds of struggling families with food from her allotment. Then vandals covered it in salt The Independent
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Who paid the bribes? Plot hole grows after Householder conviction, as FirstEnergy execs remain unscathed – cleveland.com

  1. Who paid the bribes? Plot hole grows after Householder conviction, as FirstEnergy execs remain unscathed cleveland.com
  2. Ex-Ohio House Speaker Convicted in Sprawling $60M Bribery Scheme The Daily Beast
  3. Larry Householder was convicted of corruption. But there’s plenty of unfinished business still left in the House Bill 6 scandal – LimaOhio.com LimaOhio.com
  4. Householder: Broken Government – an editorial series on Ohio’s dark-money, campaign, lobbying, ethics and pay cleveland.com
  5. Householder, Borges hint at appeals following conviction in political corruption scandal 10TV
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Tucker Carlson texted ‘I hate (Trump) passionately’ as outrage grows over Jan. 6 whitewash – New York Daily News

  1. Tucker Carlson texted ‘I hate (Trump) passionately’ as outrage grows over Jan. 6 whitewash New York Daily News
  2. ‘I hate him passionately’: Tucker Carlson was fed up with Trump after the 2020 election Yahoo News
  3. Tucker Carlson’s Private Contempt for Trump: ‘I Hate Him Passionately’ The New York Times
  4. Tucker Carlson ‘passionately’ hates Donald Trump. But that’s not all The Independent
  5. Analysis | Carlson hates Trump but needs his base — like the rest of the right The Washington Post
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UChicago Medicine Hyde Park cancer center grows in cost, size – Crain’s Chicago Business

  1. UChicago Medicine Hyde Park cancer center grows in cost, size Crain’s Chicago Business
  2. University of Chicago unveils new renderings for Hyde Park cancer facility CBS Chicago
  3. UChicago Medicine awaiting approval to begin construction on $815 million South Side cancer hospital Chicago Sun-Times
  4. University of Chicago Medicine cancer hospital to cost $182 million more than expected, have fewer beds Chicago Tribune
  5. UChicago Medicine updates plan for the city’s first freestanding cancer facility, following 10 months of community input UChicago Medicine
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The Last Of Us Audience Grows For Third Consecutive Week – Deadline

The Last of Us doesn’t look like it’ll be losing steam any time soon. On Sunday, 6.4M people tuned in to watch the third episode of the post-apocalyptic series across HBO and HBO Max, according to Nielsen and first party data. 

That’s a 12% increase from last week’s viewership, which already had set a record for the largest week 2 audience growth for an HBO Original drama series in the history of the network. Sunday’s audience is also up 37% from the series premiere, which was watched same-day by 4.7M people.

It only took two episodes for HBO to renew the series for a second season. It was an expected movie, considering the first episode scored the second-largest premiere after House of the Dragon since Boardwalk Empire’s launch in 2010.

RELATED: ‘The Last Of Us’ Causes Linda Ronstadt’s ‘Long, Long Time’ To Surge In Streams On Spotify

The first two episodes of The Last of Us are averaging 21.3M viewers. With that, HBO now has four current series that have cross-platform audiences averaging more than 15M viewers per episode. This marks the first time HBO has had multiple current series drawing more than 15M viewers at a time across all genres.

House of the Dragon Season 1 is the top performer, averaging 29M viewers per episode. The Last of Us comes in at a close second with 21.3M. Euphoria Season 2 is averaging 19.5M per episode, and The White Lotus is up to 15.5M.

The Last of Us, which is based on the PlayStation game, takes place 20 years after modern civilization has been destroyed. Joel, a hardened survivor, is hired to smuggle Ellie, a 14-year-old girl, out of an oppressive quarantine zone. What starts as a small job soon becomes a brutal journey as they both must traverse the US and depend on each other for survival. 

It stars Pascal, Bella Ramsey, Gabriel Luna, Anna Torv, Nico Parker, Murray Bartlett and Nick Offerman as well as Melanie Lynskey, Storm Reid, Merle Dandridge, Jeffrey Pierce, Lamar Johnson, Keivonn Woodard, Graham Greene, Elaine Miles, Ashley Johnson and Troy Baker.



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Backlash grows against DeSantis decision to block AP African American Studies class

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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is facing mounting backlash regarding his administration’s decision to prohibit an Advanced Placement high school course on African American studies, with Black leaders rallying in the capital, a prominent civil rights lawyer threatening to sue and state lawmakers urging him to reverse the decision.

Attorney Ben Crump accused DeSantis of violating the federal and state constitutions Wednesday by refusing to permit the course. His legal team noted that a federal judge found a 2010 law in Arizona that banned a Mexican American studies program from Tucson schools unconstitutional and officials “motivated by racial animus.”

The state Department of Education contends that the class is “inexplicably contrary to Florida law.” A new education law championed by DeSantis requires lessons on race be taught in “an objective matter” and “not used to indoctrinate or persuade students to a particular point of view.” Some education advocates and teachers say the law is so broadly framed that it is having a chilling effect on the teaching of Black history.

“If he does not negotiate with the College Board to allow AP African American Studies to be taught in classrooms across the state of Florida, these three young people will be the lead plaintiffs in a historic lawsuit,” Crump said before he introduced the students.

Crump has been involved in several high-profile civil rights cases involving Black Americans and vowed that DeSantis “cannot exterminate our culture.”

The latest controversy in Florida education policies began this month, when the DeSantis administration said a pilot Advanced Placement course on Black history would not be approved by the state Department of Education because it violated state law and “lacks educational value.”

The state Education Department listed “concerns” in the curriculum, including topics covering “Intersectionality and Activism,” “Black Feminist Literary Theory” and “Black Queer Studies.”

“Now who would say that an important part of Black history is queer theory?” DeSantis said at a news conference this week. “That is somebody pushing an agenda on our kids.”

But critics of the governor, who has made eliminating what he calls “woke indoctrination” from schools and businesses a key part of his platform, say he is unfairly targeting Black history by not allowing the course to be taught in Florida. Other Advanced Placement classes, such as European history, have not been scrutinized by the DeSantis administration.

The College Board said in a news release Tuesday that the “official framework” of the course will be released Feb. 1, replacing the pilot program and incorporating feedback from high schools and colleges. It does not mention input from public officials.

A College Board spokesman declined to comment on whether the curriculum was being adjusted in light of the DeSantis administration’s concerns. AP classes take two to six years to develop, according to the board, and “are regularly reviewed thereafter.”

Alex Lanfranconi, a spokesman for the Florida Department of Education, said in a statement that the administration is “encouraged to see the College Board express a willingness to amend.” He added that the state will reconsider approving the class after examining the new curriculum.

“We look forward to reviewing the College Board’s changes and expect the removal of content on Critical Race Theory, Black Queer Studies, Intersectionality, and other topics that violate our law,” Lanfranconi said.

Meanwhile, dozens gathered at a “Stop the Black Attack” rally in Tallahassee organized by Equal Ground, a voting rights advocacy group. Several speakers accused DeSantis of trying to further marginalize the state’s Black community during his time in office. State Sen. Shevrin Jones (D) said DeSantis should be addressing issues such as “crumbling schools, dilapidated buildings in our communities” and high property insurance costs.

“These are the issues that‘s being ignored because we have to deal with the promotion of Jim Crow 3.0 by people who don’t know and don’t care about what’s happening in Black communities, but they desire to referee how you teach our history,” Jones said.

DeSantis has said he wants students to learn Black history — and by law, they are required to — but accused teachers of indoctrinating students to believe a “woke ideology.”

Leaders with the state legislature’s Black caucus are planning to engage with national civil rights organizations to put together additional educational opportunities around Black history so that students “will not have to wait on a state or governor to see the value in their history,” the lawmakers said in a statement this week.

State Rep. Michele Rayner (D) said that DeSantis is on a political “witch hunt” and violating Florida students’ freedom to learn — and that students are aware.

“They know that the erasure of history is not a secret,” Rayner said. “There are 2.8 million students sitting in Florida public schools right now knowing that their governor does not want them to learn about Black history.”

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Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot grows a set of hands, attempts construction work

Boston Dynamics’ Atlas—the world’s most advanced humanoid robot—is learning some new tricks. The company has finally given Atlas some proper hands, and in Boston Dynamics’ latest YouTube video, Atlas is attempting to do some actual work. It also released another behind-the-scenes video showing some of the work that goes into Atlas. And when things don’t go right, we see some spectacular slams the robot takes in its efforts to advance humanoid robotics.

As a humanoid robot, Atlas has mostly been focused on locomotion, starting with walking in a lab, then walking on every kind of unstable terrain imaginable, then doing some sick parkour tricks. Locomotion is all about the legs, though, and the upper half seemed mostly like an afterthought, with the arms only used to swing around for balance. Atlas previously didn’t even have hands—the last time we saw it, there were only two incomplete-looking ball grippers at the end of its arms.

This newest iteration of the robot has actual grippers. They’re simple clamp-style hands with a wrist and a single moving finger, but that’s good enough for picking things up. The goal of this video is moving “inertially significant” objects—not just picking up light boxes, but objects that are so heavy they can throw Atlas off-balance. This includes things like a big plank, a bag full of tools, and a barbell with two 10-pound weights. Atlas is learning all about those “equal and opposite forces” in the world.

Like everything in robotics, picking up and carrying an object is more complicated than it seems. Atlas has to figure out where it is in the world in relation to the object it’s picking up, come up with a grasping plan for the hands, and lift and manipulate the object, all while calculating how this extra bit of mass will affect its balance. As Boston Dynamics software engineer Robin Deits explains in the video, “When we’re trying to manipulate something like a plank, we have to just make pretty educated guesses about where is the plank, how fast is it moving, how do we need to move the arms to cause the plank to spin 180 degrees very quickly, and if we get those estimates wrong we end up doing silly things and falling over.”

Atlas isn’t just clumsily picking things up and carrying them, though. It’s running, jumping, and spinning while carrying heavy objects. At one point it jumps and throws the heavy toolbox up to its construction partner, all without losing balance. It’s doing all this on rickety scaffolding and improvised plank walkways, too, so the ground is constantly moving under Atlas’ feet with every step. Picking up stuff is the start of teaching the robot to do actual work, and it looks right at home on a rough-and-tumble construction site. The simple claw grippers mean Atlas crushes everything it picks up, though, with objects like the plank showing visible damage where the hands dug into it. Maybe the next set of experiments will teach Atlas to be less of a hulking gorilla.

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