Tag Archives: owners

Daniel Snyder to Buy Out Other Owners of Washington NFL Team

Seeking to move past a year of tumult over the team’s former name and a sexual harassment investigation of its front office, the owner of the Washington Football Team is close to a deal with fellow league owners that will give him greater control over the organization while he pays a fine for executives’ misconduct.

The arrangement effectively resolves two pressing issues: a protracted boardroom fight over ownership that spilled out into the open and an investigation by the N.F.L. into allegations that women who worked for the team were sexually harassed by staff members, a number of whom have already been dismissed.

The league owners next week are expected to approve a special waiver that would allow the owner, Daniel Snyder, to take on an additional $450 million in debt in order to buy out minority partners he has been battling, according to a copy of the resolution reviewed by The New York Times. The N.F.L.’s finance committee last week unanimously recommended that the full cohort of owners waive the limit of debt a buyer can take on to buy into a team. Snyder will have to repay the money by March 2028.

Support for Snyder’s purchase comes as the N.F.L.’s investigation into sexual harassment claims made against former Washington Football Team executives concludes. In the coming days, Commissioner Roger Goodell may address the findings collected by Beth Wilkinson, a Washington-based lawyer whom Snyder hired last summer to investigate after several Washington Post articles reported widespread sexual harassment of women who worked for the team over a 15-year span. The N.F.L. took over her investigation from Snyder.

Snyder’s pending purchase of his partners’ shares and the end of Wilkinson’s investigation into the team’s internal culture come after a chaotic year for the franchise. The team decided to drop its nickname and logo last July after years of criticism from some Native American activists who considered it a racist slur and threats from major corporations that they would end sponsorships if the name stayed. The Washington Football Team is still reviewing possible new names and logos.

Since then, Washington sought to rectify its 3-13 record from the 2019 season by firing numerous front office executives and hiring a new coach, Ron Rivera, at the beginning of 2020. In August, Rivera learned he had cancer and began treatments for it, but he coached the full season, leading the team back to the playoffs for the first time in five years.

To try to revive the club’s tattered image, Snyder has hired several new executives, including Jason Wright, the N.F.L.’s first Black team president. A coed dance team will perform on game days, replacing the cheerleading program, which had been overseen by one of the since-fired executives who had been accused of sexual harassment.

Snyder will pay $875 million for the 40.5 percent of the team owned by Dwight Schar, Robert Rothman and Frederick Smith, ensuring his total control of the franchise he bought a majority stake of in 1999.

When the purchase is completed, which is expected shortly, Snyder and his family will hold 100 percent of the club and end a very public fight with Rothman, Schar and Smith, who bought into the team in 2003. Last spring, the three men banded together to try to sell their stakes after Snyder declined to pay them annual dividends as a way to conserve the team’s cash with the 2020 N.F.L. season still in doubt because of the coronavirus pandemic.

In August, the private disagreement over distributed dividends turned into corporate warfare that spilled into public view. Snyder all but accused Schar of orchestrating a smear campaign against him by contending in court documents that Schar facilitated the spread of negative information about him to the media with the hope that bad press would ultimately force Snyder to sell his majority stake. In that situation, the trio’s shares would have garnered a higher price if the team was sold as a whole.

The three minority owners — Schar, a real estate developer; Rothman, an asset manager; and Smith, the chairman of FedEx — turned against Snyder, accusing him in federal court of bad-faith dealing and malfeasance.

Even as Wilkinson was brought in last July to conduct an investigation into team executives’ conduct toward female employees, the N.F.L. had hired in late June former Attorney General Loretta Lynch to untangle the squabble among the Washington Football Team’s owners.

The Washington Post reported that two women had accused Snyder, 56, in separate episodes of harassment dating to 2004 — which he denied — and that he reached a financial settlement in 2009 with a female former executive who had accused him of sexual misconduct during a trip on a private jet.

Now, with the investigation into his and other team employees’ conduct wrapping up and the conclusion of his boardroom battle in sight, Snyder can focus on another major task: deciding how to rebrand the football team whose future is entirely under his control.

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Sacramento business owners hesitant, hopeful for eased restrictions

Sacramento business owners hesitant, hopeful for eased restrictions



BACK TO YOU. TY: BACK TO OUR CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE. MILLIONS MORE CALIFORNIANS ARE NOW ELIGIBLE TO GET VACCINATED. TONI: THE STATE IS OPENING UP THE REQUIREMENTS TO THOSE WITH CERTAIN HEALTH CONDITIONS AND DISABILITIES, AS WELL AS THOSE EMPLOYED IN CERTAIN INDUSTRIES. TEO TORRES IS WORKING FROM HOME. HE HAS MORE ON WHO CAN NOW GET THE SHOT. GOOD MORNING. TEO: GOOD MORNING TO BOTH OF YOU. THIS WILL ALLOW AN ESTIMATED FOUR AND A HALF MILLION MORE CALIFORNIANS TO GET THE VACCINE. THERE IS SPECIFIC CRITERIA. LET’S GO THROUGH THESE HEALTH CONDITIONS. ACCORDING TO THE STATE’S DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH, ANYONE BETWEEN THE AGES OF 16 AND 64 WITH CANCER. KIDNEY DISEASE, PULMONARY DISEASE, DOWN SYNDROME, ORGAN TRANSPLANTS, PREGNANCY, SICKLE CELL DISEASE, HEART CONDITIONS, OBESITY, AND TYPE TWO DIABET ALSO NO QUALIFIES. PEOPLE WITH DEVELOPMENTAL OR HIGH-RISK DISABILITY ARE ALSO ELIGIBLE. DR. VANESSA WALKER SAYS ITS IMPORTANT FOR PEOPLE AT HIGH-RISK TO GET THE VACCINE. >> I HAVE BEEN TAKING CARE OF PATIENTS WITH COVID FOR A LONG TIME NOW AND ITS NOT ALL ABOUT AGE. I’VE HAD MANY PATIENTS IN THEIR 50’S, 40’S, WITH DIABETES, OBESITY AND THEY ARE FREQUENTLY ON VENTILATORS, HIGH-RESOURCE UTILIZERS, VERY VERY SICK, OFTEN TIMES DI SO, I THINK IT IS VERY GOOD TO GET THESE PEOPLE THAT ARE REALLY, REALLY AT RISK OF GETTING SEVERE COVID OR HOSPITALIZED AND EVEN DYING, LET’S GET THEM VACCINATED. TEO: ELIGIBILITY IS ALSO EXPANDING TO INCLUDE PEOPLE IN JAIL, PRISON, OR TREATMENT FACILITIES AND THE HOMELESS. UTILITY WORKERS WHO RESPOND TO EMERGENCIES, PUBLIC TRANSIT WORKERS, JANITORS AND DISASTER SERVICE WORKERS, MASSAGE THERAPISTS AND LIBRARIANS WILL ALSO BE ELIGIBLE, STARTING TODAY. LAST WEEK, THE STATE RELEASED GUIDELINES THAT SAID PEOPLE WITH THESE CONDITIONS OR DISABILITIES WILL NOT BE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE DOCUMENTATION TO VERIFY THEIR DIAGNOSIS. BUT THEY MAY BE ASKED TO SIGN A SELF-ATTESTATION THAT THEY MEET THE CRITERIA. BACK TO YOU. TONI: THANK YOU. HERE’S A LOOK AT THE NUMBERS. THE PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENT SAYS NEARLY 11.8 MILLION VACCINE DOSES HAVE BEEN GIVEN TO PEOPLE IN CALIFORNIA. THAT’S ABOUT 75% OF THE 15 MILLION DOSES THAT HAVE BEEN DELIVERED TO THE STATE, AND TAKE A LOOK AT THIS THERE WERE JUST OVER 1400 CASES REPORTED STATE-WIDE ON SATURDAY. THAT’S THE LOWEST NUMBER IN MONTHS. THE 7-DAY POSITIVITY RATE IS DOWN TO 2%. THAT’S THE LOWEST IT’S EVER BEEN SINCE THE BEGINNING OF THE PANDEMIC. AS A RESULT, STATE HEALTH OFFICIALS EXPECT ANOTHER 13 COUNTIES WILL BE ABLE TO MOVE TO THE RED TIER TOMORROW. ON THE LIST, SACRAMENTO, SAN JOAQUIN, AND YUBA COUNTIES. WHILE IT’S NOT OFFICIAL YET, THE NUMBERS APPEAR TO BE ON PACE WITH RE-OPENING, JUST IN TIME FOR SAINT PATRICK’S DAY. MANY SCHOOL DISTRICTS HAVE PROMISED TO BRING MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS BACK TO SCHOOL IN THE RED TIER. YESTERDAY THE NATOMAS UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTIFIED PARENTS THAT IF THE COUNTY MOVES INTO RED TOMORROW, THEY WILL REOPEN MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOLS NEXT MONDAY, WITH MINIMUM DAYS. THOSE WHO OPTED TO CONTINUE DISTANCE LEARNING WO

Sacramento business owners hesitant, hopeful for eased restrictions

Sacramento County is expected to loosen COVID-19 restrictions on Tuesday.The county’s anticipated move to the red tier would allow some businesses to reopen indoors with limited capacity. Sacramento had been in the purple tier previously — the state’s most stringent tier for reopening — for months when case rates and deaths were at record levels across the state.Moving to the red tier means indoor dining and movie theaters can reopen at 25% capacity or up to 100 people, whichever is fewer. Gyms can open indoors at 10% capacity. Museums, zoos and aquariums can open indoor activities at 25% capacity.KCRA 3 News spoke with business owners and city leaders about the possible shift.David Gull, New Helvetia Brewing Company”I’m hopeful. I’m definitely hopeful that the 25% indoor allowance now will give us a little bit of a boost. I think this industry — not just breweries, but restaurants, pubs, bars, hospitality in general, has really taken such a huge hit over the course of the year. Obviously, we want to get it to 100% as soon as possible. It also brings with it risks. We’re going to continue with mask-wearing mandates and encourage customers to be courteous as they’re moving about in our shared indoor space.”Dave Parker, The Tower Theatre”Well, there’s a lot of preparation that goes into it. It’s been a year, obviously. We opened for a few weeks last fall. Effectively, we’ve been closed for a year. I’ve been lucky that I’ve been selling food every weekend since summer. I’ve been able to keep up on the maintenance. The place is pretty much ready to go right now.”Mike Testa, Visit Sacramento”It’s been a tough year for everybody. I think we have that chance to do a little more to bring people back into restaurants. It’s a big deal and it’s a cause for celebration because it means we’re moving in the right direction.”

Sacramento County is expected to loosen COVID-19 restrictions on Tuesday.

The county’s anticipated move to the red tier would allow some businesses to reopen indoors with limited capacity. Sacramento had been in the purple tier previously — the state’s most stringent tier for reopening — for months when case rates and deaths were at record levels across the state.

Moving to the red tier means indoor dining and movie theaters can reopen at 25% capacity or up to 100 people, whichever is fewer. Gyms can open indoors at 10% capacity. Museums, zoos and aquariums can open indoor activities at 25% capacity.

KCRA 3 News spoke with business owners and city leaders about the possible shift.

David Gull, New Helvetia Brewing Company

KCRA

Sacramento business owners cautiously optimistic about possible tier advancement. 

“I’m hopeful. I’m definitely hopeful that the 25% indoor allowance now will give us a little bit of a boost. I think this industry — not just breweries, but restaurants, pubs, bars, hospitality in general, has really taken such a huge hit over the course of the year. Obviously, we want to get it to 100% as soon as possible. It also brings with it risks. We’re going to continue with mask-wearing mandates and encourage customers to be courteous as they’re moving about in our shared indoor space.”

Dave Parker, The Tower Theatre

KCRA

Sacramento business owners cautiously optimistic about possible tier advancement. 

Well, there’s a lot of preparation that goes into it. It’s been a year, obviously. We opened for a few weeks last fall. Effectively, we’ve been closed for a year. I’ve been lucky that I’ve been selling food every weekend since summer. I’ve been able to keep up on the maintenance. The place is pretty much ready to go right now.”

Mike Testa, Visit Sacramento

KCRA

Sacramento business owners cautiously optimistic about possible tier advancement. 

“It’s been a tough year for everybody. I think we have that chance to do a little more to bring people back into restaurants. It’s a big deal and it’s a cause for celebration because it means we’re moving in the right direction.”

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This was Texas’ first weekend without Covid-19 limits. Here’s how it went for business owners

Last week they were finally given the chance to return to normal, after the governor issued an executive order lifting the state’s mask mandate and allowing businesses to reopen at 100% capacity.

Just as varied as the approaches were their experiences this weekend, the first without Covid-19 limits on businesses — some saw business improve, others said things stayed much the same. One was the target of racist vandalism.

Here’s what some Texas businesses told CNN about their first weekend since restrictions were lifted.

Mike Nguyen, San Antonio

Sunday morning, Mike Nguyen discovered his San Antonio restaurant, Noodle Tree, had been vandalized with racist messages after he’d appeared in local news outlets and on CNN to criticize the decision to lift the mask mandate.

“Kung flu,” “go back 2 China” and “hope U die,” were written in red spray paint, according to photos he shared with CNN. (CNN has reached out to the San Antonio Police Department for comment on the incident).

“Honestly, to me it’s a piece of cloth that goes over your face,” he said. “I don’t understand why they took it this far, but I guess they wanted to send a message that masks are ridiculous, or whatever.”

But aside from the vandalism, Nguyen said the weekend went well. He chose to continue requiring masks for customers unless they’re seated at their tables. And he’s capped his dining room at about 60% to 70%, rather than fully reopening.

Before the restaurant was vandalized, Noodle Tree actually doubled its business compared to last weekend, Nguyen said, calling it one of the restaurant’s “busiest weekends.” He couldn’t say whether the increase was due to the lifting of restrictions or support from the community.

Nguyen said whoever vandalized his restaurant doesn’t represent Texans and they don’t represent San Antonians. Sunday, Nguyen told CNN people had been approaching the business throughout the morning to help clean up.

“I’m very humbled,” he said. “But I’m not surprised. This is what we do as Texans, this is what we do as San Antonians — we help each other out.”

He said that was also evident in how many Texans are still wearing masks, despite the relaxed restrictions.

“It kind of shows you that there is light at the end of the tunnel, and we can go back to what we used to be,” he said. “That’s encouraging.”

“I’m just hoping we don’t go backwards,” he added.

Lisa Dickinson, Fort Worth

Lisa Dickinson, the manager of a store in Fort Worth called Parts Unknown, said business was great this weekend. Saturday, the store actually exceeded the business it had done at the same time in 2019, she said. “It was a really good day.”

The store is not requiring masks of its customers, Dickinson said, a decision that was made by its corporate office. But most of the customers who came in this weekend wore masks anyway, she said.

“Nobody was upset with the ones that didn’t and nobody was upset with the ones that did,” she said. “Everybody minded their own business and had a good time.”

A number of customers this weekend were between the ages of 50 and 70, Dickinson said, and they told her they’d been “hunkered down in their houses for the last year because of the pandemic.”

“They felt comfortable getting out,” she said, in some cases because they’d been able to get vaccinated. “This is like the first time they had ventured out in a while. They chose to come to Fort Worth, they grabbed a hotel, they do some dinner, they do some shopping.”

Dickinson said people are smart enough to make their own decisions about wearing the masks. But she recognized the pandemic isn’t over and said she hoped people would be “sensible” and not congregate in large groups.

“But after what I witnessed this weekend, the good people of Texas … they respect what they need to do, and I don’t think we need to be told what we to do or hide in our houses,” she said. “So I am very hopeful for the future.”

Nicola Blaque, San Antonio

Chef Nicola Blaque owns two restaurants in San Antonio. One of them, Mi Roti, which she opened during the pandemic, is in a San Antonio food hall and the property manages the Covid-19 restrictions there. That means no indoor dining and masks for everyone.

Despite the restrictions, business Saturday was “really, really good,” Blaque told CNN.

“The restrictions at that restaurant are very strong,” she said, “and we didn’t have any backlash or anybody not following the rules.”

As for her other restaurant, The Jerk Shack, business was largely the same this weekend as it has been during the pandemic. Though the restaurant has outdoor dining, Blaque has continued with takeout service and still encourages social distancing.

But following the governor’s order, Blaque decided to give customers the choice to wear masks at The Jerk Shack — a decision that earned her a couple of one-star reviews from customers who were upset she wasn’t requiring them.

Blaque said that decision was mainly for the safety of her employees. She didn’t want to put them in a position where they might have to enforce masks with customers who weren’t cooperative.

“I’m a minority, so 2020 was not the easiest for Black restaurants,” she said. “It was not just the pandemic happening, but other things affecting our business. So we just had to make the right decisions so we didn’t receive so much backlash and so much tension.”

In the past, they’ve been the targets of racial slurs and threats, Blaque said. Someone once busted out the windows of her food truck in front of her restaurant.

“Even the thought or the threat of violence — it’s not worth my employees’ safety,” she said.

Ryan Lachaine, Houston

For months, the restaurant staff at Riel in Houston have played it by the book when it comes to Covid-19 safety, chef and partner Ryan Lachaine told CNN. The restaurant has been scrubbed down so many times that the varnish is coming off some of the seats.

But given the first chance in a year to open at 100% capacity, Lachaine and his business partners made the tough decision to stay the course. This weekend Riel was still operating at 50% capacity and masks were still a must, Lachaine said. As a result, the restaurant didn’t see much of a change.

“It’s business as usual. It was pretty much a regular Friday and Saturday night for us,” he said Sunday, explaining that with reduced occupancy, the restaurant was as busy as it could be.

Lachaine compared running the restaurant to walking a tightrope, balancing the desire to bring in revenue with prioritizing the safety of his employees.

“In my opinion, you can’t have one without the other,” he said. “If I don’t have any staff because they’re sick or scared to go to work, I can’t produce food for people to come in. If I don’t have patrons eating, I can’t pay my staff.”

As much as Lachaine would like to return to normal, he said he wants to wait until his employees are fully vaccinated.

“That’s my prerequisite,” he said.

Arnaldo Richards, Houston

After 12 months operating at a loss, Arnaldo Richards, chef and owner of Pico’s Restaurant in Houston, said “business has been incredible” this weekend.

Richards, whose restaurant and employees were the target of threats after he announced customers would still have to wear masks, attributed the rise in business to community support, not relaxed Covid-19 restrictions. “Our sales have increased tremendously,” Richards said, since the governor made his announcement.

“We’ve had people coming in and saying, I saw this on social media or I saw this thing on TV and we’re here to support you,” he said. Richards also has not reopened his dining room to 100% capacity, sticking to about 70%. At that level, he can still safely keep customers socially distanced, he said.

When the governor announced his order, Richards said he was initially excited, thinking about how it would stimulate the economy. But he chose to keep his employees, customers and community safe by keeping the restrictions in place.

Overall, Richards said he was optimistic about the future, based on how members of the community have reacted since Abbott’s order went into effect. “(It’s) really not making people go out and be irresponsible,” he said.

“The governor said we could make the choice,” he said, “but it’s up to the community, it’s up to the individual, it’s up to the business to be responsible. Because after 12 months you should know how to protect yourself.”

CNN’s Danielle Wiener-Bronner contributed to this report.

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Circle of Hope Girls’ Ranch owners charged with abuse after women spoke out on TikTok

The owners of a religious boarding school in southwestern Missouri have been arrested on dozens of abuse charges, following an investigation prompted by alumnae who spoke out on TikTok.

Boyd and Stephanie Householder, the owners and operators of Circle of Hope Girls’ Ranch, were taken into custody Tuesday after the Missouri Attorney General’s office filed a litany of charges.

Court records show Boyd Householder, 71, faces 79 felony counts and one misdemeanor, including charges for child molestation, sodomy, sexual contact with a student and neglect of a child. Stephanie Householder, 55, faces 22 felony charges for abuse or neglect of a child, and endangering the welfare of a child. The alleged incidents occurred from 2017 to 2020.

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt told reporters at a news conference Wednesday his office has identified 16 victims “so far,” and that he considers this to be “one of the most widespread cases of sexual, physical and mental abuse patterns against young girls and women in Missouri history.”

“There are no words I can say today to describe the mix of great sadness, horror, disgust and sympathy that I feel about these reports of cruel and almost unbelievable reports of abuse and neglect,” Schmitt said.

The Householders were being held in Vernon County Jail, Cedar County Sheriff James McCrary said. They were scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday afternoon.

An attorney who has represented the Householders in civil lawsuits said he will not be representing them in the criminal cases. It was unclear Wednesday if the Householders had a defense lawyer. Stephanie Householder previously told NBC News that she and her husband deny all allegations against them.

Boyd Householder opened Circle of Hope in 2006 as a school that he claimed could reform rebellious teenage girls. Two dozen former residents previously told NBC News and “Dateline” that Boyd and Stephanie used cruel punishments against girls at the ranch, including withholding food, forcing them to perform manual labor and restraining girls face down for as long as an hour.

Schmitt said witnesses told investigators that the Householders restrained girls with handcuffs and zipties, and stuffed dirty socks in their mouths. One girl said Boyd pushed her down the stairs, and another said he advised her on how to kill herself, according to Schmitt.

Charging documents allege that Boyd slammed two girls’ heads against a wall, kept another girl in a room with no light or sound for “an extended period of time on multiple occasions,” poured hot sauce into a girl’s mouth and used duct tape and socks to prevent a girl from using her hands for “several days.” Stephanie’s charges largely stem from allegations that she assisted Boyd in dangerous restraints and allowed him to continue to interact with the girls after assaulting them, according to charging documents.

Since the boarding school opened, concerned parents, staff members and others had reported Circle of Hope at least 19 times to three sheriff’s departments, state child welfare and education officials, the highway patrol, and the state attorney general’s office, according to interviews and records obtained by NBC News.

However, these complaints did not result in charges. An assistant U.S. attorney declined to prosecute in 2018, according to an email from a highway patrol officer who investigated Circle of Hope. And state child welfare and education officials had no authority to close the ranch, a loophole that a bipartisan bill pending in the Missouri Legislature aims to close.

Amanda Householder in a family portrait with her parents, Boyd and Stephanie Householder, who founded Circle of Hope Girls’ Ranch in Missouri.Courtesy of Amanda Householder

The wave of state action began after the Householders’ daughter, Amanda, and women who attended Circle of Hope as teenagers started to post videos on TikTok last spring alleging abuse at the ranch. The videos prompted the Cedar County Sheriff’s Office to investigate, the office confirmed.

Last summer, about two dozen girls still enrolled in Circle of Hope were removed by state officials as more people came forward with abuse allegations. The Householders voluntarily closed Circle of Hope in August and put the property up for sale.

Schmitt’s office joined the investigation in November, after Cedar County prosecutor Ty Gaither requested assistance.

Amanda Householder said in a TikTok posted Wednesday morning she never thought her parents would be held accountable.

“This is a moment that does deserve to be celebrated,” she said, reacting to news of her parents’ arrests. “I am sad because they are my parents, but something my parents would always tell me is, ‘You made your bed, now you have to lie in it.’ Well, my parents made their bed and now they’re going to have to lie in it. As hard as that is for me, it’s about time.”

CORRECTION (March 10, 2021, 12:57 p.m. ET): A previous version of this article misstated how many felony charges Boyd Householder faces. It is 79 (and one misdemeanor count), not 80.



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Some Google Pixel owners are reporting camera problems

Some owners of previous-generation Pixel phones are having serious trouble with their cameras. Android Police has noticed a recent increase in one-star Play Store reviews for the camera app used by the Pixel, with frustrated owners saying the camera often crashes upon opening or no longer works at all. A thread in Google’s Pixel support forum features similar complaints. The Pixel 2 XL seems to be cited most often for experiencing the problem, but some posters say they’re having trouble with devices as recent as the 3 or 4A.

It’s not an entirely new problem. Android Police has been tracking camera issues that have plagued Pixel 2 phones primarily over the last year, and it notes more devices seem to be affected now. Owners say that Google’s suggested fixes don’t remedy the problem and that they experience the same problem when using third-party camera apps. The Pixel 2 series recently got its last security update, but there’s no logical reason why the camera should stop functioning as a result.

It’s an unfortunate bug, especially considering that many folks chose a Pixel phone because of its high-quality camera. While Pixel image quality has fallen behind other flagship competition recently, budget devices like the 4A and 4A 5G offer some of the best cameras in their class. But the best camera is the one that keeps functioning when you need it, so we hope to see Google address these user concerns. We’ve reached out to Google asking for confirmation of the issue and if a fix is on the way and will update this article with any information we get.

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Jessica Pegula, daughter of Bills owners, falls in quarterfinals of Australian Open

Getty Images

Jessica Pegula, the daughter of Buffalo Bills owners Kim and Terry Pegula, fell to fellow American Jennifer Brady in the semifinals of the Australian Open on Wednesday in Melbourne.

Pegula won the first set, 6-4, in the first set that Brady had lost so far during the entirety of the tournament.

But Pegula couldn’t hold the advantage from there as Brady rallied to win the next two sets, 6-2, 6-1, to clinch the match and advance to the semifinals.

It was Pegula’s first appearance in a Grand Slam quarterfinals.

Pegula defeated two-time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka and No. 5 seed Elina Svitolina to reach the quarterfinals against Brady.

Brady will face Karolina Muchova in one semifinal with Serena Williams facing Naomi Osaka on the other side of the bracket.

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Google gives recent Pixel device owners more control over Night Sight

Thanks to its latest update, the Google Camera app now lets you permanently turn off its Auto Night Sight feature on devices that automatically enable the low-light photography mode, 9to5Google reports. The feature is available with version 8.1.200 of the app, which started rolling out on Monday. Additionally, the update lets you disable the mode from the app’s flash settings.

When Google released the Pixel 4A 5G and Pixel 5 last year, it tweaked their camera apps to enable Night Sight mode automatically in low-light conditions. But using the feature means photos take longer to capture, so there’ll inevitably be occasions when you don’t want it to automatically come on. Annoyingly, as 9to5Google notes, the toggle to turn this feature off (on the bottom right of the Camera app) would previously reset whenever the app closed. As of this latest update, Auto Night Sight now remains disabled when you close the app.

As well as letting users permanently turn off Auto Night Sight, the latest version of the app also adds a Night Sight toggle into the app’s flash settings. The update doesn’t appear to be available for older Pixel phones, which prompt users to manually turn on Night Sight in low-light conditions rather than enabling it automatically.

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