Tag Archives: Pearl

Hawaii remembrance draws handful of Pearl Harbor survivors

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP) — A handful of centenarian survivors of the attack on Pearl Harbor joined about 2,500 members of the public at the scene of the Japanese bombing on Wednesday to commemorate those who perished 81 years ago.

The audience sat quietly during a moment of silence at 7:55 a.m., the same time the attack began on Dec. 7, 1941.

Sailors aboard the USS Daniel Inouye stood along the rails of the guided missile destroyer while it passed both by the grassy shoreline where the ceremony was held and the USS Arizona Memorial to honor the survivors and those killed in the attack. Ken Stevens, a 100-year-old survivor from the USS Whitney, returned the salute.

“The ever-lasting legacy of Pearl Harbor will be shared at this site for all time, as we must never forget those who came before us so that we can chart a more just and peaceful path for those who follow,” said Tom Leatherman, superintendent of the Pearl Harbor National Memorial.

About 2,400 servicemen were killed in the bombing, which launched the U.S. into World War II. The USS Arizona alone lost 1,177 sailors and Marines, nearly half the death toll. Most of the Arizona’s fallen remained entombed in the ship, which sits on the harbor floor.

Ira Schab, 102, was on the USS Dobbin as a tuba player in the ship’s band. He recalls seeing Japanese planes flying overhead and wondering what to do.

“We had no place to go and hoped they’d miss us,” he said before the ceremony began.

He fed ammunition to machine gunners on the vessel, which wasn’t hit.

He’s now attended the remembrance ceremony four times.

“I wouldn’t miss it because I got an awful lot of friends that are still here that are buried here. I come back out of respect for them,” he said.

Schab stayed in the Navy during the war. After the war, he studied aerospace engineering and worked on the Apollo program. Today he lives in Portland, Oregon.

He wants people to remember those who served that day.

“Remember what they’re here for. Remember and honor those that are left. They did a hell of a job. Those who are still here, dead or alive,” he said.

Only six survivors attended, fewer than the dozen or more who have traveled to Hawaii from across the country for the annual remembrance ceremony in recent years.

Part of the decline reflects the dwindling number of survivors as they age. The youngest active-duty military personnel on Dec. 7, 1941, would have been about 17, making them 98 today. Many of those still alive are at least 100.

Herb Elfring, 100, or Jackson, Michigan, said was great that many members of the public showed interest in the commemoration and attended the ceremony.

“So many people don’t even know where Pearl Harbor is or what happened on that day,” he said.

Elfring was in the Army, assigned to the 251st Coast Artillery, part of the California National Guard. He remembers hearing bombs explode a few miles down the coast at Pearl Harbor but thought it was part of an exercise.

But then he saw a red ball on the fuselage of a Japanese Zero fighter plane when it strafed the ground alongside him near his barracks at Camp Malakole.

“That was a rude awakening,” he said. One soldier in his unit was injured by the bullets, but no one died, he said.

Robert John Lee recalls being a 20-year-old civilian living at his parent’s home on the naval base where his father ran the water pumping station. The home was just about 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) across the harbor from where the USS Arizona was moored on battleship row.

The first explosions before 8 a.m. woke him up, making him think a door was slamming in the wind. He got up to yell for someone to shut the door only to look out the window at Japanese planes dropping torpedo bombs from the sky.

He saw the hull of the USS Arizona turn a deep orange-red after an aerial bomb hit it.

“Within a few seconds, that explosion then came out with huge tongues of flame right straight up over the ship itself — but hundreds of feet up,” Lee said in an interview Monday after a boat tour of the harbor.

He still remembers the hissing sound of the fire.

Sailors jumped into the water to escape their burning ships and swam to the landing near Lee’s house. Many were covered in the thick, heavy oil that coated the harbor. Lee and his mother used Fels-Naptha soap to help wash them. Sailors who were able to boarded small boats that shuttled them back to their vessels.

“Very heroic, I thought,” Lee said of them.

Lee joined the Hawaii Territorial Guard the next day, and later the U.S. Navy. He worked for Pan American World Airways for 30 years after the war.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs doesn’t have statistics for how many Pearl Harbor survivors are still living. But department data show that of the 16 million who served in World War II, only about 240,000 were alive as of August and some 230 die each day.

There were about 87,000 military personnel on Oahu at the time of the attack, according to a rough estimate compiled by military historian J. Michael Wenger.

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US military to begin draining Pearl Harbor pipelines

JOINT BASE PEARL HARBOR-HICKAM, Hawaii (AP) — The U.S. military said Monday it’s ready to begin draining 1 million gallons (3.79 million liters) of fuel from three pipelines as part of an initial step toward closing a World War II-era fuel storage facility that leaked petroleum into Pearl Harbor’s tap water last year.

The pipelines run about 3 miles (4.83 kilometers) from the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility in the mountains above Pearl Harbor down to the military base.

Starting Tuesday, the military will spend six days draining the pipelines one by one. Fuel is expected to move through the pipes for a total of 12 hours during the six days.

The fuel has been sitting in the pipes since the military suspended use of the Red Hill facility last year after it leaked petroleum into a drinking water well serving 93,000 people in and around Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

Nearly 6,000 people, mostly military personnel and their families, sought medical attention for rashes, sores, nausea and other ailments after drinking and bathing with the contaminated water.

Shortly after, the state Department of Health ordered the military to drain fuel from Red Hill and shut the facility down. The military says 104 million gallons remain in the tanks themselves. It aims to remove this fuel by July 2024 after it makes necessary repairs to be able to drain the tanks safely.

Navy Rear Adm. John Wade, the commander of Joint Task Force Red Hill, said the state Department of Health and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reviewed and approved the military’s plan to drain the pipelines. A third-party contractor also checked the plans, he said.

The most dangerous aspect of draining the pipelines is the potential for fuel to spill and enter the aquifer, Wade told reporters as a news conference.

“So everything that we’ve done, every focus of effort for the planning and the rehearsals has been focused on mitigating any chance of a spill,” he said.

The Red Hill facility sits just 100 feet (30 meters) above one of Honolulu’s most important drinking water aquifers.

Hawaii officials are concerned that last year’s spill contaminated the aquifer and are worried that any future spills would also pollute the aquifer, which normally supplies more than 20% of the water consumed in Honolulu.

Wade said representatives from the Department of Health and the EPA will be on hand while military drains the pipelines.

Task force members trained individually and as groups on how to respond if fuel spills while the pipelines are being drained, he said.

A Navy investigation found a series of mistakes over the course of six months caused last year’s spill.

It found operator error caused a pipe to rupture on May 6, 2021 when fuel was being transferred between tanks. This caused 21,000 gallons (80,000 liters) of fuel to spill. Most of it flowed into a fire suppression line and sat there for six months, causing the line to sag.

Then on Nov. 20, a cart rammed into the sagging line, releasing 20,000 gallons (75,700 liters) of fuel. A team thought they recovered all of this fuel, but they missed about 5,000 gallons (19,000 liters). Fuel they missed flowed into a French drain and from there into the drinking water well.

Fuel from the three pipelines will go to above-ground storage tanks and fuel barges which will then supply Air Force jets and Navy ships at the base, officials said.

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‘Pearl’: Mia Goth Should Get Oscars Attention for Terrifying Role

Spoiler alert: The entire plot of “Pearl” and “X” will be discussed in this article.

Who knew a church dance tryout would result in one of the year’s strongest film monologues?

That’s the case with “Pearl,” Ti West’s twisty, hallucinatory ode to Technicolor-era film. It’s the prequel to this year’s grimy porn slasher “X,” in which Mia Goth played an aspiring XXX actress as well as a makeup-laden, nearly-unrecognizable elderly woman named Pearl who ended up killing most of the film crew staying on her farm. In the latest film, Goth takes on a third role of Pearl as a young woman.

This serial killer origin story finds Pearl trapped on her family farm in 1918, with her husband Howard a world away from Texas while fighting in the war, leaving her to keep up the chores for her strict German immigrant mother and invalid father. Dreaming of a life dancing on the silver screen, she soon turns homicidal after being scolded by her mother, rebuffed by her projectionist lover and “mercy killing” her father, who would just be dead weight on her journey to film stardom.

Pearl is invited to a dance audition at church by her sister-in-law Mitsy (Emma Jenkins-Purro) and, despite giving a bombastic performance, is dismissed by the judges because they’re looking for a fresh-faced blonde dancer. In an effort to calm a distraught Pearl, Mitsy takes her home and invites her to practice what she would say to Howard in order to make her feel better, launching one of the best scenes of 2022, including a nine-minute monologue from Goth which results in an acting masterclass.

“I hate you so much for leaving me here, sometimes I hope you die,” begins Pearl sharply, lost in the fantasy of speaking to her soldier husband. “I’m sorry, I feel awful admitting that, but it’s the truth.” The admission stings the audience more than Pearl’s axe blows earlier in the film, ringing with the unspoken honesty of a woman facing loneliness and depression while her husband is across the world, his fate unknown.

“I wish things could just go back to the way they were before, but I don’t see how they could, not after the things I’ve done,” she continues to an increasingly unsettled Mitsy.

Pearl goes on, unguarded and candid about her miscarriage (“I never wanted to be a mother. I loathed the feeling of it growing inside of me, it felt like sickness…I was so relieved when it died”), infidelity and murderous rages.

With the camera locked on her face in closeup, audiences are constantly thinking of Mitsy on the other side of the table, forced to maintain a straight face while hearing these taboo declarations. As Pearl wraps, lamenting that she’ll probably be stuck on the farm forever, she delivers her fractured mission statement: “All I really want is to be loved. I’m having such a hard time without it lately.” As Pearl bows her head, exhausted and silent, Mitsy finds her opportunity to leave the room, but is trapped in one last conversation, as the other shoe drops and Pearl congratulates her sister-in-law on getting the dance part.

Although Mitsy denies it, the scene ratchets drama up further as Pearl urges her blonde cousin to admit her success and even says “I’m happy for you.” Goth diffuses the tension, seemingly coming down to earth to find frustration in the situation but not blame her family. But after considering it, Pearl grits her teeth and mutters, “You always get what you want,” and it’s clear that poor Mitsy won’t ever make it to the stage.

The scene is reminiscent of the tense opening of Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 film “Inglourious Basterds,” in which Nazi Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz) has a long discussion with farmer Perrier LaPadite (Denis Ménochet), during which both parties — and the audience — become increasingly certain there is a Jewish family hidden in the floorboards of the house, and things will not end peacefully. That scene ended up being one of the film’s most memorable, and kickstarted the buzz for Waltz’s first Academy Award.

During the beginning of her monologue, Pearl laments, “The truth is, I’m not really a good person.” Although it’s easy to pigeonhole the axe-wielding would-be movie star that way, the reality is much more muddied. She’s a broken person, a loving person, a lonely person at a time in America’s history where women had to be the supportive rocks back home. Goth plays a misbehaving woman out of time, sanding away the edges of her personality, hopes and desires.

It’s easy to think Pearl might find a kindred spirit in the titular heroine of the Chantal Akerman’s 1975 film “Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles.” In that landmark feminist work, Jeanne lives out mundane days doing chores and making ends meet through dissociative sex work, leading to a tragic ending where an unexpected climax leads to her murdering a john. The blend of the mundane, domestic and erotic all pulsing to a tragic end illuminates both works.

The startling final scene of “Pearl” — Howard comes home to a dinner table filled with Pearl’s victims, his wife eager to greet him — ends with a minutes-long unbroken shot of Goth smiling ear-to-ear, every muscle in her face stretched to exaggeration, tears breaking occasionally as her eyes stare down the barrel of the camera. It’s a visual that matches the inevitable fate of Pearl in the decades before “X”: trapped in the Technicolor nightmare of her Texas farm, contorting a grin to distract from the tears. (Another parallel with “Jeanne Dielman”: The seven-minute unbroken take of Jeanne after she stabs her john, which ends the film.)

Despite raves among fans and even a co-sign from Martin Scorsese (“I was enthralled, then disturbed, then so unsettled that I had trouble getting to sleep. But I couldn’t stop watching.”), “Pearl” seems destined to be overlooked as a serious acting showcase. Horror is perennially ignored when it comes to awards attention. Some of the most indelible performances of the last decade have been slighted, simply because of genre: Florence Pugh in “Midsommar,” Lupita Nyong’o in “Us,” Toni Collette in “Hereditary,” Anya Taylor-Joy in “The Witch.”

Yet Goth flexes every muscle during the film, nailing moments both absurd and sincere. For every shattering monologue there’s a comedic beat around the corner, or simply a startling visual of Pearl skipping along wielding a bloody axe. And while acting categories will inevitably be filled with tear-jerking performances about the pain of growing up or the grief of losing a family member, how many roles call on the lead to accidentally get too high and dry-hump a scarecrow to orgasm? That’s a range Oscar voters should get behind.



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Pearl: Mia Goth Talks Scary Scene in Ti West’s Slasher

“I didn’t have any tools to gear myself up to something like that,” Goth said of a particularly disturbing scene in Ti West’s slasher.

Mia Goth may not have a film school degree, but she’s well-versed in her cinematic influences.

The “X” actress made her film debut in Lars von Trier’s “Nymphomaniac” in 2013 and now lands her first screenwriting credit with “X” prequel film “Pearl,” in theaters September 16. To portray the titular teen dreaming of stardom, while hiding slasher tendencies, Goth looked towards Björk in “Dancer in the Dark” and Bette Davis in “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?” as inspirations.

Pearl and West also drew from Michael Fassbender’s extended monologue from “Hunger,” directed by Steve McQueen, for a particularly taxing scene. But the scariest part of playing Pearl proved to be the loftiness by which Goth and co-writer/director Ti West set out to capture her breaking point, rather than her bloody outbursts.

“I was really terrified to shoot [the monologue], because I never went to film school,” Goth told W Magazine. “I didn’t have any tools to gear myself up to something like that.”

Director West scheduled the scene towards the end of production, which Goth called “a great move, because the emotional turbulence Pearl had gone through up until that point, and the intensity of what that shoot required from everyone, helped and informed the monologue that that came that day.”

Working alongside West and co-writing “Pearl” “became truly one of the most creatively fulfilling experiences of my life,” Goth added.

IndieWire’s Kate Erbland praised Goth’s “dedication” to playing Pearl in the prequel film, writing that Goth is “doubtless an extraordinary performer.”

The “X” trilogy rounds out with the upcoming installment “MaXXXine,” picking up with Goth’s final girl from the first feature. Director West previously told IndieWire’s Eric Kohn that the third film will be “about how home video has affected people” in the 1980s.

“I’m very proud of these,” West stated. “They’re super different and very out-of-nowhere. You won’t need to see one to see the other, but they do complement each other.”

He added, “I’m trying to build a world out of all this, like people do these days. You can’t make a slasher movie without a bunch of sequels.”

West continued that the driving force behind the “X” trilogy is to involve viewers in the filmmaking process and history of cinema as a whole, much like Goth’s guerrilla-style film school experience.

“I wanted to do something where all of the crafts of the movie were very apparent charms of the movie. So part of the reason they’re making movies in this movie is to get the audience to have a crash course on the clumsiness of what it’s like to make a movie,” West explained. “And then hopefully they’ll think about what I’m doing in the movie-movie, and they’ll be a little bit of appreciative of what it’s like to make the movie for the people and for me.”

West noted that Goth was the first person he met with for the dual roles of Pearl and Maxine.

“She just had a real grasp of what the movie was. She had supreme confidence,” West said. “I could sense her ambition and drive. I liked that confidence. It meant to me that she was going to totally own the characters and would make it fun to play them off each other.”

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Eddie Vedder cancels Pearl Jam concert due to throat damage from extreme weather | Pearl Jam

Eddie Vedder, frontman with rock band Pearl Jam, has suffered damage to his throat and attributed it to extreme weather conditions in France this week.

Pearl Jam performed at the Lollapalooza Paris festival on Sunday, where temperatures reached a mid-afternoon high of 36C (96.8F).

They cancelled a concert in Vienna on Wednesday, stating: “Due to the extreme circumstances at the last outdoor site, outside of Paris (heat, dust, and smoke from the fires) our singer Ed Vedder’s throat was left damaged. He has seen doctors and had treatment but as of yet, his vocal cords have not recovered. This is brutal news and horrible timing … for everyone involved.”

They added that they were “deeply sorry” and that refunds would be offered.

Forest fires broke out in the south-western Gironde region of France last week. Nearly 40,000 people have been evacuated from their homes, with over 20,000 hectares of land burned.

Smoke from the fires has reached Paris, where meterologist Sébastien Léas told Franceinfo: “The sky is cloudy, a little hazy, and you can smell burning.”

Paris’s police force wrote on Twitter on Tuesday: “It is possible you can sense an odour of burning … this smell is definitely coming from the fires which are striking across France. The reason? The changeability of the wind. Do not clog up emergency phone lines. Do not call firefighters unless the presence of a fire has been proven.”

Pearl Jam’s next scheduled date is in Prague on Friday night, on a tour described in a five-star Guardian review as “a sensitive, subversive new vision for classic rock”.

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Pearl Jam cancels show after Eddie Vedder’s voice damaged

Pearl Jam was forced to cancel a show in Vienna on Wednesday, after singer Eddie Vedder’s famous voice was damaged during a performance in France. The band — and the audience — at the show had to contend with air affected by the nearby wildfires, which have been fueled by climate change, that have raged there for more than a week.

“To all those who were anticipating a great Pearl Jam show tonight in Vienna, we were too,” the band posted on social media. “However, due to the extreme circumstances at the last outdoor site outside of Paris (heat, dust, and smoke from the fires) our singer Ed Vedder’s throat was left damaged. He has seen doctors and had treatment but as of yet, his vocal cords have not recovered. This is brutal news and horrible timing….for everyone involved. Those who work so hard to put on the shows as well as those who give their precious time and energies to attend….”

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees promised refunds to ticket holders.

“As a band, we are deeply sorry and have tried to find options to still play. And Ed wants to play. There’s just no throat available at this time… So very, very deeply sorry. Tickets will be refunded at the point of purchase. Thank you for understanding.”

According to their official website, Pearl Jam played 22 songs, including hits “Even Flow” and “Jeremy,” on Sunday at Lollapalooza Paris. A$AP Rocky and Imagine Dragons were two of the other performers at the festival.

Past and present Pearl Jam members — from left, Eddie Vedder, Dave Krusen, Stone Gossard, Jeff Ament, Mike McCready and Matt Cameron — are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017. (Photo: Mike Coppola/Getty Images)

The band made headlines earlier this month when video surfaced of Vedder kicking a fan out of one of their shows for resorting to violence. The rocker stopped the music when he saw a woman hit a man in the head and told her he’d seen exactly what happened.

Pearl Jam’s next scheduled concert is on Friday in Prague, after which they plan to move on to Amsterdam for two nights, beginning on July 24, and then kick off the North American leg of their tour in Quebec City, Canada on Sept. 1.

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Pearl Harbor water poisoned after multiple errors at fuel storage facility, Navy report says

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The U.S. Navy is planning to defuel Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility, a massive World War II-era military-run tank farm in the hills above Pearl Harbor, after an investigation revealed multiple mistakes and mismanagement caused fuel to leak into Pearl Harbor’s tap water last year.

The Hawaiʻi Department of Health released the Navy’s investigation on Thursday that found poor management and human error caused fuel to leak from the facility into a well that supplied water to housing and officers in and around Pearl Harbor. Thousands of people were poisoned and military families were forced to evacuate their homes.

FILE – In this Dec. 23, 2021, photo provided by the U.S. Navy, Rear Adm. John Korka, Commander, Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command (NAVFAC), and Chief of Civil Engineers, leads Navy and civilian water quality recovery experts through the tunnels of the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility, near Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. A Navy investigation released Thursday, June 30, 2022 revealed that shoddy management and human error caused fuel to leak into Pearl Harbor’s tap water last year, poisoning thousands of people and forcing military families to evacuate their homes for hotels. The investigation is the first detailed account of how jet fuel from the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility, a massive World War II-era military-fun tank farm in the hills above Pearl Harbor, leaked into a well that supplied water to housing and offices in and around Pearl Harbor.
(Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Luke McCall/U.S. Navy via AP, File)

“Red Hill needs to be shut down as quickly as possible and we fully expect that the Navy will marshal all possible available resources to defuel and decommission the facility,” Deputy Director of Environmental Health Kathleen Ho said in a statement. “However, with the extensive repairs needed and the Navy’s history of spills from unsafe pipelines, our first priority continues to be ensuring that all defueling activities are performed safely for the sake of the people and environment of Hawai‘i.”

The report listed a series of mistakes from May 2021, when operator error caused a pipe to rupture and 21,000 gallons of fuel to spill when it was being transferred between tanks. The fuel spilled into a fire suppression line, sat there for six months and then spilled again when a cart rammed into it in November.

US WORLD WAR II SHIP SUNK IN FAMOUS BATTLE FOUND BY EXPLORERS, DEEPEST SHIPWRECK EVER DISCOVERED

FILE – Overhead lights illuminate a tunnel inside the Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Jan. 26, 2018. A Navy investigation released Thursday, June 30, 2022 revealed that shoddy management and human error caused fuel to leak into Pearl Harbor’s tap water last year, poisoning thousands of people and forcing military families to evacuate their homes for hotels. The investigation is the first detailed account of how jet fuel from the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility, a massive World War II-era military-fun tank farm in the hills above Pearl Harbor, leaked into a well that supplied water to housing and offices in and around Pearl Harbor.
(U.S. Navy via AP, File)

Some 6,000 people were treated for nausea, headaches, rashes and other illnesses, according to the report. The military moved about 4,000 mostly military families into hotels for months while they waited for their water to be safe again.

The report said the military failed to recognize the severity of the situation. 

US DEFENDS SENDING AIRCRAFT THROUGH TAIWAN STRAIT AS CHINA GROWS INCREASINGLY AGGRESSIVE

In this photo provided by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, this 1942 Navy photo shows miners building one of the 20 fuel tanks of Defense Logistics Agency’s Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility at Joint Base Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, which are connected by a miles-long tunnel. A Navy investigation released Thursday, June 30, 2022 revealed that shoddy management and human error caused fuel to leak into Pearl Harbor’s tap water last year, poisoning thousands of people and forcing military families to evacuate their homes for hotels. The investigation is the first detailed account of how jet fuel from the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility, a massive World War II-era military-fun tank farm in the hills above Pearl Harbor, leaked into a well that supplied water to housing and offices in and around Pearl Harbor.
(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers via AP)

Adm. Sam Paparo, the commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, told reporters at a news conference that the Navy was trying to move away from that. He called it an ongoing process “to get real with ourselves” and “being honest about our deficiencies.”

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“The lack of critical thinking, intellectual rigor, and self-assessment by key leaders at decisive moments exemplified a culture of complacency and demonstrated a lack of professionalism that is demanded by the high consequence nature of fuel operations,” the report said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Valorant patch 5.0 notes: New map Pearl, new ‘Ascendant’ rank, Split removed

The patch notes for Valorant Patch 5.0 is here for the upcoming release of Episode 5 Act 1 and Riot Games is releasing a slew of new content including a new map and changes to Competitive. Here’s the full patch notes for the latest update for Riot’s tactical shooter.

Valorant Episode 5 is almost here with a release date set for June 22, and Riot Games has revealed new details following the developer live stream that took place today, June 16.

Now, Riot Games has released an extensive list of patch notes that detail new content such as the new map, Pearl, a Pearl-only queue, and a lot of bug fixes.

Additionally, the 5.0 patch notes noted a few bug fixes surrounding the Agents Jett, Sova, Fade, and Chamber. Let’s dive in and check out the full list of changes and tweaks coming in Valorant patch 5.0.


Contents


Valorant Patch 5.0 notes

The full patch notes for Valorant’s 5.0 update can be found below.

Patch notes obtained via Riot Games.

New Pearl map

The new map Pearl is making its debut in Episode 5. According to Riot Games Pearl is “Pearl is VALORANT’s first Omega Earth map that mixes technological marvels with tactical three-lane gameplay.”

  • NEW MAP: Pearl goes live!
  • Pearl-only queue
    • This queue is a standard, Unrated mode that will give players a chance to practice
      the new map before they see it in Competitive play.
    • Pearl-only queue will be available for 2 weeks, then after that Pearl will enter
      Competitive.

Aesthetically, the map seems to take inspiration from Mediterranean cities, featuring gray stone architecture, lush vegetation and flowers, and outdoor cafes all mixed with a technological element.

New ‘Ascendant’ rank

  • Added an additional rank above Diamond, below Immortal, called “Ascendant.”
    • We believe our lower ranks have a few too many of you, especially Bronze and Silver. When we were looking at rank distribution, we realized that if we were to move some of you up and out of those lower ranks, it would overpopulated Platinum and Diamond. So by adding a new rank we can better distribute you across ranks, keep the prestige of high ranks, while helping better define the skill level of each rank.
  • Moved the rank MMR targets that determine rank down, due to the addition of the new Ascendant rank, for all ranks below Ascendant. Moved the ranked target for Immortal 1/2/3 and Radiant up.
    • These are the cut-offs that say “You should be X MMR to reach this rank”. MMR targets determine your RR gains and help push your rank to match your MMR.
    • This means players will go up in rank, if they are below Ascendant.
    • To align with our expectations of what it means to be in the highest ranks of VALORANT, Immortal+ players will find it harder to climb back to their previous episode rank. This means Immortal will also have a smaller leaderboard population in all regions
    • Due to the seasonal reset, you may not see a rank increase at the start of the Episode without putting in some work; but the reset will be “less harsh” compared to the last Episode reset. So because we are pushing the player base upwards to fill Ascendant, the reset will not hit you as hard.
    • Next time we reset ranks it will probably push you down more than this Episode’s reset. Please remember that the “less harsh” reset is unique to this Episode because of the introduction of Ascendant.
  • Grouping restrictions for Ascendant are 3 ranks above or below the Ascendant ranked
    player
    • This fits in with our Platinum+ rule set for grouping.
  • The highest placement allowed has increased to Ascendant 1 (previously Diamond 1)
  • Five stacking 25% RR penalty now starts at Immortal 1 (previously Diamond 3)
  • Solo/Duo/5-stack restriction now starts at Immortal 1 (previously Diamond 3)
    • Remember, Diamond 3 and above could previously only solo, duo, and 5-stack. This restriction now begins at Immortal 1.
    • By adding another rank we were able to push the Five Stack penalty and Solo/Duo restrictions into Immortal. This makes it more straight forward, Immortal is where the leaderboard starts and because of this we try to hold players more accountable for their standings.
  • Due to a naming clash with the new rank, we’ve renamed Sage’s tier 8 Agent Contract unlock—the new Sage title is “Dauntless”
    • Renaming this title was not something we chose lightly, but after talking about the title we felt like it was a chance to give the title more meaning to Sage and her personality/theme.

Split removed

The Split map is also being temporarily removed, which Riot Games is set to detail in a further update, though it likely has to do with Pearl debuting.

  • We are temporarily removing Split from the map pool in Unrated and Competitive queues.
  • There are reasons! You can read more about our decision in our map pool update article.

Bug Fixes

Maps

  • Fixed a bug on Haven that was preventing players from using their spray on a wall in A
    Garden

Agents

  • Fixed a bug where Jett could equip a weapon during Tailwind
  • Fixed a bug where Agents revealed by Sova’s Recon Bolt or Fade’s Haunt would sometimes briefly appear in an incorrect location on the minimap
  • Fixed a bug where the scope visual effect would sometimes disappear when aiming with Chamber’s Tour De Force

Game Systems

  • Fixed a bug where using an Ultimate point orb or defusing the Spike at maximum range could cause channeling and progress bar animations to flicker
  • Fixed a bug where the use channeling progression bar does not update if the player disconnects and reconnects during the match
  • Fixed a bug where some weapon equips could play the wrong equip speed animation, which could visually misrepresent when you were able to fire. Some situations impacted by this bug were:
    • Cypher exiting Spycam
    • Capturing Ultimate point Orbs
    • Canceling and completing Spike plant
  • Fixed a bug where the use channeling progression bar does not update if the player disconnects and reconnects during the match
  • Fixed a bug where some weapon equips could play the wrong equip speed animation,which could visually misrepresent when you were able to fire. Some situations impacted by this bug were:
    • Cypher exiting Spycam
    • Capturing Ultimate point Orbs
    • Canceling and completing Spike plant

So there you have it, that’s all you need to know about the Valorant Patch 5.0 Notes. Make sure to check out our other guides for Valorant:

Best Valorant Agents | Best Sentinels | What is the Night Market? | How to get Gun Buddies | Best Initiators |  Best Controllers | What is Econ Rating? | How to get free loot drops | Is Valorant on Mac? | How many people play Valorant? | When is Valorant on Mobile coming out? | Best Duelists

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The Official Pokémon Diamond & Pearl Sound Library Will Be Shut Down Next Week

Image: Pokémon

The Pokémon Company has announced it will be shutting down the Pokémon Diamond & Pearl sound library just months after it opened.

Fans can go to this website to stream and download the music and sound effects from 2006 releases (for free) and explore the “incredible sounds” for Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl. There are 149 tracks of music and sound effects all up.

Below is the full announcement – revealing the shutdown will take place next week on 31st May 2022.

Closing announcement – 2022.5.17

Thank you for visiting the Pokémon DP Sound Library. We will be shutting down the service on MAY 31, 2022, at 9:00 a.m. UTC. You will not be able to stream or download the sound data after this date.

As for sound data downloaded already, you will be able to continue using it within the scope of the Terms of Use and Guidelines. You can access this website to view the Terms of Use and Guidelines after the closure of Pokémon DP Sound Libary. Please make sure to follow the latest Terms of Use and Guidelines when using the sound data.

We would like to take this opportunity to thank you to everyone who has supported us since the service launch.

This sound library was originally launched at the start of February this year, around the same time Nintendo soundtracks were being pulled from YouTube.

So, if you haven’t already downloaded the free tracks available on this website, you might want to hurry up!



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Pearl Jam lets fan fill in for Matt Cameron on drums

(Credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Music

On Thursday night, Pearl Jam took the stage for a rousing three-hour set at the Oakland Arena in Oakland, California. This lineup of Pearl Jam, however, had never been seen before. That’s because longtime drummer Matt Cameron missed his first show since taking over the throne back in 1998.

In Cameron’s place, touring guitarist and former Red Hot Chili Peppers member Josh Klinghoffer stepped behind the kit for a number of songs while Seattle drummer and frequent collaborator of bassist Jeff Ament, Richard Stuverud, played the rest of the concert. Although they had some professionals holding down the kit, Pearl Jam also let a fan named Josh Arroyo sit in for the show’s final song, ‘Yellow Ledbetter’.

The show began with Eddie Vedder taking the stage solo to perform two covers, ‘The Needle and the Damage Done’ by Neil Young and ‘I Won’t Back Down’ by Tom Petty. As just the fifth concert on the band’s ‘Gigaton’ tour, Pearl Jam debuted a number of classic songs for their first time during this current trek Thursday night, including ‘Animal’ and their covers of ‘You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away’ by The Beatles, ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ by Neil Young, and ‘Baba O’Riley’ by The Who.

“Matt Cameron is a true artist and he’s a force of nature,” Eddie Vedder told the crowd at one point. “However, even his superhero status could not prevent him from testing positive. This damn COVID thing yesterday. We’ve been scrambling for 24 hours because after 25 months of… We were supposed to be here 25 months ago. We’ve been waiting and we’ve been waiting. Postponing wasn’t an option and for us, neither was cancelling.”

“We didn’t want to pull the plug and we couldn’t pull the plug,” Vedder continued. “We’ve got our group here, we’ve got our equipment here and, most importantly, you’re here. So, lucky for us, we have some friends, and one of our friends has already been on our team this tour — the multi-talented, multi-faceted, multi-instrumentalist playing behind the drum kit right now, Mr. Josh Klinghoffer. “

Vedder even got a solid baseball reference in, giving Klinghoffer props for being, “Like the Shohei Ohtani of rock ‘n’ roll. Let’s let the shit hit the fan and hopefully it’s good shit.”

Check out Klinghoffer playing the kit on ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’, Stuverud taking the throne for ‘Baba O’Riley’, and Arroyo blasting out ‘Yellow Ledbetter’ down below.

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