Tag Archives: single

Kim Kardashian Files To Be Single And Change Last Name

Looks like there won’t be anymore more “W” in “KKW.”

It looks like things are still going ahead with Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s split.


Mark Sagliocco / WireImage / Getty Images

According to TMZ and Us Weekly, Kim filed court documents to be considered legally single.


Kevin Mazur / Getty Images for Sean Combs

In some states, you can file for a legal separation. It’s not the same as being divorced — you can’t marry anyone else, and they’ll also still have to figure out their custody and financial agreements.

She’s also reportedly asked to restore her maiden name, meaning that she’ll drop the “West” from “Kim Kardashian West” if it’s approved.


Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

This comes as Kanye has made a whole bunch of public attempts at reconciliation, most recently at a concert where he changed the lyrics of “Runaway” to say, “I need you to run right back to me, baby / More specifically, Kimberly” — just hours before Kim filed to be legally separated. Kim herself was apparently in the crowd.


David Livingston / Getty Images

Not to be dramatic, but I think I would die if an ex of mine ever made a public declaration to get me back.

Meanwhile, Kim and Pete Davidson’s relationship appears to still be going swimmingly by the looks of things.

Sigh, hopefully we won’t be hearing Ye’s take at his next gig…

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Kim Kardashian Files to Be Legally Single Amid Kanye Split

Photo: Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage

He may have managed to reunite with Drake, but it looks like the rapper formerly known as Kanye West won’t be getting back together with Kim Kardashian any time soon. According to TMZ, Kardashian filed legal documents on Friday to become “legally single” and drop “West” from her last name. She previously filed for divorce in early 2021, after almost seven years of marriage. Meanwhile, Ye has been literally praying that she’ll forgive him for the mistakes he made as a husband, and even recently asked her to “run right back” to him while singing in a benefit concert that she attended with their two children, North and Saint.

We know that the pair has already agreed that Kardashian will keep their Hidden Hills Estate, but according to TMZ, there are still other property issues to address. If a judge approves Kardashian’s request, she’ll be able to officially change her marital status without having to wait for other aspects of the divorce to be resolved. And once she’s legally allowed to restore her maiden name, we’re betting her social media accounts won’t say Kim Kardashian West anymore. Still, reports that Kardashian is dating Pete Davidson haven’t stopped Ye from giving up yet, so we’ll have to wait and see if this legal move will be enough to convince him that Kimye is really over.



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Kim Kardashian files to be legally single hours after Kanye West asks to reconcile during performance: report

Kanye West doesn’t want Kim Kardashian to “Runaway” anymore – and is once again pleading with his estranged wife for reconciliation.

The rapper-producer, 44, said as much during the “Free Larry Hoover” benefit concert on Thursday at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. At the show, he named the reality star while he dedicated the single from “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy” to Kardashian, 41.

“I need you to run right back to me, baby,” the Yeezy head honcho crooned before adding, “more specifically, Kimberly,” according to People magazine.

Kardashian was in attendance for West’s performance alongside Drake. She was accompanied by her mother, Kris Jenner and sister, Kendall Jenner, along with her children: daughter North, 8, and son Saint, 6, whom she shares with West.

KANYE WEST SAYS GOD WILL BRING KIM KARDASHIAN BACK TO HIM AMID DIVORCE

Kim Kardashian has seemingly moved on with comedian Pete Davidson, right. The two have been spending more time together and were recently spotted holding hands during a walk after celebrating Davidson’s birthday together.
(Getty Images)

The pair are also parents to daughter Chicago, 3, and son Psalm, 2.

It seems West didn’t exactly get through to Kardashian as the Skims founder legally filed to move on with her life as a single woman on Friday, according to a new court filing obtained by TMZ. The outlet said a judge must sign off on the petition in which she also asked to restore her maiden name – and drop West from her moniker.

KANYE WEST SAYS PRESIDENTIAL BID STRAINED HIS MARRIAGE TO KIM KARDASHIAN IN ‘THANKSGIVING PRAYER’

As the rest of the world looked on as Kardashian and comedian Pete Davidson appeared to grow closer in numerous public outings, West joined the popular “Drink Champs” podcast and said Kardashian is “still [his] wife.”

“Ain’t no paperwork,” he added of the marital situation.

Despite the former couple being entrenched in a pending divorce, in which neither has asked the other for spousal or child support, West shared a “Thanksgiving Prayer” last month and in it, lamented the “misactions” he made that he says caused pain to his wife and family.

Kanye West vowed to repair his familial situation during a visit to the Los Angeles Mission last month. 
(Photo by David Livingston)

“All I think about every day is how I get my family back together and how I heal the pain that I’ve caused,” he said at the time. “I take accountability for my actions. New word alert: misactions. The one thing that all my successes and failures have in common is me.” 

West said some of his “misactions” were “heightened” by alcohol and his manic “episodes” — which many believe to be in reference to his being diagnosed as bipolar.

He also took to his Instagram Story the day after Thanksgiving to share a black and white photo of him kissing Kardashian along with a media story. 

KANYE WEST SAYS KIM KARDASHIAN IS ‘STILL MY WIFE’ AMID PETE DAVIDSON DATING RUMORS

“Kanye West Says God Will Bring Kim and Him Back Together, Inspire Millions,” read the headline.

During a Thanksgiving charity visit to the Los Angeles Mission last month, the “Jesus Walks” performer told a large crowd, “The narrative God wants is to see that we can be redeemed in all these relationships.” 

Kim Kardashian filed for divorce from Kanye West in February.
(Photo by Pierre Suu/Getty Images)

He added, “We’ve made mistakes. I’ve made mistakes. I’ve publicly done things that were not acceptable as a husband, but right now today, for whatever reason — I didn’t know I was going to be in front of this mic — but I’m here to change the narrative.”

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Kardashian has been single since filing for divorce from West in February.

She later addressed the divorce during a “Keeping up with the Kardashians” reunion in June.

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“I honestly don’t think I would even say it here on TV, but it was not one specific thing that happened on either part. I think it was just a general difference of opinions on a few things that led to this decision,” Kardashian told host Andy Cohen at the time.

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Kim Kardashian Files to Become Legally Single in Kanye Divorce

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Twitch streamer beats Dark Souls 3 with a single button

Twitch streamer and custom controller creator Rudeism beat Dark Souls 3 on stream earlier today using a homemade, single-buttoned controller that mapped the game’s inputs to Morse code. The streamer started his run two months ago on August 20 and defeated all 19 of the base game’s bosses, according to a celebratory tweet by Rudeism.

During Rudeism’s run, the streamer’s Morse code inputs were visible via a log in the upper-right-hand corner of the stream. An on-screen counter also tracked how many times Rudeism pressed the one button he was afforded; 258,250 button presses were counted by the game’s end, according to the streamer. 

While facing his self-imposed challenge, Rudeism also raised money for AbleGamers – a nonprofit organization that advocates for accessibility in the video game industry. The content creator used his two-month-long playthrough of Dark Souls 3 to advocate for accessibility options, including difficulty modifiers, to become standardized in video games. 

The Dark Souls series, and by extension most games by developer FromSoftware, are notoriously difficult games with one unmodifiable difficulty. Naturally, these titles are generally brought up when discussing difficulty and accessibility in games. Some claim that more accessibility options such as different control schemes or difficulty modes would enable more people, including disabled folk who may be physically incapable of playing with a standard controller, to comfortably experience these games. Meanwhile, accessibility opponents claim that such options would betray the vision that FromSoftware has for its games, and that difficulty is what defines the studio’s catalog.

On Twitter, AbleGamers Chief Operating Officer Steve Spohn noted that Rudeism’s achievement – which by all accounts took more effort than simply beating the game with a regular controller – was only possible thanks to the streamer’s manually-added accessibility options.

“I doubt this was the intent of [FromSoftware] either. And yet, [Rudeism] killed all the bosses with only 1 button. That was his point. [Accessibility didn’t] make the game cheaper. It didn’t ruin his experience. He had a blast doing it and can now claim to have beaten the game with accessibility,” said Spohn on Twitter.

Image via Bandai Namco

FromSoftware’s hotly-anticipated title, Elden Ring, will be the studio’s next game to hit store shelves in February 2022. In an interview with Famitsu (translated by FrontlineJP.net), Elden Ring director Hidetaka Miyazaki advised that the upcoming FromSoftware title would be more forgiving than some of the studio’s other games, but no further accessibility options have been confirmed.



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Adele No 1: Singer makes record-breaking return to UK chart top spot with new single

The song is her third chart-topping single in the UK after “Someone Like You” and “Hello,” and Adele also has four number-ones on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart to her name.

Streamed 24 million times in the last seven days, the British singer’s new track smashed the record of 16.9 million streams set by Ariana Grande’s “7 Rings” in 2019.

A heartbreak ballad exploring Adele’s divorce from entrepreneur Simon Konecki, “Easy on Me” serves as the lead single from Adele’s upcoming album “30,” her first new music in six years.
On October 15, streaming giant Spotify also announced on Twitter that Adele had broken the record for most-streamed song in a single day with “Easy on Me.”
According to official UK chart figures, the song has had the most successful first sales week in four years with 217,300 sales — the highest since Ed Sheeran’s “Shape of You” was released in January 2017.

The single’s digital download sales figures of 23,500 were also the highest numbers for 2021 so far.

Anticipation for Adele’s new album has also seen a surge in the popularity of her previous songs — with her 2011 signature track “Someone Like You” re-entering the top 40 along with 2016’s “When We Were Young.”

The singer is also the first person to feature on the cover of both the British and American editions of Vogue magazine in its November issue, with interviews for both editions released online in early October.

In her American Vogue interview with Abby Aguirre, Adele said “30” had become a way of explaining things to her son, including why his parents no longer lived together.
“It’s sensitive for me, this record, just in how much I love it…” Adele told the magazine. “I’m not letting go of this one. This is my album. I want to share myself with everyone, but I don’t think I’ll ever let this one go.”

“30” is scheduled for release on November 19.



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Adele’s new single, ‘Easy On Me,’ has finally dropped. So what’s the verdict?

The song, the first from a hotly anticipated album due in November, begins to do exactly what the singer promised: to address the “inner turmoil” coming from a series of big life changes, including her divorce from Simon Konecki, with whom she shares a son.

“I was still a child, didn’t get the chance to feel the world around me, had no time to choose, what I chose to do, so go easy on me,” she sings.

In an interview in the November issue of Vogue magazine, the 33-year-old singer said she recorded the song — like a lot of the album — for her son.

“I just felt like I wanted to explain to him, through this record, when he’s in his twenties or thirties, who I am and why I voluntarily chose to dismantle his entire life in the pursuit of my own happiness,” she said.

“It made him really unhappy sometimes. And that’s a real wound for me that I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to heal,” she added.

Adele filed for divorce from charity CEO Konecki in 2019. She and Konecki, who lives across the street from her in Los Angeles, share 9-year-old son Angelo.

“I was just going through the motions and I wasn’t happy,” Adele explained of their marriage to Vogue. “Neither of us did anything wrong. Neither of us hurt each other or anything like that. It was just: I want my son to see me really love, and be loved. It’s really important to me.”

She added, “I’ve been on my journey to find my true happiness ever since.”

Alicia Silverstone, Lil Nas X and Drake were among the many fans who reacted to the song’s release, with Silverstone sharing a video of herself stocking up on wine and liquor ahead of listening to the track. Meanwhile, Lil Nas X said the song was “so good,” adding: “I feel like I’m 15 again.”

“Easy On Me” has also had a positive reception from music critics.

“Her voice, as powerful as ever, sounds initially wounded, then soars. Even if you find The Stuff That Adele Does miserable, you’d have your work cut out arguing that her vocal during the final bridge is anything other than fantastic,” the Guardian wrote.
Meanwhile, Rolling Stone said the singer “reduces the world to tears” with her newest release.
And Billboard mused that despite its similarities to Adele’s previous hits, the song is “not more of the same.”

“Instead of offering more tear duct-ravaging balladry focused on long-gone exes or scorned romances, ‘Easy On Me’ presents a different type of devastation: a plea for understanding, following a breakup that has caused too much collateral damage,” Billboard wrote.

The singer took to social media Wednesday to tell fans that the new album, “30,” will be out on November 19.



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Adele Releases ‘Easy On Me’, First Single And Video From Album ’30’ – Deadline

The first new music in six years from British superstar songstress Adele is out today, marking her return after a long hiatus that saw a divorce and a remarkable physical transformation.

The new song, “Easy on Me,” is a spare midtempo ballad that, like her other songs, reflects her real-life experiences. “Go easy on me, baby,” she sings. “I was still a child / Didn’t get the chance to feel the world around me / Had no time to choose what I chose to do / So go easy on me.”

The music video starts off in black-and-white and is in the same location Adele used in her video for the 2015 hit single “Hello.”

The song and video are part of 30, her fourth full album, out on Nov. 19. Adele is actually age 33.

Adele was clear in an an Instagram Live over the weekend as to what her new album is about, “Divorce, babe, divorce.” And, in a Twitter statement Wednesday, she described the album as her “ride or die throughout the most turbulent period of my life.”



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Single Event Upsets: High Energy Particles From Outer Space Flipping Bits

Our world is constantly bombarded by high-energy particles from various sources, and if they hit in just the right spot on the sensitive electronics our modern world is built on, they can start flipping bits. Known as Single Event Upsets (SEU), their effect can range from unnoticeable to catastrophic, and [Veritasium] explores this phenomenon in the video after the break.

The existence of radiation has been known since the late 1800s, but the effect of low-level radiation on electronics was only recognized in the 1970s when trace amounts of radioactive material in the ceramic packaging of Intel DRAM chips started causing errors. The most energetic particles come from outer space and are known as cosmic rays. They originate from supernovas and black holes, and on earth they have been linked to an impossibly fast Super Mario 64 speedrun and a counting error in a Belgian election. It’s also possible to see their path using a cloud chamber you can build yourself. There are even research projects that use the camera sensors of smartphones as distributed cosmic ray detectors.

Earth’s magnetic field acts as a protective barrier against the majority of these cosmic rays, and there is a measurable increase in radiation as you gain altitude and enter space. In space, serious steps need to be taken to protect spacecraft, and it’s for this reason that the Perseverance rover that landed on Mars this year uses a 20-year-old main computer, the PowerPC RAD750. It has a proven track record of radiation resistance and has been used on more than a dozen spacecraft. Astronauts experience cosmic radiation in the form of flashes of light when they close their eyes and protecting their DNA from damaging effects is a serious concern for NASA.

It’s impossible to know the true impact of cosmic radiation on our world and even our history. Who knows, one of those impossible-to-replicate software bugs or the inspiration for your latest project might have originated in another galaxy.

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Team measures the breakup of a single chemical bond

Researchers measured the mechanical forces applied to break a bond between carbon monoxide and iron phthalocyanine, which appears as a symmetrical cross in scanning probe microscope images taken before and after the bond rupture. Credit: Pengcheng Chen et al.

The team used a high-resolution atomic force microscope (AFM) operating in a controlled environment at Princeton’s Imaging and Analysis Center. The AFM probe, whose tip ends in a single copper atom, was moved gradually closer to the iron-carbon bond until it was ruptured. The researchers measured the mechanical forces applied at the moment of breakage, which was visible in an image captured by the microscope. A team from Princeton University, the University of Texas-Austin and ExxonMobil reported the results in a paper published Sept. 24 in Nature Communications.

“It’s an incredible image—being able to actually see a single small molecule on a surface with another one bonded to it is amazing,” said coauthor Craig Arnold, the Susan Dod Brown Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and director of the Princeton Institute for the Science and Technology of Materials (PRISM).

“The fact that we could characterize that particular bond, both by pulling on it and pushing on it, allows us to understand a lot more about the nature of these kinds of bonds—their strength, how they interact—and this has all sorts of implications, particularly for catalysis, where you have a molecule on a surface and then something interacts with it and causes it to break apart,” said Arnold.

Nan Yao, a principal investigator of the study and the director of Princeton’s Imaging and Analysis Center, noted that the experiments also revealed insights into how bond breaking affects a catalyst’s interactions with the surface on which it’s adsorbed. Improving the design of chemical catalysts has relevance for biochemistry, materials science and energy technologies, added Yao, who is also a professor of the practice and senior research scholar in PRISM.

In the experiments, the carbon atom was part of a carbon monoxide molecule and the iron atom was from iron phthalocyanine, a common pigment and chemical catalyst. Iron phthalocyanine is structured like a symmetrical cross, with a single iron atom at the center of a complex of nitrogen- and carbon-based connected rings. The iron atom interacts with the carbon of carbon monoxide, and the iron and carbon share a pair of electrons in a type of covalent bond known as a dative bond.

Yao and his colleagues used the atomic-scale probe tip of the AFM instrument to break the iron-carbon bond by precisely controlling the distance between the tip and the bonded molecules, down to increments of 5 picometers (5 billionths of a millimeter). The breakage occurred when the tip was 30 picometers above the molecules—a distance that corresponds to about one-sixth the width of a carbon atom. At this height, half of the iron phthalocyanine molecule became blurrier in the AFM image, indicating the rupture point of the chemical bond.

The researchers used a type of AFM known as non-contact, in which the microscope’s tip does not directly contact the molecules being studied, but instead uses changes in the frequency of fine-scale vibrations to construct an image of the molecules’ surface.

By measuring these frequency shifts, the researchers were also able to calculate the force needed to break the bond. A standard copper probe tip broke the iron-carbon bond with an attractive force of 150 piconewtons. With another carbon monoxide molecule attached to the tip, the bond was broken by a repulsive force of 220 piconewtons. To delve into the basis for these differences, the team used quantum simulation methods to model changes in the densities of electrons during chemical reactions.

The work takes advantage of AFM technology first advanced in 2009 to visualize single chemical bonds. The controlled breaking of a chemical bond using an AFM system has been more challenging than similar studies on bond formation.

“It is a great challenge to improve our understanding of how chemical reactions can be carried out by atom manipulation, that is, with a tip of a scanning probe microscope,” said Leo Gross, who leads the Atom and Molecule Manipulation research group at IBM Research in Zurich, and was the lead author of the 2009 study that first resolved the chemical structure of a molecule by AFM.

By breaking a particular bond with different tips that use two different mechanisms, the new study contributes to “improving our understanding and control of bond cleavage by atom manipulation. It adds to our toolbox for chemistry by atom manipulation and represents a step forward toward fabricating designed molecules of increasing complexity,” added Gross, who was not involved in the study.

The experiments are acutely sensitive to external vibrations and other confounding factors. The Imaging and Analysis Center’s specialized AFM instrument is housed in a high-vacuum environment, and the materials are cooled to a temperature of 4 Kelvin, just a few degrees above absolute zero, using liquid helium. These controlled conditions yield precise measurements by ensuring that the molecules’ energy states and interactions are affected only by the experimental manipulations.

“You need a very good, clean system because this reaction could be very complicated—with so many atoms involved, you might not know which bond you break at such a small scale,” said Yao. “The design of this system simplified the whole process and clarified the unknown” in breaking a chemical bond, he said.

The study’s lead authors were Pengcheng Chen, an associate research scholar at PRISM, and Dingxin Fan, a Ph.D. student at the University of Texas-Austin. In addition to Yao, other corresponding authors were Yunlong Zhang of ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company in Annandale, New Jersey, and James R. Chelikowsky, a professor at UT Austin. Besides Arnold, other Princeton coauthors were Annabella Selloni, the David B. Jones Professor of Chemistry, and Emily Carter, the Gerhard R. Andlinger ’52 Professor in Energy and the Environment. Other coauthors from ExxonMobil were David Dankworth and Steven Rucker.


How metals work together to weaken hardy nitrogen-nitrogen bonds


More information:
Breaking a dative bond with mechanical forces, Nature Communications (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25932-6 , www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-25932-6
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Team measures the breakup of a single chemical bond (2021, October 4)
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