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Box Office: ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Debuts to Stratospheric $124 Million

LOS ANGELES, May 29 (Variety.com) – Tom Cruise may have pulled off one of the most daring stunts of his career — getting audiences to go to the movies for something that doesn’t involve superheroes.

“Top Gun: Maverick” pulled in blockbuster ticket sales in its opening weekend, collecting $134 million from a record 4,732 North American cinemas. Paramount and Skydance’s all-American action adventure is expected to collect $151 million through Monday, defying expectations while also setting a new high-water mark for Memorial Day opening weekends. That’s thanks to dazzling reviews, heaping doses of nostalgia and getting Cruise back in the cockpit to perform real aerial stunts as pilot Pete “Maverick” Mitchell.

“Top Gun: Maverick” is the highest-grossing debut in Cruise’s 40-year career, and his first to surpass $100 million on opening weekend. “War of the Worlds,” which opened to $64 million in 2005, previously stood as Cruise’s biggest opening weekend.

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Audiences over 40 years old, the people who were top of mind when Paramount greenlit a sequel to 1986’s “Top Gun,” turned out in force, which is impressive because that demographic has been the most reluctant to return to theaters. The film’s positive word of mouth should be helpful in reaching younger audiences, who were not alive when “Top Gun” opened 36 years ago.

David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment Research, called the film’s three-day figure “outstanding.”

“The source material remains strong, the execution is excellent, and Tom Cruise makes it work impeccably well,” he says.

“Top Gun: Maverick” continues a stellar box office streak for Paramount, marking the studio’s fifth movie this year to open in first place. Without the assistance of comic books or raging dinosaurs, the studio’s 2022 slate — also consisting of “Sonic the Hedgehog” ($182 million in North America), “The Lost City” ($100 million in North America), “Scream” ($81 million in North America) and “Jackass Forever” ($57 million in North America) — has resonated in theaters in a big way. It’s an impressive rebound since Paramount hardly released any movies during the pandemic, instead sending big titles like Chris Pratt’s “The Tomorrow War,” director Aaron Sorkin’s “The Trial of the Chicago 7” and Eddie Murphy’s “Coming 2 America” to streaming services.

U.S. actor Tom Cruise arrives at the premiere of ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ in London, Britain May 19, 2022. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls/File Photo

Despite countless delays (the “Top Gun” sequel was scheduled to open in the summer of 2020 until COVID-19 scrambled those plans), Cruise was adamant that “Maverick” not follow in the footsteps of those films. The two-year wait has already started to pay off since the film has been rapturously reviewed. It has a 97% on Rotten Tomatoes and an “A+” CinemaScore.

Joseph Kosinski directed the PG-13 “Top Gun: Maverick,” which picks up decades after the original and sees Maverick train a new group of cocky aviators for a crucial assignment. The cast includes Miles Teller, Glen Powell, Jon Hamm, Jennifer Connelly and Val Kilmer, who played Iceman in the first “Top Gun.”

“Top Gun: Maverick” also needs theaters to justify its hefty $170 million production budget, which does not include the tens of millions spent on promoting the movie to audiences worldwide. Those efforts included a splashy premiere at the Cannes Film Festival, which culminated with eight fighter jets flying over the Croisette (the French government paid for those). Skydance Media co-produced and co-financed the film.

Only one film, Disney and 20th Century’s “The Bob’s Burgers Movie,” was brave enough to open against “Top Gun: Maverick.” For a movie that’s based on a long-running animated TV show, “The Bob’s Burgers Movie” served up an impressive $12 million from 3,425 venues, enough for third place on box office charts. The movie should finish Memorial Day with $15.3 million.

“The Bob’s Burgers Movie” landed just behind “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” which dropped to No. 2 after three weeks atop domestic box office charts. Disney’s newest Marvel Cinematic Universe installment declined 50% to add $16 million from 3,805 cinemas in its fourth weekend of release. The superhero sequel, starring Benedict Cumberbatch, has generated $375 million to date.

At No. 4, “Downton Abbey: A New Era” plunged 63% from its opening, collecting $5.9 million between Friday and Sunday. It’s estimated to earn $7.5 million from 3,830 theaters by Monday. After two weeks in theaters, the sequel to the big-screen continuation of the beloved British television show, has grossed $30 million in North America and $68.9 million worldwide. The follow-up film cost $40 million to produce, meaning the latest “Downton” adventure has ways to go before getting into the black.

Universal’s animated heist comedy “The Bad Guys” rounded out the top five with $4.6 million from 2,944 locations. By Monday, the family friendly film should rake in $6.1 million, which will bring its domestic tally to $82 million.

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IPL 2022 – RR vs GT – ‘I wanted to show what I have worked hard for, and today was the day’

Gujarat Titans, playing their maiden IPL, topped the league stage, won the first qualifier, and then cruised to victory in the IPL 2022 final against Rajasthan Royals in Ahmedabad. Here’s how some of their key personnel reacted to their fantastic victory.

David Miller (481 runs at 68.71): “It’s been a phenomenal journey. Finishing at the back-end was pretty special and being there in the moment [of victory]. It has been a collective effort, everyone’s stuck their hand up in key moments. One of the best rides I’ve ever had. It has been a relaxed environment led by [head coach] Ashish Nehra and [captain] Hardik [Pandya]. Hardik has gotten better and better as the season has gone on. He’s tactically been really good, led with both bat and ball.”

Gary Kirsten, batting coach and mentor: “[Hardik has been] fantastic. He’s a high profile guy in India, but he’s been incredibly humble. Wants to learn as a leader. Especially in IPL and in India, he wants to help youngsters. He’s come in with real responsibility, very different to seeing him in other IPLs. Great for Ashish and [team director] Vikram [Solanki] as well. Brand new franchise, to put a team together and get guys performing – amazing.

“[On team composition at auction:] Good balance, good depth but most importantly have players who can play different ways. With Ashish we have learnt you need to have guys who are versatile, and we have that at No. 4, 5, 6.”

Hardik Pandya (487 at 44.27 and eight wickets at 27.75): “I wanted to show what I have worked hard for, and today was the day from my bowling point of view, I saved the best for the best [stage]. I think [that] the second ball of my spell that I bowled, after getting Sanju [Samson] out, I saw that if you hit the wicket hard and if you bowl in on the seam, something is going to happen. So, for me it was all about sticking to the right lengths and asking the batters to play a good shot rather than me trying something and giving a boundary.

“[On his batting:] Any given day I’d take the trophy than me batting at 160 or 170 [strike rate], team is the most important, whichever team I play for. I have always been that kind of individual. Outside noise does not bother me, and if I have to sacrifice and have a worse season and my team still wins, I’ll take that.

“Me and Ashu pa [Ashish Nehra] are similar in terms of wanting to play five proper bowlers, who can win you matches all day… Most of the time, I have seen in T20 cricket, it’s a batters’ game but bowlers win you games.”

Hardik Pandya

“[On batting at No. 4:] I’ve always fancied myself as a batter. Batting comes first to me, it’s always going to be close to my heart, so, obviously when we got the auction done, it was clear that I had to bat up the order to guide… I have been in this kind of situation before, so for my team, I thought that it’s the best position [No. 4] for me to bat, so that all the other batsmen can come and express themselves.

“[On team combination:] Me and Ashu pa [Ashish Nehra] are similar in terms of wanting to play five proper bowlers, who can win you matches all day. Batters can obviously chip in and make sure that whatever or whenever we require batsmen can raise their hand and say ‘we are there’. But, most of the time, I have seen in T20 cricket, it’s a batters’ game but bowlers win you games.

“[Titans behind the scenes:] A lot of the time, we won the game, but we always spoke about what are the things we missed out on and how we can do better. A lot of the credit goes to all the support staff, from Ashish [Nehra] to [spin-bowling coach and scout] Ashish Kapoor, Gary [Kirsten], the physios to the masseurs, the logistics team; everyone chipped in, they were there to make sure all the players were comfortable, feel at home.

“[On how this win is different from his previous IPL title wins:] Obviously, I count myself lucky. I’ve been in five finals and won five times. It’s been exciting. This is going to be a special one because we spoke about creating legacy and making sure… this is for the generation to come, everyone will remember that this was the team who started this journey and… first year [for us in the IPL] to win the championship is very special.”

Rashid Khan (19 wickets at 22.15): “It’s the biggest achievement of your career as a player being part of a winning IPL team. It’s one of the most big achievements for me in my cricket career.

“People said we were batters short, short on experience. The franchise showed faith in David, me and Hardik. Now we’ve won, so nothing left to say.”

Rahul Tewatia

“[On the final:] We adjusted ourselves very quickly with the wicket. We knew it was the kind of wicket if they scored 150-plus it would be hard but we have to bowl in the right area and that’s what happened. Everyone took the responsibility, the middle overs was really important and we bowled really well.”

Rahul Tewatia (217 runs at 31.00): “We were relaxed in Qualifier 1 and we depended on staying relaxed and taking the game deep and finishing it off.

“[On his feelings in the moment:] Don’t know about the party, but when the season started, someone asked me ‘what are your goals for IPL 2022?’ I said my only goal was to win a trophy with my new team. Don’t know about party, but I definitely won’t sleep tonight.

“[On the team:] People said we were batters short, short on experience. The franchise showed faith in David, me and Hardik. Now we’ve won, so nothing left to say.”

Wriddhiman Saha (317 runs at 31.70): “This season some people said we didn’t make a good team, so we have proved everyone wrong. Feels good to win. Mohammed Shami got a wicket off the first ball of the season for us. We got momentum from there. So he has been outstanding through the season. Everyone has performed.”

“I think winning an IPL is as big as winning a World Cup and this is my fifth year and I’m fortunate enough to win it this time.”

Shubman Gill

Mohammed Shami (20 wickets at 24.40): “I know Saha for 20 years. We know each other very well. Everyone knows his ability, he just needed a chance.”

Shubman Gill (483 runs at 34.50): “It means a lot, you know after winning the U-19 World Cup. I think winning an IPL is as big as winning a World Cup and this is my fifth year and I’m fortunate enough to win it this time. I wanted to be there [batting] till the end this time and that was the talk with coaches and we came over the line.”

Matthew Wade (157 runs at 15.70): “We’ve had a relaxed environment. Haven’t relied on one person too much even though Davey [Miller], Rashid and Hardik have had terrific seasons. It’s been a real family atmosphere, Ashish has created that. Everyone gets plenty of training time, he takes care of that. Everyone feels welcome and you can see the performances.”

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‘Sharkcano’ eruption: NASA photos show underwater volcano

A unique underwater volcano in the Pacific Ocean near the Solomon Islands has been termed a “sharkcano” because the sharks living there have withstood the extreme temperatures.

Kavachi Volcano is one of the most active underwater volcanoes in the Pacific Ocean. The volcano began erupting in October, according to the Smithsonian’s Global Volcanism Program, and satellite data picked up the discolored water starting in April and May.

NASA recently took some satellite images that proved the eruption, and the space agency said the interaction of magma and water has caused the volcano’s explosive eruptions.

The reason it is called a sharkcano dates back to 2015, when an expedition to the area found two types of sharks living in the center of the volcano.

Temperatures inside the crater would often reach 100 degrees Fahrenheit.

It also brought up the possibility of other marine life living in the volcano.

“Populations of gelatinous animals, small fish, and sharks were observed inside the active crater, raising new questions about the ecology of active submarine volcanoes and the extreme environments in which large marine animals can exist,” the Oceanography article published in 2016 reads.

The volcano’s constant eruptions have been recorded since 1939 and resulted in the creation of small islands nearby.

However, NASA said those islands have been eroded by ocean waves.

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Police in Brazil gas man to death in trunk of car, video appears to show

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The video starts off with three highway police officers pinning a man to a dirt road in northeastern Brazil.

After a cut, the man’s legs are shown thrashing as two officers trap him inside a hatchback police vehicle. White-colored smoke can be seen pouring out of the car.

“Look at the man there, oh my God,” a voice from behind the camera says. “They’re killing him inside the car.”

Genivaldo de Jesus Santos, 38, was dead by the time police brought him to a hospital Wednesday, according to his relatives. He was unarmed and suffering from schizophrenia when Federal Highway Police fatally gassed him on the side of the road, according to his nephew, who said he was at the scene.

Rio police were ordered to limit favela raids during the pandemic. They’re still killing hundreds of people.

Even in a place long inured to police killings, the video, shared widely on social media, sparked horror and outrage across Brazil.

“We told the police all the time that he had a heart problem, he had mental problems,” his nephew, Wallison de Jesus, told The Washington Post. “And they continued the torture, telling everyone to stay away.”

Brazil’s Federal Police released a statement Thursday that said they were investigating Santos’s death in the city of Umbaúba, in the northeastern state of Sergipe. In a separate statement, the Federal Highway Police also said it would cooperate with investigating authorities and had already suspended the officers involved in the incident.

The video has sparked protests in Santos’s hometown and calls for justice across Brazil, where police are notorious for warlike raids — encouraged by far-right Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro as part of his populist crime-fighting agenda.

On Tuesday, the day before Santos’s death, at least 21 people died during a police operation in Rio de Janeiro. It was one of the deadliest raids in recent years, but only the latest in a long list of such operations.

Santos was Black, according to Brazilian news reports, and his death also ignited anger over the police’s history of discrimination and use of disproportionate force against Black men.

“There is no way out for Brazil that is not built on guaranteeing the life of the Black population,” said Douglas Belchior, a member of an activist group called the Brazilian Black Movement Delegation.

Lucas Rosario, a spokesperson for Sergipe’s Public Security Secretariat, which oversees the state’s police, declined to comment on the video’s veracity. She said Santos’s family members provided the video as evidence when they filed a police report Wednesday.

“The images are just shocking,” said Samira Bueno, executive director of the nongovernmental Brazilian Forum on Public Safety. “He’s a mentally disturbed person, and it’s the story of you using the vehicle as a gas chamber to immobilize a person.”

Soldiers in Brazil fired dozens of shots at her family, killing her husband. Will anyone be held accountable?

Sergipe’s Institute of Forensic Medicine, which overseas autopsies, said Thursday that Santos died of asphyxia but that it could not determine the “immediate cause” of death.

Santos’s nephew told The Post that he saw police throw a tear gas grenade into the car.

Rosario said the source of the gas seen pouring from the vehicle was under investigation.

Eyewitnesses and police provided contrasting accounts.

Officers said Santos “actively resisted” police as they approached, according to a statement released Wednesday, and that he “fell ill” during his transfer to a police station.

De Jesus, the nephew, said police stopped his uncle, who was riding a motorcycle, and asked him to lift his shirt. Santos began to get nervous after police found packets of his medication on him. The nephew said he informed police officers about his uncle’s mental health condition and that he required this medication.

As police shootings in Rio rise, children are caught in the crossfire

“Then the torture session began,” de Jesus said.

Police grabbed Santos’s arms, kicked his legs and knocked him to the ground, his nephew said. After beating him on the ground, officers tied his legs and threw him in the car along with the tear gas canister, de Jesus said.

Santos’s wife, Maria Fabiana dos Santos, told G1 that her husband had been living with schizophrenia for two decades but was never violent.

“I have lived with him for 17 years,” she said. “He never assaulted anyone, never did anything wrong, always doing the right thing. And at a moment like this, they caught him and did what they did.”

Ronaldo Cardoso da Silva, a local teacher and social worker, told The Washington Post that he had been Santos’s friend. He survived off social security benefits and the occasional odd jobs, sometimes driving a rickshaw and letting cash-strapped passengers ride free, Cardoso da Silva said.

Some 6,000 Brazilians died after being shot intentionally by on-duty police officers in 2020, according to the data from the Monitor of Use of Lethal Force in Latin America, a consortium of researchers and academics from the region.

Bolsonaro has called for criminals to “die in the streets like cockroaches” and has said that police who kill criminals “should be decorated, not prosecuted.”

José Luiz Ratton, a professor of criminal studies at Brazil’s Federal University of Pernambuco, said the increase in violent raids in recent years targeting the “socially vulnerable” has been “fed by authorities … who encourage and reinforce violent, unregulated and uncontrolled police action in the name of ‘fighting crime.’ ”



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Ellen DeGeneres ends daytime show with plea for compassion

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ellen DeGeneres brought her nearly two-decade daytime talk show to an end Thursday with a celebrity lovefest and a forceful assertion of her achievement as a gay woman daring to be herself.

DeGeneres and guests Jennifer Aniston, Billie Eilish and Pink shared memories and affection as “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” concluded its Emmy-winning, 3,200-plus episode run that began in September 2003.

“Twenty years ago, when we were trying to sell the show, no one thought that this would work. Not because it was a different kind of show, but because I was different,” DeGeneres said of the pushback from TV stations.

When the syndicated show went on the air, she was prevented from saying the word “gay” or even the pronoun “we,” DeGeneres said, since the latter would imply she had a partner. She didn’t specify who imposed the ban.

“Sure couldn’t say wife, and that’s because it wasn’t legal for gay people to get married — and now I say ‘wife’ all the time,” DeGeneres added, with a touch of defiance, as actor Portia de Rossi watched from the studio audience. They wed in 2008.

The host, who became known for encouraging her audience to join her in impromptu dances, shared some last moves with her sidekick and DJ, Stephen “tWitch” Boss, to the tune “Best of My Love.”

The dancer-choreographer saluted DeGeneres as someone who inspires others because she has “the courage to step out and be your authentic self.”

Aniston, who as the first guest on the show’s first episode gave DeGeneres a “Welcome” doormat, arrived with another that read, “Thanks for the memories.” DeGeneres noted the “Friends” star has been on the show a total of 20 times.

“You’re welcome,” Aniston said, teasingly, then turned serious.

“I love you, and I so appreciate you and what you have given to the world over the last 19 years. The contribution is endless,” she said. She introduced a career retrospective video that also touted DeGeneres’ philanthropic efforts, said to include more than $400 million in donations to charities and “deserving viewers.”

“I love you,” a beaming Eilish told DeGeneres during their chat. “I love you so much, it’s dumb,” said Pink, who performed “What About Us.”

DeGeneres’ daytime reign hit a serious bump in 2020, when the show was alleged to be a toxic workplace and three producers exited amid the claims. On the air that fall, DeGeneres apologized for “things that shouldn’t have happened,” but defended herself as being the same genuine person — if an imperfect one — on- and off-camera.

The talk show represented a second major TV act for DeGeneres. In 1997, she made an indelible mark when she came out as lesbian and brought her character on the ABC sitcom “Ellen” with her. The series was axed the next year.

“Twenty-five years ago, they canceled my sitcom because they didn’t want a lesbian to be in prime-time once a week. And I said, ‘OK, then I’ll be on daytime every day,’” DeGeneres said Thursday.

The comedian, actor and producer has said she’ll take time to consider her next career move, but first she and de Rossi are making a trip to Rwanda. DeGeneres wrapped her daytime show with a plea to her audience, one she said was worth repeating.

“If I’ve done anything in the past 19 years, I hope I’ve inspired you to be yourself, your true authentic self. And if someone is brave enough to tell you who they are, be brave enough to support them, even if you don’t understand,” DeGeneres said. “By opening your heart and your mind you’re going to be that much more compassionate, and compassion is what makes the world a better place.”

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India puts ‘new reality’ on display with Davos street show

DAVOS, Switzerland, May 25 (Reuters) – Bright colours and bold logos proudly signal where India has set up base on the main street in Davos this year, as the country trumpets its pro-business and foreign investment drive.

Inside a pavilion on the Swiss Alpine resort’s Promenade street beneath an “India @ Davos 2022” logo, the federal government served up treats including ‘masala chai’ tea, ‘samosa’ snacks and other spicy delicacies.

Clustered around it are six Indian states with their own lounges, housed in what are usually high street shops.

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“It’s an Indian street, it should be called ‘Little India’. It shows the country is open for investments,” said Samir Saran of India’s Observer Research Foundation.

Indian Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal told Reuters that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had suggested bringing states together to showcase unity at the gathering of business and political leaders at the World Economic Forum.

“Investors love this kind of a messaging,” Goyal said.

While India has long had a presence at the World Economic Forum, several officials and attendees from Asia’s third-largest economy said it was not previously so prominent.

At the government’s base, food was being prepared by a team of 15 chefs who were flown in from India, along with 450 kilograms of vegetables and local spices, head chef Guru Nathan told Reuters, as people enjoyed a fragrant morning buffet.

“We were asked to keep the spice moderate so that everyone can enjoy (the food),” Nathan said.

Only a few steps down the road, Indian tech giants Infosys (INFY.NS), Wipro (WIPR.NS) and HCL Technologies (HCLT.NS) have set up their bases close to those of Alphabet’s (GOOGL.O) Google, Meta (FB.O) and Intel (INTC.O).

One state government official put the number of Indian officials attending Davos at more than 100, with scores of company executives and a handful of startups also present. Goyal estimated overall there would be 200 Indian participants.

“We have record numbers from India,” Sriram Gutta, head of India agenda at the WEF, said.

‘NEW REALITY’

Federal ministers have talked about India’s economic boom and the opportunities it offers at Davos.

Although Modi’s government has often faced criticism from foreign companies for announcing policies which they say are protectionist in nature and favour domestic companies, India recently reported its highest ever foreign direct investment inflow, which hit $83.57 billion in 2021-22.

After engaging regularly with Indian states on subjects such as agriculture technology, drones and electric vehicles, the WEF has gradually increased the number of invitations to them, Gutta said, adding that they “will continue to gain prominence”.

Even though they are run by different political parties, the states were seeking to project a united image and showcase their respective offerings for businesses, Deepak Bagla, CEO of federal investment promotion arm Invest India, told Reuters.

The southern state of Andhra Pradesh signed investment pacts worth a total of $16 billion for investment in renewables at Davos, while one official said Karnataka has held meetings with prospective investors. read more

“What this street really shows you is the new reality of India,” Bagla said.

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Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Alexander Smith

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‘Trump is in the past’: Mounting losses show limits of power

WOODSTOCK, Ga. (AP) — Donald Trump opened May by lifting a trailing Senate candidate in Ohio to the Republican nomination, seemingly cementing the former president’s kingmaker status before another possible White House run. He’s ending the month, however, stinging from a string of defeats that suggest a diminishing stature.

Trump faced a series of setbacks in Tuesday’s primary elections as voters rejected his efforts to unseat two top targets for retribution: Georgia’s Republican governor and secretary of state, both of whom rebuffed Trump’s extraordinary pressure to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. But the magnitude of defeat in the governor’s race — more than 50 percentage points — was especially stunning and raised questions about whether Republican voters are beginning to move on from Trump.

Nearly seven years after the onetime reality television star launched what seemed to be an improbable campaign for the White House, the “Make America Great Again” movement Trump helmed isn’t going anywhere. But voters are increasingly vocal in saying that the party’s future is about more than Trump.

“I like Trump a lot, but Trump is in the past,” said David Butler of Woodstock, Georgia, who voted for Gov. Brian Kemp on Tuesday and said Trump’s endorsements had “no” impact “whatsoever” on his thinking.

It was the same for Will Parbhoo, a 22-year-old dental assistant who also voted for Kemp.

“I’m not really a Trumper,” he said after voting. “I didn’t like him to begin with. With all the election stuff, I was like ‘Dude, move on.’”

One thing Parbhoo liked about the current governor? “Kemp is focused on Georgia,” he said.

Trump sought to play down the losses by his favored candidates, saying on his social media platform Wednesday that he had a “very big and successful evening of political Endorsements” and insisting some races “were not possible to win.”

Still, the pattern of high-profile defeats is hard to ignore.

After JD Vance vaulted from third to first place following Trump’s late-stage endorsement in the Ohio Senate primary, the dynamics took a turn. Trump’s pick in Nebraska’s primary for governor, Charles Herbster, lost his race after allegations surfaced that he had groped women.

In Idaho a week later, the governor beat a Trump-backed challenger. In North Carolina, voters rebuffed Trump’s plea to give a scandal-plagued congressman a second chance. And in Pennsylvania, a marquee Senate primary featuring Trump-endorsed celebrity heart surgeon Mehmet Oz remains too close to call.

But his biggest upset was in Georgia, a crucial swing state, where former Sen. David Perdue, whom Trump had lobbied to run and helped clear the field for, lost to Kemp. The governor was among Trump’s top targets after he refused to overturn the results of the 2020 White House election in his state.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who defied Trump’s call to “find” the votes to change the outcome two years ago — a call that is now under investigation — also won his party’s nomination. Attorney General Chris Carr and Insurance Commissioner John King — both opposed by Trump — were also successful in their primaries.

In Alabama, Rep. Mo Brooks, whose Senate endorsement Trump rescinded as he struggled to gain traction, made it to a runoff, having gained support after Trump dropped him.

Trump has endorsed in nearly 200 races, from governor to county commissioner, often inserting himself into contests that aren’t particularly competitive and helping bolster his compilation of wins. Some of his work, even in races with multiple candidates, has paid off.

His early support helped football great Herschel Walker and Rep. Ted Budd sail to their respective Senate primary nominations in Georgia and North Carolina. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Trump’s former press secretary, easily won the GOP nomination for governor in Arkansas. And even in Georgia, all of the candidates Trump endorsed in open races won or will head to runoffs.

Some allies say Trump’s endorsement tally is a poor measure of his influence, even if Trump constantly promotes that record.

They argue that voters may support the former president and be eager for him to run again, but may not be persuaded by his selections, especially in races with governors such as Kemp who have long histories with voters. And even without Trump on the ballot, the party has been transformed in Trump’s image, with candidates adopting his “America First” platform, mimicking his tactics and parroting his lies about a stolen election.

But with Trump out of office and relegated to posting on his own social media platform, other voices are beginning to fill the void. Fox News host Tucker Carlson, the most watched personality on cable television, has becoming a driving ideological force in the party. Republicans such as the conspiracy-embracing Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who won her party’s nomination for reelection Tuesday, have taken up his mantle in Washington.

Meanwhile, potential presidential rivals to Trump are waiting in the wings for 2024.

Former Vice President Mike Pence, who has been distancing himself from Trump, rallied with Kemp in suburban Atlanta on Monday evening and told the crowd that “elections are about the future” — an implicit knock on his former boss.

Trump has also spawned a new generation of candidates who have channeled his “MAGA” brand, but who have done so independent of his support and see themselves as its next iteration.

“MAGA doesn’t belong to him,” Kathy Barnette, the Pennsylvania Senate candidate whose late-stage surge stunned party insiders, said in an interview. “Trump coined the word. He does not own it.”

While the left, she said, may see the “MAGA movement” as a “cult of Trump voters,” she said it goes far beyond one man. She argued that Trump had succeeded in 2016 because he aligned himself with voters’ concerns and said out loud what people were already thinking, particularly on immigration. She said she tried in her race to do the same.

“I do believe Trump has an important voice still,” she added, but “he needs to get better advisers, and in addition to that, he needs to do better himself in remembering why we aligned with him. And it wasn’t because we were aligning with his values. It was because he was aligning with our values. And I think he needs to remember that so that his voice can remain relevant.”

Other Republicans grouse that precious time and money have been wasted on an ego-driven Trump vengeance campaign, forcing incumbents to defend themselves in primaries rather than focus on general elections. They worry Trump has elevated some candidates who may prove unelectable in the November general election and has exacerbated divisions.

“There’s no question unnecessary fights with kind of the extremes of the party, of Trump’s grievance party, have made it more difficult for us to win in November,” said Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a potential 2024 GOP presidential candidate who has been working to protect incumbent governors.

Hogan, a Trump critic, said that, so far, the races have “been a bit of a mixed bag,”

“We’re in the middle of a battle for the soul of the Republican Party and quite frankly the battle’s not over yet,” he said. “I don’t think we can say exactly what the outcome is yet. And I think we still have many more primaries to go.”

Others are more confident in saying Trump’s power has diminished over time.

“The Trump endorsement is helpful but it is not something that by itself can put anyone over the top. And that means it’s less powerful than it was when he was president and it seemed like a fait accompli when he endorsed,” said Mike DuHaime, a longtime GOP strategist.

Still, he acknowledged that Trump is “still the most influential person in the party,” even if that influence has waned.

___

Colvin reported from New York.

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Ricky Gervais is accused of humiliating trans people in new Netflix show SuperNature

Ricky Gervais has been praised for hitting out at cancel culture in new Netflix show SuperNature by joking about ‘old fashioned’ and ‘new women with beards and c**ks’ as fans call it his ‘funniest stand-up ever’.

The comedian, 60, starts the show by describing comedy to the audience as ‘basically a bloke talking’, before purposely failing to recall any ‘funny female comedians’.

And just minutes into his opening monologue, Gervais yawns to the crowd as he talks about ‘those old-fashioned women, you know, with wombs’.

Talking to the audience about cancel culture and the transgender issues, he says: ‘Ah women. Not all women, I mean the old-fashioned women, you know the ones with wombs? Those f***ing dinosaurs.  

‘I love the new women. They’re great, aren’t they? The new ones we’ve been seeing lately. The ones with beards and c***s. They’re as good as gold, I love them. 

‘And now the old-fashioned ones say “oh, they want to use our toilets”. Why shouldn’t they use your toilets? For ladies! They are ladies — look at their pronouns!’

Acting out a discussion, he adds: ‘What about this person isn’t a lady? “Well, his penis.” Her penis, you f***ing bigot! “What if he rapes me?’ What if she rapes you, you f***ing TERF w***e?’

Discussing Kevin Hart’s decision to remove himself from hosting the Oscars in 2018 after historical homophobic tweets emerged, Gervais continues: ‘You can’t predict what will be offensive in the future. You don’t know who the dominant mob will be. 

The comedian, 60, starts the show by describing comedy to the audience as ‘basically a bloke talking’, before purposely failing to recall any ‘funny female comedians’

Gervais’ jokes regarding trans people and cancel culture have been met with criticism on Twitter, with viewers describing it as ‘bigoted hatred’

Jimmy Carr is slammed over Holocaust joke in Netflix comedy special His Dark Material 

Jimmy, 49, sparked criticism in February over a clip from his Netflix special His Dark Material, which saw him joke that the ‘thousands of gypsies killed by the Nazis’ was a ‘positive’ effect of the Holocaust.

In a widely shared clip from his Netflix show, Jimmy joked about the horror of the Holocaust and ‘six million Jewish lives being lost’.

As a punchline, he then made a disparaging remark about the deaths of thousands of gypsies at the hands of the Nazis.

‘But they never mention the thousands of gypsies that were killed by the Nazis. No one ever wants to talk about that, because no one ever wants to talk about the positives,’ Carr quipped to a laughing audience.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s spokesman branded the joke ‘unacceptable’, while Health Secretary Sajid Javid urged people to boycott the one-hour special.

Jewish comedian David Baddiel, 57, was also among swathes of other people to slam Jimmy over the gag.

David said: ‘You can obviously tell a Holocaust joke that is cruel and inhumane and mean spirited and racist.

‘Or you can tell one that targets the oppressors, or draws attention to the fundamental evil of it, or shines and light on the humanity of the victims.

‘It’s not the subject matter of the joke that counts, it’s the specifics of the individual joke. Clearly, Jimmy Carr’s was the former.’

Meanwhile, Conservative MP and Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries told BBC News that the gag was ‘abhorrent’.  

‘Like, the worst thing you can say today, get you cancelled on Twitter, death threats, the worst thing you can say today is, “Women don’t have penises”, right?

‘Now, no one saw that coming. You won’t find a ten-year-old tweet saying “Women don’t have penises.” You know why? We didn’t think we f***ing had to!’

And in another joke towards the end of the show in which he addresses self identity, Gervais says he supports trans rights – a remark met by cheers by a few members of the audience.

He adds: ‘Full disclosure. In real life, of course I support trans rights. I support all human rights and trans rights are human rights. 

‘Live your best life, use your preferred pronouns, be the gender that you feel that you are. But meet me halfway ladies, lose the c**k, that’s all I’m saying.’

The remarks have been met with ire from the usual suspects on social media.

One viewer said on Twitter: ‘Netflix, care to comment on the bigoted hatred? Platforming hate, be it racism, homophobia, sexism OR transphobia is wrong! 

‘So why air Ricky Gervais’ bigotry? Why encourage others to target trans people with these “jokes”. It’s NOT edgy, its NOT controversial, IT’S HATE. STOP!’

Another said: ‘Ricky Gervais has a new stand up show out on Netflix today. 5 minutes in and he’s making jokes about trans women attacking & raping people in public bathrooms. 

‘To him we exist only as a punchline, a threat, something less than human.’

A third added: ‘Ricky Gervais is a disgrace, he is going to cause hate crime and ultimately the death of Trans folk. Anyone who needs to vilify minorities to get a laugh is the most evil hateful soul and seriously needs mental help.’ 

The British comedian didn’t hold back in the programme and also joked about ‘taboo’ subjects including Hitler, famine and AIDS.

But despite the controversial topics mentioned in the special, which was filmed on his most recent tour, many fans rushed to Twitter to praise the comic.

One wrote: ‘I’m not even 10 minutes into #SuperNature and this is hands down the funniest comedy special I’ve ever seen.

But some viewers have rushed to Twitter to praise the comic, despite the controversial topics discussed in the Netflix comedy special

Another said on Twitter: ‘I can’t remember the last time I laughed out loud as much at a stand up show as I am currently at SuperNature. Ricky Gervais, absolutely brilliant.’

A second wrote: The bloke never fails! Another masterpiece from Ricky Gervais with #SuperNature. Absolute National Treasure.’

A third added: ‘SuperNature was brilliant. Your comedic perspective is the perfect antidote to taking this crazy world too seriously.’

A fourth wrote: ‘Howled for the last 64 minutes. Tears rolling down my cheeks. It’s been worth waiting for! Just brilliant!’

It comes after Jimmy Carr faced criticism in February earlier this year after it emerged that he joked about the deaths of six millions Jews in the Holocaust.

The comedian received a barrage of uproar in over a clip from his Netflix special which saw him joke that the ‘thousands of gypsies killed by the Nazis’ was a ‘positive’ consequence of the Holocaust.

In the Netflix footage, the 8 Out of 10 Cats presenter said: ‘When people talk about the Holocaust, they talk about the tragedy and horror of six million Jewish lives being lost to the Nazi war machine. But they never mention the thousands of gypsies that were killed by the Nazis. No one ever talks about that because no one wants to talk about the positives.’

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s spokesman branded the joke ‘unacceptable’, while Health Secretary Sajid Javid urged people to boycott the one-hour special. 

Jewish comedian David Baddiel, 57, was also among swathes of other people to slam Jimmy over the gag.

David said: ‘You can obviously tell a Holocaust joke that is cruel and inhumane and mean-spirited and racist.

‘Or you can tell one that targets the oppressors, or draws attention to the fundamental evil of it, or shines and light on the humanity of the victims.

‘It’s not the subject matter of the joke that counts, it’s the specifics of the individual joke. Clearly, Jimmy Carr’s was the former.’

Meanwhile, Conservative MP and Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries told BBC News that the gag was ‘abhorrent’. 

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‘Better Call Saul’ Is Officially a Show About the Cartel

Of the myriad possibilities for the midseason finale of Better Call Saul’s final season, “Plan and Execution,” let’s give the show credit: Surely nobody anticipated the parallel arcs of Howard Hamlin and Lalo Salamanca. But against all odds, two characters from completely opposite ends of the series—the legal and cartel sides that have overlapped more with each season as Jimmy McGill transforms into Saul Goodman—found themselves desperately searching for proof to support outlandish claims against their enemies, and arrived at the same destination. Howard and Lalo’s respective journeys land them at Kim Wexler’s apartment before the credits roll, and it ends well for only one of them. Given their professions, you can probably guess who got more than he bargained for.

Let’s start with Howard, who finally found himself on the receiving end of Jimmy and Kim’s long-gestating scheme to tarnish his career. Their plan hinged on the latest meeting about the Sandpiper Crossing retirement home case that HHM is handling, and which is being mediated by a retired judge with a striking handlebar mustache. Jimmy and Kim hired a lookalike to portray the judge and make it seem like he was being bribed by Jimmy, staging photos for Howard’s private investigator to deliver to him. But as revealed in “Plan and Execution,” Howard’s P.I. has been working for Jimmy and Kim the whole time. And when the P.I. handed the supposed evidence over to Howard, the photos were covered with the mysterious topical substance that Jimmy and Kim acquired in the previous episode from Dr. Caldera, something that temporarily causes a person’s heart rate to skyrocket and pupils to dilate. After Howard touched the photos, it basically looked like he was coked out of his mind.

When the judge showed up for the mediation session, Howard made a wild-sounding accusation that the mediator was being paid off by Jimmy and said that the photographic evidence was up in his office. Naturally, though, the fake P.I. switched out the photos with some shots of Jimmy handing over a frisbee to a college student with a handlebar mustache. (Out of context, those frisbee photos would feel right at home in an I Think You Should Leave sketch.) The humiliation of the sequence is punctuated by Howard’s dilated pupils and his sweaty, manic appearance: compelling proof that there’s something seriously wrong with him. With the mediation cut short, the judge storms off and Cliff Main informs Howard that they’re going to have to accept the current settlement from Sandpiper. By extension, even though the main objective of the scheme was to ruin Howard’s image, Jimmy gets a cushy payout from the settlement that could go a long way toward decorating the garish law office he’ll have in Breaking Bad. (Apologies to Francesca and her lovely interior design.)

“This is a campaign by Jimmy to take me down!” Howard assures Cliff, but his accusations do no good. Howard is left to suffer a similar fate as Chuck McGill in Better Call Saul’s third season, when he angrily testified against Jimmy and came out the other end looking totally unhinged. The tragic irony is that, like Chuck, everything Howard claims that Jimmy has done—forged photos with a lookalike, hired a con man to be his P.I., drugged him—is true, even if he can’t prove it. After years of being sympathetic to Jimmy over the way that Chuck treated him, including offering him a job at HHM last season, Howard has finally borne the brunt of one of Jimmy’s signature grifts. Despite having bowling balls thrown at his car and being accosted by sex workers at business lunches, Howard has been admirably levelheaded in the face of Jimmy’s antics—a fitting response from someone who has a “Namast3” license plate. But Jimmy and Kim have gone too far, and Howard’s ready for a long overdue confrontation.

Meanwhile, Lalo has returned from his relaxing German getaway with a clearer understanding of Gus Fring’s plans to create his own meth lab. The problem is that he needs to bring proof to Don Eladio, who has no reason to suspect one of his top earners of any wrongdoing. So Lalo spies on Fring’s laundromat business from a drainage grate, hunkered down in the Albuquerque sewer system like he’s Pennywise the Clown. We can say this for Lalo: The dude is committed.

For Better Call Saul, the Lalo conundrum is twofold: the show has created an amazing villain who’s been brought to life with scene-stealing charisma by Tony Dalton, but he never shows up in Breaking Bad and we already know that Fring’s meth lab will be operational in the future. (Fring also claims in Breaking Bad that all the Salamancas are dead, which doesn’t exactly help Lalo’s odds.) All signs point to Lalo meeting his doom—not only is he greatly outnumbered by Fring’s men, but the Chicken Man has kept a gun hidden in the still-incomplete lab in the event they have their inevitable confrontation underground.

But Lalo gets a lifeline in “Plan and Execution”: When he calls to give Hector Salamanca an update, he hears a faint static over the line. The phone in his uncle’s room at the retirement home has been tapped, so Lalo no longer has the element of surprise against Fring and must regroup. It’s at that moment that Lalo spots a cockroach scurrying in the sewer. That might seem innocuous, but in last season’s “Bagman,” Lalo reassured Kim that nothing was going to happen to Jimmy in the desert because he’s a “born survivor” like the cucaracha. And seeing as Lalo already had one memorable standoff at Kim’s apartment in Season 5, he knows exactly where to find him.

Howard is the first to show up at the apartment, which Jimmy and Kim already expected. It’s a tense scene, not least of all because the specter of Lalo looms large over it. But there are still brilliant little moments reflecting Jimmy’s inner turmoil. When Howard mentions he’s suffering through depression and marital problems, Jimmy appears genuinely surprised and looks over at Kim, the real mastermind behind the operation. Deep down, Jimmy knows that Howard probably doesn’t deserve such punishment. The fact that they’ve been piling on a guy who’s losing his wife and clinging to his career to feel any sense of normalcy is especially cruel. “You’re perfect for each other,” Howard says. “You have a piece missing. I thought you did it for the money but now it’s so clear: Screw the money, you did it for fun. You get off on it, you’re like Leopold and Loeb, two sociopaths.”

As Howard promises to dedicate his life to exposing the truth about them, Lalo arrives. Unsurprisingly, Jimmy and Kim are both terrified, while Howard is oblivious to the mortal danger he finds himself in. “I just need to talk to my lawyers,” Lalo tells Howard, to which he responds: “You want my advice? Find better lawyers!” It’s a grimly funny exchange that almost immediately curdles into bone-chilling terror, as Lalo attaches a silencer to his pistol and Howard slowly realizes that he’s out of his depth. It’s a feeling he won’t hold on to for long: With a swift shot to the temple, one of the H’s in HHM has been wiped off the board. Just before the credits roll, Lalo reminds Jimmy and Kim why he’s there: He wants to talk.

For viewers who have been critical of Better Call Saul’s relatively leisurely pace to start its final season, “Plan and Execution” is a proverbial headshot that sets up a tantalizing cliff-hanger ahead of the six remaining episodes. (Good thing we only have to wait until July.) And like Nacho Varga’s tragic sendoff earlier in the season, the final stretch will have to make do without another series mainstay in Howard Hamlin. Among the many great performances on Better Call Saul—here’s my regular reminder to the Television Academy that Rhea Seehorn deserves an Emmy nomination for this performance—it’s easy for Patrick Fabian to get overlooked. But the actor did an exceptional job of making the audience loathe Howard at the beginning of the show and later sympathize with him. Caught between wanting to do right by Chuck and his own misgivings with treating Jimmy like crap—and later reckoning with his law partner’s probable death by suicide—Howard constantly found himself in existential turmoil that he barely hid behind the facade of a polished, high-end lawyer. This reaction shot from Season 4 is an all-timer:

As for Jimmy and Kim, it’s hard to say what Lalo’s dramatic reemergence portends, or what they can do to help him get a leg up over Fring. (Again, it’s not like Lalo can do much when we know Fring will be alive and the meth lab will be open for business in Breaking Bad.) If nothing else, we do have a better idea of why Saul was so terrified thinking that Walter White and Jesse Pinkman were sent by Lalo during his introduction in Breaking Bad.

There’s also the small matter of Kim finding out that Lalo was still alive earlier this season from Mike Ehrmantraut and declining to tell Jimmy, and whether that will put a strain on their relationship. Mike told Kim that he didn’t think Jimmy had the stomach for this line of work, and that she was “made of sterner stuff.” Perhaps, given her absence in Breaking Bad, it’s Kim who’s hit a breaking point.

In any case, Howard’s death means that Better Call Saul has reached a point of no return. With Jimmy and Kim being pulled further and further into Albuquerque’s criminal underworld with every season, the legal side of the show had been increasingly hanging on by a thread. Aside from the immense toll that Howard’s death will have on its primary characters’ psyches, Better Call Saul is now completely subsumed by the cartel-related conflicts: a fitting development as we inch closer and closer to Breaking Bad’s timeline. (Not to mention the ongoing black-and-white adventures of Cinnabon manager Gene Takovic.) We know that Jimmy-cum-Saul is going to come out of his latest encounter with Lalo unscathed—he is, after all, the cucaracha. But with Howard lying in a pool of his own blood and Kim nowhere to be seen in Breaking Bad, all other bets are off.

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UFC Vegas 55 post-fight show: Did Holly Holm get robbed in main event?

Ketlen Vieira picked up the biggest UFC wins of her career, but it certainly will go down as a controversial one.

Following Vieira’s split decision win over Holly Holm in the main event of UFC Vegas 55, MMA Fighting’s Mike Heck and Alexander K. Lee react to the five-round contest, figure out if Holm was robbed by the judges, talk Michel Pereira’s fifth straight win — this one over Santiago Ponzinibbio in the co-main event — and where he goes, Chidi Njokuani’s ceiling following his vicious standing elbow finish of Dusko Todorovic, Jailton Almeida’s future after a fantastic heavyweight debut in submitting Parker Porter, and other storylines coming out of Saturday’s card at the UFC APEX.

In addition, a reaction to the boxing event that included Floyd Mayweather and Anderson Silva competing in separate exhibition bouts in Abu Dhabi.

Watch the video above, or an audio-only version of the show can be streamed below and on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, and wherever else you get your pods.

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