Tag Archives: Splits

Netflix’s ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Is No ‘One Piece,’ Splits Fans And Critics – Forbes

  1. Netflix’s ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Is No ‘One Piece,’ Splits Fans And Critics Forbes
  2. Avatar: The Last Airbender Review IGN
  3. ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Boss Talks Top-Secret Casting Process, Stories Left Behind and Series Gameplan Hollywood Reporter
  4. Sokka Actor Defends Netflix’s ‘Avatar’ After Fan Outrage Over Toning Down Character’s Sexism: ‘He’s Still the Sokka We Know and Love From the Cartoon’ Variety
  5. ‘Avatar The Last Airbender’ Netflix cast: Who plays Aang, Zuko, Suki USA TODAY

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Santo Condorelli Splits 24.03 50 Fly, Stops at 60yds in the 100 Fly Prelim | 2023 Westmont Pro Swim – SwimSwam

  1. Santo Condorelli Splits 24.03 50 Fly, Stops at 60yds in the 100 Fly Prelim | 2023 Westmont Pro Swim SwimSwam
  2. TYR Pro Swim Series Westmont: Lydia Jacoby Overtakes Lilly King for 100 Breast Win (Women’s Recap) Swimming World Magazine
  3. 2023 Westmont Pro Swim Series — Day 2 Finals Live Recap SwimSwam
  4. Finke Pulls Away From Pack for Impressive 800M Freestyle Win | 2023 TYR Pro Swim Series Westmont USA Swimming
  5. LEON MARCHAND, LILLY KING, RYAN MURPHY, AND SHAINE CASAS HEADLINE TYR PRO SWIM SERIES STREAMING LIVE EXCLUSIVELY ON PEACOCK THIS WEEK NBC Sports Pressbox
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Biden Administration Splits on Prosecuting Russia for War Crimes in Ukraine – The Intercept

  1. Biden Administration Splits on Prosecuting Russia for War Crimes in Ukraine The Intercept
  2. Ukraine war crimes cases to open as International Criminal Court seeks 1st arrest warrants since Russia’s invasion CBS News
  3. Russian attacks against civilians in Ukraine amount to war crimes, UN-backed investigation finds Roanoke Times
  4. Is Russia Committing Genocide in Ukraine? What Experts Say TIME
  5. Prosecuting Russians for abducting Ukrainian children will require a high bar of evidence – and won’t guarantee the children can come back home The Conversation
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Pentagon splits $9 billion cloud contract among Google, Amazon, Oracle and Microsoft

Dec 7 (Reuters) – The Pentagon awarded $9 billion worth of cloud computing contracts to Alphabet Inc’s Google (GOOGL.O), Amazon Web Services Inc (AMZN.O), Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and Oracle Corp on Wednesday.

The Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability (JWCC) is the multi-cloud successor to the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI), which was an IT modernization project to build a large, common commercial cloud for the Department of Defense.

The separate contracts, which carry a notional top line of $9 billion, run until 2028 and will provide the Department of Defense with enterprise-wide, globally available cloud services across all security domains and classification levels, the contract announcement said.

U.S. flag hangs during a ceremony to honor victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks at the Pentagon in Washington, U.S., September 11, 2022. REUTERS/Cheriss May

U.S. Navy Commander Jessica McNulty, a Department of Defense spokesperson, said in a statement the JWCC was a multiple-award procurement composed of four contracts with a shared ceiling of $9 billion.

The move comes months after the Pentagon had delayed its decision to award an enterprise-wide JWCC contract.

The Pentagon attempted to move to the cloud several years ago using the JEDI concept, but the proposal died after litigation stopped the procurement process.

This deal could put the military more in line with private-sector companies, many of whom split up their cloud computing work among multiple vendors.

Reporting by Nathan Gomes in Bengaluru and Mike Stone in Washington D.C.; Editing by Stephen Coates and Gerry Doyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Selma Blair stuns with cartwheel and splits on ‘Dancing With the Stars’

On Monday’s Dancing With the Stars, Selma Blair continued to inspire everyone as she put on an acrobatic display. In 2018, Blair revealed she is battling multiple sclerosis. The disease has impaired her balance, but it hasn’t impaired her desire to dance. This week she performed a jive, with a little help from her partner Sasha Farber.

“There’s hurdles we have to cross,” Farber explained. “I say, ‘Okay, you gotta kick with the left foot.’ And she’s like, ‘Okay, but I can’t really feel my left leg.’ So we’ve come with indicators in our arms, which means the left and the right.”

A casual viewer would never know that the actress regularly uses a cane as she nailed leg kicks, performed a perfect cartwheel and easily slipped into splits.

Blair’s Cruel Intentions co-star-turned-best-friend, Sarah Michelle Gellar, could be seen in the audience fighting back emotions. And when it came time to speak with the judges, the praise from last week continued for Blair.

“There’s no other way to say it except you make it look so much easier than it must be for you,” said judge Carrie Ann Inaba. “That is such an amazing feat.”

Viewers were also impressed with Blair’s moves, as one person tweeted, “Selma Blair just did a cartwheel to a split on DWTS and I am absolutely in awe of her strength and perseverance.”

As for Blair, just being able to dance has been special.

“It’s been amazing,” she said. “I haven’t been able to invert for years. I used to be a gymnast when I was little… little little, 50 years ago! It was amazing to at least start to really play and just really have the best time. I just loved it.”

Dancing With the Stars streams Mondays at 8 p.m. on Disney+.

Watch as Simu Liu shocks everyone with come-from-behind ‘Celebrity Jeopardy!’ win:

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Mick Schumacher car splits into two pieces in big crash at wet Monaco Grand Prix

MONTE CARLO — Mick Schumacher walked away unharmed from a big crash at the Monaco Grand Prix that prompted the second red flag of the event.

A downpour just before the scheduled start delayed the race by 70 minutes, and it eventually got going on a drying track.

Drivers had just completed the switch from the full and intermediate wet tyres to dry tyres when Schumacher, running 17th, lost control of his car through the Swimming Pool section and slammed into the wall on the exit of the chicane.

Schumacher’s rear suspension and rear wing completely detached from the Haas car.

Schumacher, the son of seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher, immediately climbed out of the car and walked back to the Haas garage.

Curiously, the race stewards cycled through all three of the options available to them in the case of a crash as marshals looked to clear the wreckage.

First, they implemented the virtual safety car, in which drivers are required to drive slowly to a delta time.

The actual safety car was then deployed two minutes later, which requires the field to bottle up behind a pace car.

Just six minutes later, the race was suspended with a red flag to allow marshals to fix the barrier Schumacher had gone into.

When the race resumed, Red Bull’s Sergio Perez led a rolling start.

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Jan. 6 Panel Has Evidence for Criminal Referral of Trump, but Splits on Sending

WASHINGTON — The leaders of the House committee investigating the Capitol attack have grown divided over whether to make a criminal referral to the Justice Department of former President Donald J. Trump, even though they have concluded that they have enough evidence to do so, people involved in the discussions said.

The debate centers on whether making a referral — a largely symbolic act — would backfire by politically tainting the Justice Department’s expanding investigation into the Jan. 6 assault and what led up to it.

Since last summer, a team of former federal prosecutors working for the committee has focused on documenting the attack and the preceding efforts by Mr. Trump and his allies to reverse his defeat in the 2020 election. The panel plans to issue a detailed report on its findings, but in recent months it has regularly signaled that it was also weighing a criminal referral that would pressure Attorney General Merrick B. Garland to open a criminal investigation into Mr. Trump.

Despite concluding that they have enough evidence to refer Mr. Trump for obstructing a congressional proceeding and conspiring to defraud the American people, some on the committee are questioning whether there is any need to make a referral. The Justice Department appears to be ramping up a wide-ranging investigation, and making a referral could saddle a criminal case with further partisan baggage at a time when Mr. Trump is openly flirting with running again in 2024.

The committee’s vice chairwoman, Representative Liz Cheney, said on CNN on Sunday that the committee had not made a final decision about making referrals and downplayed any divisions on the committee, but acknowledged there was significant evidence of criminality.

“I think that it is absolutely the case, it’s absolutely clear that what President Trump was doing, what a number of people around him were doing, that they knew it was unlawful. They did it anyway,” said Ms. Cheney, a Wyoming Republican.

The shift in committee leaders’ perspective on making a referral was prompted in part by a ruling two weeks ago by Judge David O. Carter of the Federal District Court for Central California. Deciding a civil case in which the committee had sought access to more than 100 emails written by John C. Eastman, a lawyer who advised Mr. Trump on efforts to derail certification of the Electoral College outcome, Judge Carter found that it was “more likely than not” that Mr. Trump and Mr. Eastman had committed federal crimes.

The ruling led some committee and staff members to argue that even though they felt they had amassed enough evidence to justify calling for a prosecution, the judge’s decision would carry far greater weight with Mr. Garland than any referral letter they could write, according to people with knowledge of the conversations.

The members and aides who were reluctant to support a referral contended that making one would create the appearance that Mr. Garland was investigating Mr. Trump at the behest of a Democratic Congress and that if the committee could avoid that perception it should, the people said.

Even if the final report does not include a specific referral letter to Mr. Garland, the findings would still provide federal prosecutors with the evidence the committee uncovered — including some that has not yet become public — that could be used as a road map for any prosecution, the people said.

“If you read his decision, I think it’s quite telling,” Representative Zoe Lofgren, Democrat of California and a member of the committee, said of Judge Carter’s ruling. “He and we have reviewed a huge amount of documents, and he reached a conclusion that he outlined in very stark terms.”

Ms. Lofgren is among those who believe a referral letter to the Justice Department is superfluous, since it would carry no legal weight.

“Maybe we will, maybe we won’t,” she said of a referral. “It doesn’t have a legal impact.”

But the question about whether to send the referral has, for one of the first times since the committee was formed in July, exposed differences among members.

Representative Elaine Luria, Democrat of Virginia and a member of the panel, said that the committee should still send a referral for any crimes it uncovers.

“I would say that I don’t agree with what some of my colleagues have said about this,” Ms. Luria said on MSNBC this month. “I think it’s a lot more important to do what’s right than it is to worry about the political ramifications. This committee, our purpose is legislative and oversight, but if in the course of our investigation we find that criminal activity has occurred, I think it’s our responsibility to refer that to the Department of Justice.”

Ms. Cheney portrayed any divisions as minor and said the panel would work collaboratively and reach a consensus agreement.

“I’m confident we will work to come to agreement,” she said.

Although staff members have been in discussions about a referral, and some have debated the matter publicly, the committee members have not sat down together to discuss whether to proceed with a referral, several lawmakers said.

Representative Pete Aguilar, Democrat of California, said the committee was likely to hold off on making a final determination until investigators finished their work. He said the panel was “finishing up” its investigative phase and shifting to a more “public-facing” one in which the panel will present its findings.

“The members haven’t had those conversations,” Mr. Aguilar said of a meeting to discuss a potential referral. “Right now, we’re gathering the material that we need. As the investigative phase winds down, we’ll have more conversations about what the report looks like. But we’re not presupposing where that’s going to go before we get a little further with the interviews.”

Although the committee has the ability to subpoena testimony and documents and make referrals to the Justice Department for prosecutions, it has no criminal prosecution powers.

Ms. Cheney singled out Mr. Trump’s conduct at a public hearing in December, reading from the criminal code and laying out how she believed he had obstructed Congress.

In early March, the committee in effect road-tested whether the evidence it had gathered could support a prosecution, laying out in a filing in the civil case before Judge Carter its position that Mr. Trump and Mr. Eastman had obstructed Congress and defrauded the American public.

In validating the committee’s position, legal experts said, the judge made it difficult for the Justice Department to avoid an investigation. Mr. Garland has given no public indication of the department’s intentions other than to say that it will follow the facts and the law. But subpoenas issued by a federal grand jury indicate that prosecutors are gathering information about a wide array of issues, including about efforts to obstruct the election certification by people in the Trump White House and in Congress.

Investigators from the House committee and the Justice Department have not been sharing information, except to avoid conflicts around the scheduling of certain witnesses.

“We want them to move faster, but we respect their work,” Mr. Aguilar said, adding that the committee has a different goal than the Justice Department’s inquiry: to fully investigate what led to the riot, which injured more than 150 police officers, and take legislative steps to prevent a repeat. “It’s an insult to the lives of the Capitol Police officers if we don’t pursue what happened and take meaningful and concrete steps to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.”

Aside from the question of whether to make a referral about Mr. Trump, the committee has moved aggressively to use the Justice Department to ensure that witnesses cooperate with its investigation. The committee has made criminal referrals against four Trump White House officials for their refusal to sit for questioning or hand over documents, accusing them of contempt of Congress. But the Justice Department has charged only one — Stephen K. Bannon — frustrating the committee.

Those frustrations played out in public at a hearing this month, when Ms. Lofgren said: “This committee is doing its job. The Department of Justice needs to do theirs.”

Ms. Lofgren said she had not planned to make the remarks, but as she sat on the dais during the hearing, she decided to veer from her planned remarks because the department’s slowness in addressing the contempt referrals ate at her.

“Some of us did express some frustration. I’m among them,” she said. “Honestly, I hadn’t planned to say that. It wasn’t my script. It wasn’t there. But I thought, you know, this is frustrating. I just decided to say it.”

Trying to pressure the Justice Department to prosecute a contempt of Congress charge is more appropriate than other criminal referrals, Ms. Lofgren argued.

“It’s different than doing a referral generally for prosecution,” she said. “When you’re the victim of a crime, there is some weight to that. And when you are the victim of criminal contempt, as the committee is, you’re the victim. And so I think there was some stature to that.”

The committee is preparing to hold public hearings in May and June, and to make a final report in September.

After interviewing more than 800 witnesses — including more than a dozen Trump White House officials — the panel has another 100 interviews lined up, including some witnesses it wants to bring in a second time. Among those scheduled to testify soon is Stephen Miller, a former White House adviser to Mr. Trump, who the committee says helped spread false claims of voter fraud in the election and encouraged state legislatures to appoint alternate slates of electors in an effort to invalidate Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.

Mr. Miller has sued to block the committee from gaining access to his phone records, arguing in part that the panel was invading his parents’ privacy since he was on their family plan.

The committee is still deciding whether to call some key witnesses, including Mr. Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and Virginia Thomas, the wife of Justice Clarence Thomas, who urged Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff at the time, to work to keep Mr. Trump in office.

“We have completed a substantial amount of work,” Ms. Lofgren said. “We’re going to accomplish — we hope — what we set out to do, which is to tell the entire story of what happened, the events of the 6th and the events that led up to the day.”

Maggie Haberman contributed reporting.

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Tesla adds to wave of megacap stock splits

A driver recharges the battery of his Tesla car at a Tesla Super Charging station in a petrol station on the highway in Sailly-Flibeaucourt, France, January 12, 2019. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File Photo/File Photo

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March 28 (Reuters) – Tesla’s (TSLA.O) announcement on Monday that it will seek shareholder approval to increase its share count in order to enable a stock split adds to a recent wave of megacap companies splitting their shares in a bid to attract more investors.

Tesla said in a filing it would hold a vote at its upcoming annual shareholder meeting to increase the number of authorized shares in order to enable a stock split. read more

A stock split by Tesla, which would have be approved by its board of directors, would be the electric car maker’s second since 2020, and it would follow stock split announcements by other major U.S. companies in recent years.

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In the past two years, Apple (AAPL.O), Nvidia (NVDA.O) and Tesla (TSLA.O) have split their shares, while Amazon (AMZN.O) and Google-parent Alphabet (GOOGL.O) have recently announced upcoming share splits.

Megacap stock splits

Companies split their shares to make their stock prices appear less expensive and appeal to more investors. However, splitting a stock does not affect its underlying fundamentals.

Still, BofA Global Research said in recent research note that stock splits “historically are bullish” for companies that enact them, with their shares marking an average returns of 25% one year later versus 9% for the market overall.

Tesla’s stock surged 8% on Monday, adding over $100 billion to its stock market value.

Reuters Graphics

Amazon has gained about 20% since March 9, when the ecommerce heavyweight announced a stock split that will take effect on June 6. That compares to a 7% gain in the Nasdaq (.IXIC) during the same period. During that time, Wall Street has also seen a broad rebound in megacap growth stocks following losses earlier this year, as well as volatility related to rising interest rates and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Tesla was the most traded stock among Fidelity’s online brokerage customers on Monday, with buy and sell orders almost evenly split, suggesting retail investors are cautious about the company.

Reuters Graphics

Since joining the S&P 500 in December 2020, Tesla has been one of its most heavily weighted stocks, currently accounting for over 2% of the index. It has gained about 300% since announcing its first stock split in August 2020.

Other S&P 500 companies with nominally high share prices, which analysts say could hint at a future stock split announcement, include Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG.N), up 0.1% on Monday at $1,558, as well as Booking Holdings (BKNG.O), trading near flat at about $2,247.

Reuters Graphics
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Reporting by Noel Randewich; Editing by Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Rosario Dawson splits from Senator Cory Booker 

New Jersey Senator Cory Booker and his actress girlfriend Rosario Dawson have split after almost three years together, sources claim. 

A source close to the A-list couple told People that Dawson and Booker have decided to put an end to their relationship, but remained in good terms and considered each other ‘good friends.’ 

The pair reportedly met at a fundraiser for then-Maryland gubernatorial candidate Ben Jealous in 2017.

Dawson, 42, was in a relationship at the time, and when they reconnected months later in 2018, Booker was eager – yet nervous-, to ask for her phone number.   

‘I had one of those really awkward experiences. I am United States Senator, and I had to get up the courage to walk up to her and ask her for her phone number,’ Booker, 52, told CNN at a Town Hall in March 2019. 

‘I had trouble asking for her phone number…I think I said something really stupid like, ‘Uh, how would I get in touch with you?’ And she mercifully said something like, ‘Oh, you want my phone number?’ And my insides were like, ‘Hell, yeah!’ Booker told the Washington Post that same year.  

New Jersey Senator Cory Booker and his actress girlfriend Rosario Dawson have called it quits after almost three years together, pictured in 2019 

Dawson and Booker were first spotted flirting at the Broadway show Dear Evan Hanson, with Booker allegedly singing ‘I love you’ to Dawson while they took pictures with the cast backstage.  

Rumors soon emerged that the Senator and The Mandalorian actress were together. 

In February 2019, Booker confirmed he was in a relationship but declined to say who her partner was.

‘I’m dating somebody really special,’ he told the radio show The Breakfast Club,’I got a boo.’   

Dawson then confirmed the relationship to TMZ in March that year, adding that she was grateful to be with somebody she ‘respected, admired and loved so much.’

Rumors that they had broken up first emerged in November last year, with two sources telling Marie Claire the power couple had decided to go their separate ways due to their conflicting schedules and the distance. Above, Dawson and Booker on the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon 

A sourced told People the couple is no longer dating but they remain ‘good friends.’ Above, Booker and Dawson visit SiriusXM Studios on February 07, 2020 in New York City

By April 2019, Booker was making appearances on Dawson’s Instagram feed, with her more than a million followers hyping up the romance. 

Appearing on RuPaul’s talk show in 2019 amid his bid to become the Democratic Presidential Nominee, Booker even ventured to suggest the couple could get married.

When RuPaul remarked that, if elected, Booker would be the first unmarried President in a long time, the Senator said things could change. 

‘The swearing in isn’t until the 21st of January, 2021. You never know what might happen between now and then,’ Booker said at the time.

During the three-year romance, the couple often appeared together at red carpets and Booker’s event for his Presidential campaign. 

To maintain the relationship alive with their busy schedules, the couple would reportedly FaceTime each other and meet weekly.

In May 2020, as Booker embarked on his campaign, Dawson sold her California home and moved with him to New Jersey.  

‘This is the first time in my life I’ve really lived with somebody — and obviously Rosario and I are enjoying and adjusting to that, right?’ Booker told BuzzFeed at the time.  

‘I have not done that, really, as a bachelor, where I actually sit at a table and just, like, breathe and eat a meal,’ he added.   

Rumors that they had broken up first emerged in November last year, with two sources telling Marie Claire the power couple had decided to go their separate ways due to their conflicting schedules and the distance. 

Booker had been working in Washington to support Biden’s Build Back Better plan, while Dawson had been working on several projects.  



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Former DOJ official splits with lawyer before Jan. 6 testimony

Jeffrey Clark has parted ways with his lawyer.

The former top Trump Justice Department official is scheduled to field questions from Jan. 6 committee investigators on Friday. But he and Robert Driscoll, the Washington attorney who has been representing him, have recently parted ways, according to two people with knowledge of the matter on Wednesday. It is unclear if the departure will impact Clark’s interview.

Clark has drawn notoriety for his role in the final days of the Trump administration. He pushed for other senior DOJ officials to greenlight a letter falsely claiming the FBI found serious evidence of voter fraud in multiple states. At one point, Trump also discussed firing his acting Attorney General Jeff Rosen and replacing him with Clark. When the rest of the department’s top leadership learned of the plan, they told Trump in a White House meeting that they would all quit if the president followed through on it.

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