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USWNT vs. Brazil score, highlights: Christen Press, Crystal Dunn lead USA to SheBelieves Cup win

The U.S. women’s national team defeated Brazil, 2-0, in the team’s second SheBelieves Cup match on Sunday. The game-opening goal was provided by Christen Press in the 11th minute, and Megan Rapinoe added the second in the 88th minute.

An open first half between the two teams provided some thrilling results as the USWNT quickly tried to establish tempo from the first whistle. The payoff came early as Linsdey Horan provided a through ball to Press and her shot from the edge of the box gave the U.S. an early lead. Take a look:

The Brazilians were able to create and generate their own attack, giving the U.S. defense problems along the right side from Marta and company. But they were unable to find an equalizer to close out the first half despite getting into dangerous spots in the final third. Many of Brazil’s chances were shut down thanks to recoveries from Crystal Dunn.

The open play continued into the second half between the two sides, with the USWNT still providing good link-up play between Dunn and Press. Brazil continued to play into pockets of space as the two sides found more time each other’s respective half. The USWNT ended the game out-shooting Brazil 17-10.

Craving more coverage of the world’s game? Check out the latest ¡Que Golazo! podcast for a weekend recap:

Brazil’s late-game attempts on the ball in transition proved a handful for the backline to deal with, though the defense looked far more settled as Julie Ertz sat deeper defensively to provide defensive coverage for the U.S.

Carli Lloyd and Megan Rapinoe subbed on as attacking options for USWNT in the 70th minute, and Rapinoe’s impact on the game came in the 88th minute to provide the insurance goal for as the U.S. and a homage to teammates and new mothers, Ali Krieger and Ashlyn Harris.

Player ratings

Let’s take a look at some player ratings from the match with a 1 rating being an early red card send off while a 10 is a hat-trick level game.

Christen Press, USWNT: Provided the opening goal to give the team an early lead and had constant movement off the ball with great link-up play with Williams and Dunn. Rating: 8

Crystal Dunn, USWNT: Outstanding play from the outside back to get involved in the attack and provide defensive recoveries where the backline coverage was lacking. Rating: 8.5

Emily Sonnett, USWNT: Not a great day at the office for the outside back as the space she left got exposed constantly throughout the first half from Brazil. She did better in moments during the second half. Rating: 5.5

Debinha, Brazil: The 2019 NWSL championship MVP had another strong game on the top line for Brazil, but lack of combining play from others around her presented some frustration. Rating: 7.5

Marta, Brazil: The iconic Brazilian midfielder generated tons of opportunities on the ball to try and power Brazil’s attack, while also playing lower to cover and defend when necessary: Rating: 7

Ludmila, Brazil: Her constant movement on and off the ball provided dangerous moments for Brazil in the final third, but the team was unable to get her into better positions throughout the match. Rating: 7

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Disney Pulled Gina Carano Mandalorian Press After She Refused Apology

Carano claims she did not know she was being fired by Lucasfilm until she read about it on social media.

Gina Carano is continuing to speak out about her firing from “The Mandalorian,” this time in statements given to former New York Times writer Bari Weiss (via Weiss’ Substack page). Lucasfilm announced February 10 it was severing ties with the actress over her history of controversial social media posts, which culminated last week in an Instagram story post comparing the current U.S. political climate to Nazi Germany. Speaking to Weiss, Carano revealed she had no warning about her firing and found out on social media that her relationship with Lucasfilm had ended.

The #FireGinaCarano movement on Twitter went viral last year after Carano appeared to mock transgender pronouns by putting “Beep/bop/boop” in her profile bio. Carano said Lucasfilm pushed her to release a company-written apology statement over the matter, but she refused.

“Earlier on last year before ‘The Mandalorian’ came out, they wanted me to use their exact wording for an apology over pronoun usage,” Carano said. “I declined and offered a statement in my own words. I made clear I wanted nothing to do with mocking the transgender community, and was just drawing attention to the abuse of the mob in forcing people to put pronouns in their bio.”

According to Carano, Lucasfilm’s reaction to her not using their apology statement was excluding her from all press and promotion for “The Mandalorian” Season 2.

“That was heartbreaking, but I didn’t want to take away from the hard work of everyone who worked on the project, so I said ok,” Carano added. “That was the last time I was contacted about any type of public statement or apology from Lucasfilm. I found out through social media, like everyone else, that I had been fired.”

Lucasfilm announced Carano’s firing by calling her social media posts “abhorrent and unacceptable” in how they “denigrated people based on their cultural and religious identities.” Following her firing, a THR report broke the news that Lucasfilm had privately scrapped plans last year to announce Carano as the star of a “Mandalorian” spinoff series in the midst of her social media controversy (most likely “Rangers of the New Republic”).

With the “Star Wars” universe now behind her, Carano is gearing up to star in and produce a new movie for the conservative website The Daily Wire. Carano’s initial statement on her firing, released last week, read: “I am sending out a direct message of hope to everyone living in fear of cancellation by the totalitarian mob. I have only just begun using my voice which is now freer than ever before, and I hope it inspires others to do the same. They can’t cancel us if we don’t let them.”

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Biden press aide TJ Ducklo resigns over ‘abhorrent’ remarks to female journalist | Biden administration

White House deputy press secretary TJ Ducklo has resigned, the day after he was suspended for issuing a sexist and profane threat to a journalist inquiring about his relationship with another reporter.

In a statement on Saturday, Ducklo said he was “devastated to have embarrassed and disappointed my White House colleagues and President Biden”.

“No words can express my regret, my embarrassment and my disgust for my behavior,” he said. “I used language that no woman should ever have to hear from anyone, especially in a situation where she was just trying to do her job. It was language that was abhorrent, disrespectful and unacceptable.”

It is the first departure from the new administration, less than a month into President Joe Biden’s tenure, and comes as the White House was facing criticism for not living up to standards set by Biden himself in their decision to retain Ducklo.

During a virtual swearing-in for staff on inauguration day, Biden said “If you ever work with me and I hear you treat another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, I will fire you on the spot. No ifs, ands or buts.”

Ducklo was suspended for a week without pay on Friday after a report surfaced in Vanity Fair outlining his sexist threats against a female Politico journalist to try to suppress a story about his relationship, telling her “I will destroy you”.

The journalist had been seeking to report on his relationship with a political reporter at Axios who had previously covered the Biden campaign and transition.

Before Politico broke the story Tuesday, People Magazine had published a glowing profile of the relationship. It was the first time either one had publicly acknowledged that they were dating.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki faced a flurry of questions about the controversy on Friday, with reporters highlighting Biden’s comments and questioning the decision to merely suspend Ducklo for a week.

Confronted with those comments from the president, Psaki said on Friday that Ducklo’s conduct “doesn’t meet our standards, it doesn’t meet the president’s standard, and it was important that we took a step to make that clear”.

She pointed to apologies made by top members of the White House communications team and Ducklo himself to the Politico reporter as ample moves reflecting the seriousness of the situation.

On Saturday, Psaki said in a statement that Ducklo’s decision came with the support of White House chief of staff Ron Klain, and added that “we are committed to striving every day to meet the standard set by the president in treating others with dignity and respect, with civility and with a value for others through our words and our actions.”



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White House deputy press secretary suspended after allegations of verbally harassing a reporter

WASHINGTON — A White House press aide was suspended for a week without pay on Friday, the administration announced, after a report detailed allegations that he verbally harassed and threatened a female reporter from Politico.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki announced Friday that deputy press secretary TJ Ducklo had been suspended for one week without pay following a report from Vanity Fair that said Ducklo had threatened the reporter after he learned that Politico was planning to publish an article on his relationship with a reporter at Axios.

Ducklo is expected to return to work after the suspension. Ducklo did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

President Joe Biden campaigned on a message that he would restore respect and civility to the White House, frequently criticizing the behavior of the previous president and his staff, including how the press was treated.

“I am not joking when I say this: If you are ever working with me and I hear you treat another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, I promise you I will fire you on the spot. No ifs, ands, or buts,” Biden said during a virtual swearing-in of appointees his first week in office.

People magazine reported this month that Ducklo, a former employee of the NBC News communications department, is dating Alexi McCammond, a reporter at Axios who is also a contributor for NBC and MSNBC, in an article that was tweeted approvingly by several top White House officials. Politico then reported that it had informed the White House that it intended to publish an article shortly before the People magazine article appeared.

Vanity Fair reported that Ducklo had called Tara Palmeri, a Politico reporter, and threatened her when he learned Politico had planned to publish an article.

The Vanity Fair article said that Ducklo made “derogatory and misogynistic comments” to Palmeri and threatened to “destroy” her.

Psaki said that Ducklo would no longer be assigned to work with Politico reporters once he returned from his suspension.

“TJ Ducklo has apologized to the reporter, with whom he had a heated conversation about his personal life. He is the first to acknowledge this is not the standard of behavior set out by the President,” Psaki said in a tweet. “In addition to his initial apology, he has sent the reporter a personal note expressing his profound regret.”

“I take this very seriously,” Psaki told reporters Friday afternoon. “He [Ducklo] is the first to acknowledge this is not the standard of behavior set out by the president nor is it the standard of behavior set by me.”

Psaki said that while she was not excusing Ducklo’s behavior, the story he discussed with the Politico reporter was about his personal life and not an issue related to White House policy. Psaki acknowledged that the White House did not immediately suspend Ducklo after learning of the incident, bur rather after they were made aware of the Vanity Fair article.

Psaki said that she had not discussed Ducklo’s behavior with Biden directly but had addressed it with White House chief of staff Ron Klain.

When asked how female reporters outside of Politico were supposed to feel comfortable working with Ducklo when he returns, Psaki reiterated that Ducklo’s behavior was “completely unacceptable” and that she had been clear “this will never happen again and is not going to be tolerated here at the White House.”



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‘I’m not gonna be a pushover’ in White House press briefings

  • White House press secretary Jen Psaki has sought to lower the temperature in the briefing room.
  • Psaki knows that the job comes with tough questioning and strives for fact-based answers.
  • “People should know that I’m not gonna be a pushover up there,” she told The Daily Beast. 
  • Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.

While the relationship between the White House press corps and presidential administrations is always somewhat adversarial, former President Donald Trump’s relationship with the media was famous for its perpetual toxicity.

Since her debut almost three weeks ago, White House press secretary Jen Psaki has sought to lower the temperature and focus on policy.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, Psaki looked back at her first press conference, where she spoke to reporters in a collegial manner, speaking of “the role of a free and independent press in our democracy.”

This statement was a stark contrast to the rough-and-tumble personalities of former press secretaries like Sean Spicer, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and Kayleigh McEnany.

Psaki said she knows that the job comes with tough questioning and relishes the focus on facts.

“That has certainly been my perspective throughout my career, and my goal was to return to accuracy and transparency from the podium,” Psaki said. “But also [to acknowledge that] there would be moments of disagreement, and that was part of democracy, right?”

She added: “Fact sheets are back. We love facts sheets here. Making policy hip again is our goal.”

Read more: Inside the 7-minute virtual workouts the Biden transition team used to stay connected as staffers prepared to demolish Trump’s policies

Psaki and the White House communications team are already receiving largely positive reviews from the press corps, many of whom had gotten accustomed to the Trump administration’s spotty briefings and email responses.

“It’s great to have a return to briefings and a useful exchange for reporters to get their questions answered,” Associated Press White House reporter Zeke Miller told The Daily Beast. “But it’s not just about the exchange of information; it’s about the potent symbol that that forum sends around the world, but also in Washington — that the government is not above taking questions from journalists. It’s an important principle that’s good to see.”

However, Psaki’s interaction with Politico’s Anita Kumar this past week shows that the core dynamic of the press secretary’s role in pushing back has not gone away.

Psaki, who was not pleased with a question presented about the relationship between President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping, chided the White House correspondent. 

“I don’t appreciate the, like, putting words in my mouth,” Psaki said to Kumar, who was reportedly startled by the encounter.

“People should know that I’m not gonna be a pushover up there,” Psaki told The Daily Beast. “And I’m not going to allow people to put words in my mouth or misconstrue what I said. It’s important to be clear and concrete and very specific, because you’re still speaking on behalf of the government.”



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Biden Press Secretary Jen Psaki Prepares for End of Media Honeymoon, Says ‘I’m Not Gonna Be a Pushover’

If not quite over, the honeymoon is starting to fade.

The touching romance between the Biden administration and the news media that cover it—which began with such ardor and emotional release on Jan. 20—has finally begun to cool down to the sort of businesslike, occasionally bickering liaison that is only to be expected of an arranged marriage between two hoary institutions of American democracy.

Four years after White House press secretary Sean Spicer devoted his first formal briefing to yelling at the assembled journalists about “deliberately false reporting” of the crowd size at Donald Trump’s inauguration—before storming off without taking questions—Joe Biden’s top spokesperson, Jen Psaki, stood at the podium for the first time and delivered a heartwarming tribute to “the role of a free and independent press in our democracy and for the role all of you play.”

“That has certainly been my perspective throughout my career, and my goal was to return to accuracy and transparency from the podium,” Psaki—a former Obama White House official and State Department spokesperson—told The Daily Beast on Friday, elaborating on her own inaugural address. “But also [to acknowledge that] there would be moments of disagreement, and that was part of democracy, right?”

The job of the White House press secretary—which encompasses being interrogated on live television on behalf of the president and the entire United States government on issues foreign and domestic, substantive and trivial—is by far the highest-profile role that the 42-year-old Psaki has played on the global stage.

Her every word, past and present, is now subject to intense scrutiny, as with her tweet last August mocking Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina as “Lady G,” a reference to the Washington-insider joke that the 65-year-old Graham is a closeted gay man (which he has steadfastly denied).

Right-wing media outlets and various Republican operatives especially have characterized Psaki’s tweet—prompted by Graham’s antagonistic grilling of former acting attorney general Sally Yates over her role in the Trump/Russia investigation—as “homophobic,” although The Advocate, a prominent gay publication, defended it in light of Graham’s public record of anti-LGBTQ policies and rhetoric.

“I don’t believe anyone should be spreading conspiracy theories or attacking public servants, and that’s what that tweet was about,” Psaki said in her first public comments on the flap. “I sent it six months ago, long before I was involved in the Biden White House [when she was an on-air commentator for CNN]. And I think anyone who’s known me for more than three minutes—which is not any of the people who are attacking me on Twitter—knows that I am a longtime, lifelong advocate—long before most people were—for LGBTQ rights in the community. But yes, it’s painful, and you try not to let some of this stuff bother you, but sometimes it does.”

Two-and-a-half weeks in, Psaki and the White House press operation are getting largely positive reviews from reporters on the beat, who, during the Trump presidency—even before the COVID-19 pandemic—had become accustomed to not having any briefings at all or even getting their emails answered. During her rare appearances in the briefing room, Trump’s fourth White House press secretary, Kaleigh McEnany, used the occasion mainly to launch personal attacks on reporters, praise Trump and spin falsehoods.

People should know that I’m not gonna be a pushover up there. And I’m not going to allow people to put words in my mouth or misconstrue what I said.

White House Press Sec. Jen Psaki

“It’s great to have a return to briefings and a useful exchange for reporters to get their questions answered,” said the Associated Press’s Zeke Miller, president of the White House Correspondents Association. “But it’s not just about the exchange of information; it’s about the potent symbol that that forum sends around the world, but also in Washington—that the government is not above taking questions from journalists. It’s an important principle that’s good to see.”

Ironically, given the bad blood between the 45th president and the press, it’s unlikely that Washington journalists will ever have the near-naked visibility into the machinations of Team Biden that they enjoyed with Trump and his often-warring minions.

“With Donald Trump, you always knew what was going on in the cortex of his brain, minute to minute, because he was tweeting it,” said Washington Post columnist Karen Tumulty. “It is true that Biden himself is rarely seen except in kind of scripted settings. It’s not perhaps as transparent as it was, but it’s a lot more orderly.”

A veteran White House correspondent, who asked not to be further identified, said: “Jen Psaki is having daily briefings and she is actually letting people ask follow-up questions, and she’s not doing a little political speech at the end with a video on how awful the press is! There’s probably a natural human tendency to be, like, ‘Wow!’”

Making an implicit invidious comparison to the previous regime, CNN White House correspondent John Harwood tweeted: “Jen Psaki is a very disciplined briefer.”

Yet CBS 60 Minutes correspondent John Dickerson, who covered Bill Clinton and the second Bush White House for Time magazine, argued that the Biden White House is hardly doing anything extraordinary.

“The Biden team is just doing the expected things that they’re supposed to do, but because it’s such a departure from the previous administration, it seems like—actually it is—quite a hairpin turn,” said Dickerson, whose book about the American presidency, The Hardest Job in the World, is out next month with a new edition.

“The contrast with the Trump administration is huge in all kinds of different ways, not just stylistic,” Dickerson told The Daily Beast. “The basic agreement between those in public office and members of the press was constantly up for grabs and a matter of dispute in the Trump administration. They didn’t feel the obligation to perform the explanatory, informational role of the presidency and the executive branch. They would have briefings, but the briefings weren’t for the purpose of explaining, they were for the purpose of spinning the story.”

Indeed, during the previous administration, White House reporters were frequently left in the dark—sometimes for days—about what exactly was in many of the executive orders that Trump signed with his trusty Sharpie and then displayed during Oval Office photo ops. By contrast, when Biden signed several executive orders on the first day of his presidency, the White House press office not only provided reporters with the actual wording, they also included explanatory fact sheets.

“Fact sheets are back,” Psaki said. “We love facts sheets here. Making policy hip again is our goal.”

Over at the state department, the freshly confirmed secretary, Antony Blinken, gave diplomatic beat reporters a rousing endorsement of their work—noting that he, too, “started my career as a journalist” (in his case, as a columnist for the Harvard Crimson and an intern at The New Republic). “You keep the American people and the world informed about what we do here,” Blinken said—earning several grateful thank-yous from the state department press corps. “And you hold us accountable, ask tough questions, and that really does make us better.”

A current White House correspondent said a sense of relief among the press corps is only natural. “There’s this huge exhale when you have a secretary of state stand up and, first of all, do a press conference, which Mike Pompeo rarely did, and when he did do it he was just a total asshole,” this person said. “Now it’s kinda like, here’s Tony Blinken and he’s actually answering some questions and he’s not berating people for asking the questions!”

Not surprisingly—after Trump repeatedly branded working journalists “liars,” “scum,” “fake news” and worse—some of the post-Trump euphoria was bound to be excessive. Describing a display of lights at the Lincoln Memorial, CNN political director David Chalian claimed: “Those lights that are just shooting out from the Lincoln Memorial along the Reflecting Pool — it’s like almost extensions of Joe Biden’s arms embracing America.”

MSNBC political analyst John Heilemann was predictably derided by Breitbart News for this on-air description of the inauguration scene at the Capitol: “The sight of the Clintons and the Bushes and the Obamas, the Avengers, sort of the Marvel superheroes back up there together all in one place with their friend Joe Biden.”

John Dickerson, however, credibly denied reports in The Daily Mail and the New York Post that he had ever referred to Biden’s ascension as “America’s happy ending”—especially given the unfortunate double entendre.

“Exactly one of the reasons I never would have used that phrase!” he said. “I also don’t believe it substantively.”

I call on every person every day… It doesn’t matter what the political persuasion of the media outlet is.

Jen Psaki

At the White House on Day 2, meanwhile, Washington Post reporter Annie Linskey posed gauzy queries about the meaning of “unity”—formerly known as the standard student-election platform of every high school politician—not only to Psaki but also to President Biden. In its appeal to sweetness and light, if not substance, Linskey’s question was reminiscent of then-New York Times reporter Jeff Zeleny’s ethereal challenge to Barack Obama at the beginning of that presidency: “What has… enchanted you the most about serving in this office?”

Unity and enchantment have notoriously brief half-lives in Washington. Less than a week after Linskey’s question in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room, Psaki became visibly annoyed with Politico’s Anita Kumar when the longtime White House correspondent pushed her on why President Biden had not yet spoken to Chinese dictator Xi Jinping and whether it was the administration’s strategy to keep Xi at bay.

“I don’t appreciate the, like, putting words in my mouth,” Psaki snapped at Kumar—the equivalent of a hard hockey check that startled the reporter, who seemed only to be seeking clarification on what Psaki meant by “strategy.” (Kumar declined to comment.)

“People should know that I’m not gonna be a pushover up there,” Psaki told The Daily Beast. “And I’m not going to allow people to put words in my mouth or misconstrue what I said. And that exchange was, in part, because the reporter spat back, ‘well, this is what you’re saying,’ and I said, ‘that’s not what I’m saying.’ It’s important to be clear and concrete and very specific, because you’re still speaking on behalf of the government.”

The same day as that back and forth, The Daily Beast reported certain members of the White House press corps’ increasing discomfort and irritation with the Psaki team’s attempts to find out what individual correspondents planned to ask her at briefings. It’s an effort to provide the press with more complete answers at the televised briefing, according to defenders of the practice—or, in a more ominous interpretation, a way for Psaki to avoid questions she doesn’t like.

“I call on every person every day,” Psaki pointed out, noting that only 14 masked-up reporters attend each socially distanced briefing. “And that’s part of what I think the role is, too. It doesn’t matter what the political persuasion of the media outlet is.”

Indeed, since the presidential campaign, Fox News’ Peter Doocy has become a convenient foil for President Biden, who during a recent photo op answered Doocy’s perfectly legitimate question—what did he discuss on the phone with Vladimir Putin?—“You!” as he walked away. “He sends his best,” Biden added sarcastically.

But whenever Doocy has attended the briefing, Psaki has called on him.

“Our job is to provide information about a range of things and if somebody has a very unique and particular interest, I want to be able to say, ‘I went and talked to the person who’s an expert on Bangladesh, and here’s what they had to say.’ And I want to bring them to the briefing room,” Psaki said.

“But there’s a complete mischaracterization of what we do—which is be a resource to reporters before the briefing, after the briefing, at night, first thing in the morning, to try to explain, provide information, get a sense from them for what’s of interest, what aren’t we explaining well, what more information are you looking for, what expert are you looking to talk to?”

Psaki joked: “If I got a book of questions that were gonna be asked, that would sure make my job easier.”

As this tempest in a teapot blew up into a category-4 hurricane on Newsmax and Fox News, Politico media columnist Jack Shafer tweeted: “Happy to see that the Psaki honeymoon is over.”



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Ex-NY Times editor Bari Weiss bashes former paper over ‘press release’ praising Kamala Harris’ stepdaughter

Former New York Times opinion columnist and editor Bari Weiss mocked her former employer on Thursday, saying the Gray Lady published a “press release” about Vice President Kamala Harris’s stepdaughter.

Weiss seemed to feel the paper lived up to its reputation that it favors liberals when it published a story praising Harris’ stepdaughter for receiving a modeling contract

The piece headlined, “Ella Emhoff Gets a Major Modeling Contract,” called her a “breakout star” of the inauguration, The Daily Wire flagged.

LOS ANGELES TIMES MOCKED AFTER DEDICATING NEW BEAT TO CELEBRATING KAMALA HARRIS: ‘BLATANT HAGIOGRAPHY’

“One week after the Miu Miu coat she wore at President Biden’s swearing in went viral, Ella Emhoff, the 21-year-old stepdaughter of Vice President Kamala Harris, became the newest face at IMG Models, one of the world’s most prestigious modeling agencies,” Times reporters Vanessa Friedman and Jessica Testa wrote

The report featured the president of IMG Models fawning over Emhoff, promoted everything from her Instagram account to her tattoos, and claimed that the fashion world is embracing the Biden administration’s “focus on diversity and empathy” after four “antagonistic” years of dealing with the Trump administration.

LOS ANGELES TIMES MOCKED AFTER DEDICATING NEW BEAT TO CELEBRATING KAMALA HARRIS: ‘BLATANT HAGIOGRAPHY’

Cole and Ella Emhoff arrive during the 59th Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

“Emhoff throws a crocheted grenade at the image of typical D.C. political offspring, with a style that could be termed Wes Anderson chic. In her selfies, she doesn’t wear much makeup and doesn’t carefully blow-dry her naturally curly hair. She shows off her armpit hair and cartoonish tattoos, which include eggs and bacon in the shape of a smiley face and a cow,” the Times reported.

Weiss took notice of the glowing piece and mocked it on Twitter.

“A modeling contract (!!) “speaks to the fashion world’s growing embrace of the Biden administration, with its focus on diversity and empathy, after four antagonistic years with the Trump administration,” Weiss wrote. “Please enjoy this press release!”

Weiss published a scathing resignation letter in July that she sent to Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger on her personal website. She said she was was bullied by colleagues for her heterodox views in an “illiberal environment.”

She added she didn’t understand how toxic behavior is allowed inside the newsroom and “showing up for work as a centrist at an American newspaper should not require bravery.”

Weiss wasn’t the only person to criticize the Times’ article, with others like The Atlantic’s Conor Friedersdorf noting the Times made no mention of Emhoff likely getting the deal because of her famous stepmother.

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Touchless tech mimics the ability to ‘press’ an elevator button

In their COVID—19 information page, both the CDC and the WHO warn people against touching their faces with unwashed hands, since the virus can survive on surfaces. There’s been a rise in the use of touchless technologies as a result, and Singaporean studio Stuck Design envisions a world wherein passengers won’t even have to press elevator buttons with their fingers to get to where they need to go. The studio’s Kinetic Touchless technology can mimic the movement of one’s fingers and recreate the tactile response of pushing a button.

It works by using motion as an input method so it doesn’t need direct contact and can imitate the movement from a distance. The studio says the type of touchless interaction its technology offers can be applied to various gestures, as well. That means buttons using the technology can sink inwards or move outwards if the user makes a pushing or pulling motion. A row of buttons can also follow the user’s finger if they make a sliding movement.

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Riverside County to change coronavirus vaccine appointment website after complaints – Press Enterprise

Riverside County is changing its website that books coronavirus vaccination appointments after scores of complaints from residents who said the site crashed or failed to schedule a shot once they filled out online forms.

The announcement came hours after an appointment window, which started at noon Thursday, Jan. 21, closed after just 32 minutes for six county-run clinics scheduled for the next few days in Perris, Lake Elsinore and Indio. Almost 4,000 appointments were booked, one for each available vaccine dose. Last week, more than 11,000 appointments were full in less than two hours Friday, Jan. 15.

A new website link will be announced soon, county officials said late Thursday afternoon in a news release.

For many, it has been a struggle just to log onto the county site. They took to social media and email to report website crashes and reported filling out forms only to find out no appointments were available.

“It was like trying to buy concert tickets with the site crashing, constantly reloading, and then finally getting in only to fill out all of my information to find out all the appointments were taken,” wrote Kathleen Orr, a 49-year-old Riverside resident and 8th grade middle school teacher, who tried getting an appointment at noon.

She added: “I don’t know of one teacher who was successful in getting an appointment today when the new sites opened up.”

Gary Dailey, a 69-year-old Riverside man, sought an appointment via the county website and also through Albertsons pharmacy.

“I just love how the (county) website is set up, if you are lucky enough to get on,” he said sarcastically via email. “I love repeatedly filling out the forms until I get to the very end where I actually make the appointment only to find out there are none, or better yet, the website vapor locks and you have to start all over from the beginning.”

In the release, county officials blamed “a technical issue in the website code (that) was uncovered at the time” the appointment window opened.

“Unfortunately, when many residents attempted to visit the appointment website, they saw a timeout screen,” the release states.

“Residents are understandably frustrated that the appointment website did not perform today,” Interim County Executive Officer Juan C. Perez said in the release. “While we worked with our vendor to ensure it would be operational today, unfortunately, it was not. Frankly, that’s unacceptable. We apologize for this unfortunate situation and will soon direct residents to a new website.”

Riverside County officials have also reminded residents that there are other options beyond the county, such as doctors, pharmacies and urgent-care clinics but stressed that the demand for shots exceeds the supply.

In an email to a constituent, Jeff Greene, chief of staff to Riverside County Supervisor Kevin Jeffries, wrote that part of the problem was Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement that counties could start offering the vaccine to those 65 and older — “we have nowhere near sufficient vaccine supplies to fill that need.”

“The previous plan with tiers and phases had its own frustrations and confusions, but it had at least been designed to make smaller groups eligible at once, so the system wouldn’t be overwhelmed,” Greene wrote.

“This week, we only had 3,900 doses total available to the county, and those appointments disappeared within a half hour (Thursday), with the system completely crashing for many/most/all of the unsuccessful applicants … The county bought significant extra bandwidth capacity for this week, but the website vendor apparently had other problems that contributed to the crashing of the site.”

Another issue, Greene wrote, is the state website used to complete the registration.

“Our own website is simply directing people to the CALVAX.org system operated by the state,” he wrote. “And not only has their platform been crashing regularly, but they are also responsible for the very frustrating process that doesn’t tell you there is no space available until after you’ve submitted all your information, unlike a private sector ticket site that holds your spot while you fill in the form.

Riverside County has no control over that, and other counties are seeing the same problem, he said.

San Bernardino County spokesman David Wert said users of that county’s vaccination website run into problems when clicking a link that takes them to the state website to fill out information to book an appointment. Often, users fill out pages of personal information, only to find there are no appointments available, he said.

The county is so frustrated, Wert added, that it’s considering creating its own online appointment booking system, though that would take a considerable amount of time and money.

Riverside County officials also said that when appointments open on their new website, it will still link to the state’s vaccine registration portal. If all appointments are booked when completing the state’s registration, residents won’t be able to schedule a time, the release stated.

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