Tag Archives: Ian

Ian McShane on Playing ‘An Angel of Death’ in Gonzalo López-Gallego’s ‘American Star,’ Waiting for a ‘John Wick 5’ Call – Variety

  1. Ian McShane on Playing ‘An Angel of Death’ in Gonzalo López-Gallego’s ‘American Star,’ Waiting for a ‘John Wick 5’ Call Variety
  2. ‘American Star’ Review: Ian McShane Has Never Been Cooler The Daily Beast
  3. ‘American Star’ Review: Armed and Vacationing The New York Times
  4. ‘American Star’ Review: Ian McShane’s Hitman Postpones One Last Job for a Soul-Searching Island Vacation Variety
  5. Review: Ian McShane is cold and fascinating in moody, atmospheric ‘American Star’ SF Chronicle Datebook

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Travis Kelce TD elicits hilarious Taylor Swift reference from announcer Ian Eagle amid dating rumors – CBS Sports

  1. Travis Kelce TD elicits hilarious Taylor Swift reference from announcer Ian Eagle amid dating rumors CBS Sports
  2. Travis Kelce Just Addressed Those Taylor Swift Dating Rumors & If She ‘Reached Out’ Yahoo Life
  3. Chiefs’ Travis Kelce’s touchdown gets Taylor Swift-inspired announcer call Fox News
  4. Russell Wilson and Ciara, plus Justin Verlander and Kate Upton: Sport’s biggest power couples after Travis Kel Daily Mail
  5. CBS Announcer Ian Eagle Expertly Teases Travis Kelce Over Taylor Swift Dating Rumors HuffPost
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Ian Machado Garry Reacts to ‘Wonderboy’ Allegedly Turning Down Fight Against Him – MMA Fighting – MMAFightingonSBN

  1. Ian Machado Garry Reacts to ‘Wonderboy’ Allegedly Turning Down Fight Against Him – MMA Fighting MMAFightingonSBN
  2. Ian Machado Garry had planned to ‘drag out’ 15-minute beating of ‘f—king piece of s—t’ Neil Magny MMA Mania
  3. Ian Machado Garry almost imitated Conor McGregor all the way to jail Bloody Elbow
  4. Ian Machado Garry reacts to Stephen Thompson allegedly turning down fight against him MMA Fighting
  5. Wait! Ian Garry insists Stephen Thompson UFC fight is still on the table — ‘I end up getting everything I wan… MMA Mania
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Hilarious clip shows injured Inter Miami defender Ian Fray dancing on crutches while Lionel Messi’s team celeb – Daily Mail

  1. Hilarious clip shows injured Inter Miami defender Ian Fray dancing on crutches while Lionel Messi’s team celeb Daily Mail
  2. Lionel Messi, with another goal, leads Inter Miami to Leagues Cup title after a wild penalty shootout Yahoo Sports
  3. Miami Heat, Rest Of South Florida Teams Hoping To Follow Messi And Inter Miami’s Playoff Success Sports Illustrated
  4. WATCH: Inter Miami boss Tata Martino sprayed with champagne during press conference after Lionel Messi leads Herons to Leagues Cup glory Goal.com
  5. Comparing Messi and Ronaldo’s Title Wins in the Leagues Cup and Arab Club Champions Cup Sports Brief
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Mushroom deaths: Leongatha locals make extraordinary offer to help surviving member from fatal lunch, Ian Wilk – Daily Mail

  1. Mushroom deaths: Leongatha locals make extraordinary offer to help surviving member from fatal lunch, Ian Wilk Daily Mail
  2. Deadly ‘mushroom poisoning’: The family lunch mystery gripping Australia The Independent
  3. Man whose parents were killed after lunch with his ex ‘suspects’ she had tried to poison him New York Post
  4. Mushroom deaths unsettle tight Victorian community: ‘Thrust into spotlight’ Yahoo News Australia
  5. Leongatha deaths: Investigators await toxicology report over suspected mushroom poisoning | ABC News ABC News (Australia)
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Man City breaches could result in RELEGATION from the Premier League! – Ian Darke | ESPN FC – ESPN UK

  1. Man City breaches could result in RELEGATION from the Premier League! – Ian Darke | ESPN FC ESPN UK
  2. Manchester City May Fall, but Soccer’s Billionaire Era Lives On The Ringer
  3. PL clubs want Man City RELEGATED if guilty of alleged financial breaches! Sky Sports Premier League
  4. Why Arsenal & Arteta do NOT want Man City to be deducted points – even if it guaranteed Premier League title win Goal.com
  5. Vincent Kompany ‘sceptical’ about ‘finger-pointing’ over Manchester City’s alleged financial breaches The Athletic
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Cubs, Ian Happ Avoid Arbitration

The Cubs and outfielder Ian Happ came to an agreement on a $10.85MM salary for the 2023 season in order to avoid arbitration, per The New York Post’s Jon Heyman.

Happ, 28, has spent his entire professional career as a member of the Cubs organization. He delivered a strong debut campaign in the 2017 season, posting a .253/.328/.514 slash line, good for a 114 wRC+ and some down-ballot Rookie of the Year votes while splitting time between second base and center field. The following season, Happ split time between all three outfield spots as well as third base but took a step back offensively, posting a slash line of just .233/.353/.408 (106 wRC+) in 142 games with a worrisome 36.1% strikeout rate.

Happ spent much of the 2019 season at Triple-A Iowa working on his game, and appeared to have made improvements by the time he came up in the second half: in 58 games that season, he slashed .264/.333/.564 (126 wRC+) while cutting his strikeout rate all the way down to 25.0%. Happ’s improved game carried into the shortened 2020 campaign, where he looked like a potential MVP candidate early in the season before an injury an early September caused him to slump down the stretch. Still, he managed a 132 wRC+ on the year after his hot start to the shortened season. That slump continued throughout the first half of the 2021 season as Happ slashed .193/.296/.330 in the first half, though a strong second half allowed him to push his overall season numbers back above league average.

After a difficult year in 2021, however, Happ was able to post the best full season of his career in 2022, and looked like a completely different hitter while doing it. He posted a career high in doubles, a career low strikeout rate, earned a gold glove after settling into a full-time role in left field rather than bouncing around the diamond as he had in the past, and even managed to correct his heavy platoon split from previous years, becoming a largely split neutral player. All this led to his first career All Star appearance in 2022 and allowed him to earn over $10MM in his final trip through arbitration this offseason, even narrowly beating out the $10.6MM projection of MLBTR contributor Matt Schwartz.

While Happ is set to become a free agent following the 2023 season, rumblings of an extension have permeated throughout the offseason, with both Happ and president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer reportedly looking to start any potential extension talks before Spring Training, according to Maddie Lee of the Chicago Sun-Times.



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Lack of flood insurance in hard-hit Central Florida leaves families struggling after Hurricane Ian



CNN
 — 

When Amanda Trompeta was woken up by her dog barking early last Thursday morning, she assumed he was just frightened by Hurricane Ian. But then she got out of bed – and found herself standing ankle-deep in floodwater.

By the time the storm passed, three and a half feet of murky, dark water had swept into Trompeta’s house in the Orlando suburb of Winter Springs. “It went everywhere, every single room,” she said. “All the floors, all the walls have to be redone – everything is ruined.”

Despite the devastation, when Trompeta called her insurance company, she came to an unpleasant realization: “They are not planning on covering anything.”

Homeowners insurance policies typically don’t cover flood damage, and most people living in Ian’s path across Florida didn’t have a separate flood insurance policy. Inland areas that experienced historic rainfall and catastrophic floodwaters were especially unprepared, according to a CNN analysis of FEMA flood insurance data.

About a fourth of single-family homes in coastal Lee County, where Ian came onshore, are covered by federal flood insurance. The coverage rates are higher in some of the hardest-hit areas of the county, like Sanibel Island, where about half of homes are covered.

But further inland, only about 4% of single-family homes in Seminole County, 3% of homes in Orange County and 2% of homes in Polk County are covered by flood insurance. All of those counties have reported significant flooding during Ian.

“The most concerning factor coming out of the storm and all the losses is the lack of flood insurance, particularly in the Central Florida area,” said Mark Friedlander, the corporate communications director of the Insurance Information Institute, an industry group.

While people without flood insurance will still be eligible for assistance payments from FEMA and potentially other aid approved by Congress, many homeowners will likely only receive a tiny fraction of the cost of the damage they suffered.

“People are going to be really disappointed when they see what funds they get and how short they are in helping them recover,” Friedlander said.

Ian cut a swathe of disaster across Florida’s mid-section, inundating communities with historic levels of rain from Fort Myers on the southwest coast, through the Orlando region and up into the northeastern corner of the state. The floodwaters turned towns into rivers, and forced some residents to kayak through their living rooms to assess the damage.

In inland Central Florida – which marked its wettest month on record in September – officials reported considerable damage and high flood levels that persisted even days after the storm passed.

In Seminole County, northeast of Orlando, more than 5,200 residential buildings have been damaged by the storm, primarily due to flooding, according to a county spokesperson. “We’ve never had anything to this nature,” said Jay Zembower, a Seminole County commissioner, calling the flooding “a 500-plus-year event of quick rainfall in a short window of time.”

Polk County has counted about 3,000 buildings damaged in the storm, Orange County has tallied about 1,200, and Volusia County on the state’s eastern coast has at least 4,000 damaged, county officials said. All of the counties said their numbers are preliminary – in some cases because damage assessment teams still haven’t been able to reach some flooded areas.

Previous hurricanes like Irma in 2017 also caused significant damage in the region. But much of that damage in Seminole County, at least, was from wind and debris, which is covered by typical homeowners insurance policies, and not flooding, the county spokesperson said.

Now, the lack of flood insurance is a major hurdle for families trying to get back on their feet. Homeowners are generally required to purchase flood insurance if they live in a FEMA-designated flood zone and have a federally-backed mortgage. But the flooding from Ian stretched beyond that floodplain in Central Florida and elsewhere, according to an analysis by the satellite mapping company ICEYE.

That means that many of those affected by the floods, especially away from the coasts, likely didn’t have flood insurance and can’t count on any insurance payments to help them.

In Winter Springs, for example, at least 2,000 buildings have been affected, according to county officials, but there are only about 525 federal flood insurance policies active in the city, FEMA records show.

Trompeta, whose neighborhood is littered with debris and waterlogged furniture piled on front lawns, said the lack of flood insurance on the home that she and her fiancé bought a few years ago threw her carefully planned finances out of whack.

“It’s obviously a big setback,” she said. “We both have student debt,” and with the federal forgiveness program, she added, “I was on track to be debt-free in a year.”

“Now we have to focus on rebuilding the house so that we have some place to live,” Trompeta said.

Without flood insurance, people like Trompeta will be forced to apply for other government aid like FEMA’s individual assistance programs. Those payments are capped at about $38,000, and after past hurricanes, many people ended up receiving roughly $5,000 to $10,000, said Roy Wright, the former chief executive of FEMA’s National Flood Insurance Program.

“The US disaster programs presume that homeowners are insured,” Wright said. The individual assistance programs “are there not even as a safety net but simply as a helping hand to those who were left in a bad spot,” he said.

Congress could also pass additional disaster aid – like lawmakers did in the wake of previous major hurricanes, like Katrina, Sandy and Harvey. But it could take months or longer for the funding to be approved and for affected communities to receive it, Wright said.

Experts like Wright said that the widespread damage from Ian should be a wake-up call that far more homeowners around the US need to purchase flood insurance – even if they don’t own a waterfront property. That’s especially the case as climate change leads to stronger and more frequent storms.

While some people have purchased private flood insurance that’s not captured in the FEMA data, the federal flood insurance program still accounts for about 80% of the policies in Florida, Friedlander said.

Research has also found that FEMA’s flood maps underestimate the danger in some areas as climate change advances, leaving some homeowners unaware of their level of risk.

Bash presses FEMA Admin on need to update flood maps

Meanwhile, even some of the families affected by Ian who do have flood insurance are finding that it’s not enough to account for all of their damage. Federal flood insurance caps payouts for single-family home damage at $250,000 and contents of the home at $100,000.

Pamela Sanders said her family’s home in Geneva, Florida has had flood insurance for years, but she expects the damage the home suffered during Ian’s onslaught to exceed her maximum coverage. Floodwaters that swept through her neighborhood left the lower story of her house under water and mold is already growing on the second floor.

“It’s unbelievable,” Sanders said. “I always had a job, paid my bills, paid off my house, was all set for retirement – and now I’m 75 and homeless.”



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Hurricane Ian uninsured, insured damages estimated between $41-70B

An analysis of final estimated uninsured and insured damages in impacted states following Hurricane Ian reveals total flood and wind related losses are between $41 billion and $70 billion. 

The analytics and data provider CoreLogic said that that estimate includes wind loss, re-evaluated insured and uninsured storm surge loss and newly calculated inland flood loss for residential and commercial properties.

Flood loss from private insurance and the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) for residential and commercial properties is estimated to be between $8 billion and $18 billion. 

That total includes both re-evaluated storm surge and new estimates for inland flooding.

BATTLING FIRES FROM WATER-DAMAGED EVS ‘TIES UP RESOURCES’ IN HURRICANE IAN RECOVERY, FLORIDA FIRE DEPT SAYS

A sign is stuck in a pile of home furnishings that reads “please don’t take anything insurance must document you loot I shoot” on Oct. 7, 2022 in Fort Myers, Florida.  (Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images)

In addition, uninsured flood loss for Florida, South Carolina and other states is estimated to be between $10 billion and $17 billion.

Wind losses are estimated to be $23 billion to $35 billion.

BATTLING FIRES FROM WATER-DAMAGED EVS ‘TIES UP RESOURCES’ I NHURRICANE IAN RECOVERY, FLORIDA FIRE DEPT SAYS

CoreLogic used the U.S. Inland Flood Model and the CoreLogic North Atlantic Hurricane Model to reach these conclusions.

Renardo Josino rests in his vehicle on Oct. 7, 2022 in Fort Myers, Florida. Mr. Josino said he was in the area hoping to help people recover from the storm and with no hotel rooms available he is using his van.  (Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images)

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Insured loss represents the amount insurers will pay to cover damages. 

A destroyed house following Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers Beach, Florida, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2022.  (Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Flood is a separate coverage and not mandatory outside designated Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs).  

The inland flood analysis is based on the rainfall from Sept. 25 to Oct. 4.

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According to CoreLogic, more than 66,000 pending mortgage applications worth nearly $22.5 billion are currently in progress in Florida and the Carolinas and are in jeopardy from Hurricane Ian damages.

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DeSantis’ appearance with Biden after Hurricane Ian has shifted Florida’s races



CNN
 — 

Charlie Crist, whose career as a Republican ended with a hug from a Democratic president, may have seen his political fate sealed by another Democratic president complimenting his Republican rival.

That’s the sentiment rolling through Democratic circles in Florida after President Joe Biden’s tour of the state’s storm-ravaged Gulf Coast, where he praised Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, Crist’s opponent, for his handling of Hurricane Ian. Biden called DeSantis’ response “pretty remarkable” after a congenial joint event with his sometime nemesis.

Hurricane Ian’s arrival a month before the election has pushed politics to the back burner as state and local leaders continue to deal with the fallout of the deadliest storm to hit Florida in generations. It has been a challenge for Democratic candidates to turn the attention back to the campaign trail with so much focus on the recovery and so many residents in southwest Florida homeless.

At the time of Biden’s remarks, Crist, the Democratic nominee for governor, and his allies were ramping up criticism of DeSantis tied to the hurricane – highlighting the former GOP congressman’s past votes against storm aid and climate change legislation and raising questions about the timing of evacuations in Lee County and the lack of urgency to address a crumbling property insurance market. Earlier in the week, Crist and the state Democratic Party promoted a story from a local television station featuring Floridians who said they were blocked from delivering storm supplies so DeSantis could survey the damage.

Biden “closed the door to that,” one veteran Democratic strategist told CNN, asking not to be named to speak openly about the race.

“The dynamics of the race needed to shift, and this was an opportunity for it to shift,” the strategist said. “The President complimenting the governor takes that whole issue off the table.”

Democrats were already facing an uphill climb in a state trending red prior to Ian making landfall. The Republican voter registration edge in Florida, a recent phenomenon, grew to 270,000 in September, according to the state’s Division of Elections. A recent survey of likely voters conducted by Siena College before the storm gave DeSantis an 8-point advantage over Crist. And DeSantis still hasn’t fully unleashed his colossal fundraising advantage – $106 million on hand to Crist’s $5 million at the end of last month.

In the race for US Senate, Republican Sen. Marco Rubio similarly led Rep. Val Demings, an Orlando Democrat, by 7 points in the Siena poll. And Rubio, though outraised for most of this cycle, has nearly twice as much cash for the closing weeks as Demings, who spent aggressively over the summer to introduce herself to voters unfamiliar with her background as a former Orlando police chief and three-term congresswoman.

Just as Floridians live under constant threat of hurricanes this time of year, campaigns here, too, are often forced to navigate the politics of storms. The disruption Ian has caused to the electoral calendar, while not remotely a concern for those bearing personal loss from the destruction, nevertheless remains a delicate test for candidates.

Demings has reengaged with the campaign by focusing on Rubio’s past votes related to disaster relief. On Thursday, Demings told MSNBC that Rubio “should pay a price” for skipping a vote on a stopgap bill to fund the government through the end of the year that included $18.8 million for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to assist states, including Florida, with natural disasters.

“If there’s any time we should lay politics aside, it dag gone should be during a natural disaster,” she said.

Rubio’s campaign accused Demings of supporting a Hurricane Ian relief bill full of “pork” for projects unrelated to the storm. The senator has said he would vote against such a bill.

“We shouldn’t have that in there because it undermines the ability to come back and do this in the future,” Rubio said.

As Ian arrived, Crist pulled his ads off the air in most of the state’s media markets. This week, he redirected his campaign bus to assist with the relief efforts. The only scheduled debate between Crist and DeSantis, slated for next week, is now delayed, and the host station has not announced a new date.

Amid his financing crunch, Crist canceled a fundraiser scheduled for this week in Sanibel Island, one of the barrier island communities that bore the brunt of the storm surge brought on by Ian. Another fundraiser scheduled with Biden was postponed as well.

Meanwhile, DeSantis, who continued to air campaign commercials throughout the storm, has commanded Florida’s response from ground zero, holding regular briefings in which he updates reporters on the state’s recovery efforts. In recent days, these news conferences have been joined by supporters of the governor, who cheer him on as he announces new developments in the push to get Lee and Charlotte counties up and running.

At DeSantis’ joint appearance with Biden in Fort Myers Beach on Wednesday, absent was the Republican’s aggressively partisan approach to governing that has fueled his fast rise to 2024 presidential hopeful. Instead, he commended the White House for its collaboration in helping Floridians, while Biden returned the favor, telling reporters that DeSantis has done “a good job” managing the recovery.

“We have very different political philosophies, but we worked hand in glove,” Biden said. “On things related to dealing with this crisis, we’ve been completely lockstep. There’s been no difference.”

Democrats expected Biden and DeSantis to play nice during their brief time together, but the compliments the President offered the governor caught some by surprise.

Sean Shaw, a former state representative who remains active with the state party, said his phone was full of text messages from Democrats noting how bad Biden’s remarks would be for Crist.

“But I mean, what else is Biden gonna say?” Shaw said in a text message to CNN.

Crist has seen his political fortunes upended by presidential visits before. As a Republican governor in 2009, Crist drew criticism from his party for hugging President Barack Obama at a Florida event to sell the White House’s financial recovery plan. The fallout from that moment kickstarted Crist’s eventual exit from the GOP.

Now, as the Democratic candidate for governor, Crist has emphasized his hug with Obama to engage with Black voters and he has embraced Biden like few in his party have. The day after winning the Democratic primary for governor of Florida, Crist called Biden a “great man” and “the best I’ve ever met” and he welcomed the President to join him on the campaign trail.

“Thank god for Joe Biden,” Crist said in the interview. It’s a line featured – twice – in a Republican ad airing against Crist.

Reggie Cardozo, who previously served as Obama’s political director in Florida, said he believes there is still an opportunity for Crist to make a case against DeSantis despite Biden’s remarks.

“The White House wanted this to be as apolitical as possible. So I’m not surprised that there was a kumbaya moment. As it should be,” Cardozo said. “Crist can credit the governor for doing his best to make sure the recovery is going smoothly while making sure people don’t forget this is a man who voted against this and believes that.”

Democrats would also like to shift the conversation back to issues on which they believe they have the upper hand, including the future of abortion access in the state and the soaring cost of living in Florida. In an appearance Thursday night on MSNBC, Crist attempted to link DeSantis’ about-face on hurricane aid to the Republican push to restriction abortion.

“It sure would be nice to be kind of consistent about what you believe versus what you think is an emergency situation,” Crist said. “He just seems to be inconsistent on so many things. He talks about freedom, for example. Yet he wants to attack a woman’s right to choose. I mean, it’s consistent all the way.”

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