Tag Archives: swings

Box Office: ‘Godzilla x Kong’ Staying on Top, ‘Monkey Man’ Swings Into Second and ‘The First Omen’ Gets Crossed Up – Variety

  1. Box Office: ‘Godzilla x Kong’ Staying on Top, ‘Monkey Man’ Swings Into Second and ‘The First Omen’ Gets Crossed Up Variety
  2. How to Watch ‘Monkey Man’: Is Dev Patel’s Movie Streaming? Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Directing ‘Monkey Man,’ Dev Patel Makes Himself an Action Hero The New York Times
  4. Box Office: ‘Monkey Man’ Fights Off ‘First Omen’ in Thursday Night Previews Hollywood Reporter
  5. ‘Godzilla x Kong’ Rising To $30M; ‘Monkey Man’ Sees $10M, ‘First Omen’ Jinxed With $8M+ – Box Office Deadline

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‘Across the Spider-Verse’ Swings Toward ‘Into the Spider-Verse’s Lifetime Total at Domestic Box Office – Collider

  1. ‘Across the Spider-Verse’ Swings Toward ‘Into the Spider-Verse’s Lifetime Total at Domestic Box Office Collider
  2. Sony Sent Updated Version of ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’ to Movie Theaters After Sound Complaints Yahoo Entertainment
  3. 10 Things Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse Does Better Than Into The Spider-Verse CBR – Comic Book Resources
  4. Across the Spider-Verse Weaves a Messy Relationship with Police Gizmodo
  5. ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’s Ending Fails in One Frustrating Way Inverse
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Warner Bros. Discovery Swings to $50M Streaming Profit, Says U.S. Streaming Business Will Be Profitable for 2023 – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Warner Bros. Discovery Swings to $50M Streaming Profit, Says U.S. Streaming Business Will Be Profitable for 2023 Hollywood Reporter
  2. Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav explains how it turned a $50 million streaming profit in Q1 CNBC Television
  3. Warner Bros. Discovery reports big overall loss even as streaming turns a profit CNBC
  4. What to expect in Warner Bros. Discovery’s Q1 earnings amid Hollywood writers’ strike Yahoo Finance
  5. Warner Bros. Discovery: Should You Throw In The Towel On Disappointing Q1 Earnings? (WBD) Seeking Alpha
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Pickleball Slam: Roddick, Agassi, McEnroe, Chang take swings – The Associated Press

  1. Pickleball Slam: Roddick, Agassi, McEnroe, Chang take swings The Associated Press
  2. John McEnroe Is Playing Pickleball for $1 Million? You Cannot Be Serious The Wall Street Journal
  3. Pickleball Slam: John McEnroe is playing in it, but he isn’t a big fan of, well, pickleball | Opinion Miami Herald
  4. Feast Your Eyes On A Vlasic, Er, Classic Lineup For The Inaugural Pickleball Slam On ESPN Sunday espnfrontrow.com
  5. Pickleball Slam 2023: Why are Roddick, Agassi, McEnroe and Chang competing again and how much money can they Marca English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Banks Are Melting’—Elon Musk Sends Warning To Joe Biden And The Fed Amid Wild Bitcoin, Ethereum And Crypto Price Swings – Forbes

  1. ‘Banks Are Melting’—Elon Musk Sends Warning To Joe Biden And The Fed Amid Wild Bitcoin, Ethereum And Crypto Price Swings Forbes
  2. Bill Ackman warns US economy headed for ‘train wreck’ after latest Fed rate hike Yahoo Finance
  3. Elon Musk claps back at Biden over climate change tweet Fox Business
  4. Elon Musk says ChatGPT ‘couldn’t do worse’ than Fed boss Powell after hike Markets Insider
  5. Elon Musk says Jerome Powell is so bad at his job that GPT-4 would be a better Fed chair: ‘This foolish rate hike will worsen depositor flight’ Yahoo Finance
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Android swings + slot machines [Video]

Google is back at CES for the first time in several years. To highlight several of the big software announcements, there’s a huge Android booth for attendees to visit. Not everyone is able to attend CES in Las Vegas, but we’ve made things a little easier by touring it for you.

The space just outside the Las Vegas Convention Center is home to Google for CES 2023, but it also is most certainly a vehicle for the Android operating system. Most importantly, there’s room for plenty of “Bugdroid” in all forms and finishes.

Before the booth opened to the public, Google gave selected media (including 9to5Google) a chance for a sneak peek inside the dedicated Android booth for CES 2023. There were plenty of demos for features like enhanced group Nearby Share, cross-device audio switching, improved Android Auto redesign, and even a brief demo of the smart home Matter quick connection in action. If you have a Pixel Watch, you’ll soon be able to keep your phone unlocked so long as your wearable is nearby. This was showcased in a neat throwback “slide to unlock” setup.

The CES booth has plenty of room for some Google Assistant action plus the deeper Fitbit integration with your Pixel Watch and Pixel phone. All of this was wrapped up in typically Googley color schemes and a little bit of Material You plus a Bugdroid-themed swing seat to chill on.

To top the whole thing off, there was even a Fast Pair-powered slot machine that dispensed candy-filled gacha pods in the classic Google green color. You don’t need to miss out, check out our brief first-person tour of Google’s Android CES booth down below:

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China’s capital swings from anger over zero-COVID to coping with infections

BEIJING, Dec 11 (Reuters) – Beijing’s COVID-19 gloom deepened on Sunday with many shops and other businesses closed, and an expert warned of many thousands of new coronavirus cases as anger over China’s previous COVID policies gave way to worry about coping with infection.

China dropped most of its strict COVID curbs on Wednesday after unprecedented protests against them last month, but cities that were already battling with their most severe outbreaks, like Beijing, saw a sharp decrease in economic activity after rules such as regular testing were scrapped.

Anecdotal evidence suggests that many businesses have been forced to close as infected workers quarantine at home while many other people are deciding not to go out because of the higher risk of infection.

Zhong Nanshan, a prominent Chinese epidemiologist, told state media that the Omicron strain of the virus prevalent in China was highly transmissible and one infected person could spread it to as many as 18 others.

“We can see that hundreds of thousands or tens of thousands of people are infected in several major cities,” Zhong said.

With regular COVID testing of Beijing residents scrapped and reserved only for groups such as health workers, official tallies for new cases have plunged.

Health authorities reported 1,661 new infections for Beijing Saturday, down 42% from 3,974 on Dec. 6, a day before national policies were dramatically relaxed.

But evidence suggests there are many more cases in the city of nearly 22 million people where everyone seems to know someone who has caught COVID.

“In my company, the number of people who are COVID-negative is close to zero,” said one woman who works for a tourism and events firm in Beijing who asked to be identified as just Nancy.

“We realise this can’t be avoided – everyone will just have to work from home,” she said.

‘HIGHER RISK’

Sunday is a normal business day for shops in Beijing and it is usually bustling, particularly in spots like the historic Shichahai neighbourhood packed with boutiques and cafes.

But few people were out and about on Sunday and malls in Chaoyang, Beijing’s most populous district, were practically deserted with many salons, restaurants and retailers shut.

Economists widely expect China’s road to economic health to be uneven as shocks such as labour crunches due to workers calling in sick delay a full-fledged recovery for some time yet.

“The transition out of zero-COVID will eventually allow consumer spending patterns to return to normal, but a higher risk of infection will keep in-person spending depressed for months after re-opening,” Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics, said in a note.

China’s economy may grow 1.6% in the first quarter of 2023 from a year earlier, and 4.9% in the second, according to Capital Economics.

Epidemiologist Zhong also said it would be some months before a return to normal.

“My opinion is in the first half of next year, after March,” he said.

While China has removed most of its domestic COVID curbs, its international borders are still largely closed to foreigners, including tourists.

Inbound travellers are subjected to five days of quarantine at centralised government facilities and three additional days of self-monitoring at home.

But there are even hints that that rule could change.

Staff at the main international airport in Chengdu city, asked if quarantine rules were being eased, said that as of Saturday whether or not one needed to do the three days of home quarantine would depend on a person’s neighbourhood authorities.

(This story has been refiled to correct spelling of ‘woman’ in paragraph 9)

Reporting by Ryan Woo, Albee Zhang, Josh Arslan, Liz Lee and Judy Hua; Editing by Robert Birsel

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Italy swings to far-right: Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party set to win Italy’s election

An alliance of far-right parties, led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party — whose origins lie in post-war fascism — were on track to win between 41 and 45% of the vote in Sunday’s general election, according to data from the Rai exit pollster Piepoli.

The ultra-conservative Brothers of Italy party looks likely to win between 22 and 26% of the vote, with coalition partners the League, led by Matteo Salvini, taking between 8.5 and 12.5% and Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia scoring between 6 and 8% of the vote.

As the leader of the far-right coalition, Meloni is now set to become Italy’s first female prime minister. Final results are expected early Monday.

Meloni’s party has seen an astronomical rise in popularity in recent years, having won just 4.5% of the vote in the last elections, in 2018.

Their popularity underscores Italy’s longstanding rejection of mainstream politics, seen most recently with the country’s support of anti-establishment parties such as the Five Star Movement and Salvini’s League.

Celebrating the early results on Sunday evening, Salvini said on Twitter, “Center-right in clear advantage both in the House and in the Senate! It will be a long night, but already now I want to say THANK YOU.”

Meloni, a 45-year-old mother from Rome who has campaigned under the slogan “God, country and family,” leads a party whose agenda is rooted in Euroskepticism, anti-immigration policies, and one that has also proposed curtailing LGBTQ and abortion rights.

The center-left coalition, led by the left-wing Democratic Party and centrist party +Europe are set to win between 25.5% and 29.5% of the vote, while former prime minister Giuseppe Conte’s bid to revive the Five Star Movement appeared to have been unsuccessful, taking just 14 to 17% of the vote.

The Democratic Party conceded defeat early Monday morning, calling the results a “sad evening for the country.”

“Undoubtedly we cannot, in light of the data seen so far, not attribute the victory to the right dragged by Giorgia Meloni. It is a sad evening for the country,” Debora Serracchiani of the Democratic Party told reporters.

Sunday’s snap national election was triggered by party infighting that saw the collapse of Prime Minister Mario Draghi’s government in July.

Voters headed to the polls amid a number of new regulations, with voting hours also contained to one day rather than two.

Other changes included a younger voting age for the Senate and a reduction in the number of seats to elect — down from 685 seats to 400 in the Senate and from 315 to 200 in the lower House of Parliament. That parliament is scheduled to meet on October 13, at which point the head of state will call on party leaders to decide on the shape of the new government.

The buildup to the election was dominated by hot-button issues including Italy’s cost-of-living crisis, a 209-billion euro package from the European Covid-19 recovery fund and the country’s support for Ukraine.

Meloni differs from coalition partner leaders Berlusconi and Salvini on a number of issues, however, including Ukraine, and has no connection to Russian President Vladimir Putin, unlike the pair, who have said they would like to review sanctions against Russia because of their impact on the Italian economy. Meloni has instead been steadfast in her support for defending Ukraine.

The incoming prime minister — the sixth in just eight years — will be tasked in tackling those challenges, with soaring energy costs and economic uncertainty among the country’s most pressing.

And while Meloni is slated to make history as Italy’s first female prime minister, her politics do not mean that she is necessarily interested in advancing women’s rights.

Emiliana De Blasio, adviser for diversity and inclusion at LUISS University in Rome told CNN Meloni is “not raising up at all questions on women’s rights and empowerment in general.”

Sunday’s results come as other far-right parties in other European countries have marked recent gains, including the rise in Sweden’s anti-immigration party, Sweden Democrats — a party with neo-Nazi roots — who are expected to play a major role in the new government after winning the second largest share of seats at a general election earlier this month.

And in France, while far-right ideologue Marine Le Pen lost the French presidential election to Emmanuel Macron in April, her share of the popular vote shifted France’s political center dramatically to the right.

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Italy swings to far-right: Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party set to win Italy’s election

An alliance of far-right parties, led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party — whose origins lie in post-war fascism — were on track to win between 41 and 45% of the vote in Sunday’s general election, according to data from the Rai exit pollster Piepoli.

The ultra-conservative Brothers of Italy party looks likely to win between 22 and 26% of the vote, with coalition partners the League, led by Matteo Salvini, taking between 8.5 and 12.5% and Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia scoring between 6 and 8% of the vote.

As the leader of a far-right coalition, Meloni, a 45-year-old Euroskeptic firebrand, is now set to become Italy’s first female prime minister. Final results are expected early Monday.

Meloni’s party has seen an astronomical rise in popularity in recent years, having won just 4.5% of the vote in the last elections, in 2018.

Their popularity underscores Italy’s longstanding rejection of mainstream politics, seen most recently with the country’s support of anti-establishment parties such as the Five Star Movement and Salvini’s League.

Celebrating the early results on Sunday evening, Salvini said on Twitter, “Center-right in clear advantage both in the House and in the Senate! It will be a long night, but already now I want to say THANK YOU.”

Meloni, a 45-year-old mother from Rome who has campaigned under the slogan “God, country and family,” leads a party whose agenda is rooted in Euroskepticism, anti-immigration policies, and one that has also proposed curtailing LGBTQ and abortion rights.

The center-left coalition, led by the left-wing Democratic Party and centrist party +Europe are set to win between 25.5% and 29.5% of the vote, while former prime minister Giuseppe Conte’s bid to revive the Five Star Movement appeared to have been unsuccessful, taking just 14 to 17% of the vote.

Sunday’s snap national election was triggered by party infighting that saw the collapse of Prime Minister Mario Draghi’s government in July.

Voters headed to the polls amid a number of new regulations, with voting hours also contained to one day rather than two.

Other changes included a younger voting age for the Senate and a reduction in the number of seats to elect — down from 685 seats to 400 in the Senate and from 315 to 200 in the lower House of Parliament. That parliament is scheduled to meet on October 13, at which point the head of state will call on party leaders to decide on the shape of the new government.

The buildup to the election was dominated by hot-button issues including Italy’s cost-of-living crisis, a 209-billion euro package from the European Covid-19 recovery fund and the country’s support for Ukraine.

Meloni differs from coalition partner leaders Berlusconi and Salvini on a number of issues, however, including Ukraine, and has no connection to Russian President Vladimir Putin, unlike the pair, who have said they would like to review sanctions against Russia because of their impact on the Italian economy. Meloni has instead been steadfast in her support for defending Ukraine.

The incoming prime minister — the sixth in just eight years — will be tasked in tackling those challenges, with soaring energy costs and economic uncertainty among the country’s most pressing.

And while Meloni is slated to make history as Italy’s first female prime minister, her politics do not mean that she is necessarily interested in advancing women’s rights.

Emiliana De Blasio, adviser for diversity and inclusion at LUISS University in Rome told CNN Meloni is “not raising up at all questions on women’s rights and empowerment in general.”

Sunday’s results come as other far-right parties in other European countries have marked recent gains, including the rise in Sweden’s anti-immigration party, Sweden Democrats — a party with neo-Nazi roots — who are expected to play a major role in the new government after winning the second largest share of seats at a general election earlier this month.

And in France, while far-right ideologue Marine Le Pen lost the French presidential election to Emmanuel Macron in April, her share of the popular vote shifted France’s political center dramatically to the right.

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PMS mood swings, anxiety a global public health issue, researchers say

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Premenstrual mood swings and anxiety are so common that they represent a “key public health issue globally,” according to a new study. Researchers from the University of Virginia say 64 percent of women experience these symptoms.

Their study finds most women experience premenstrual syndrome (PMS) symptoms every menstrual cycle, with those symptoms regularly affecting their day-to-day lives. Regardless of age, one of the most common reported PMS symptoms is mood swings or anxiety. Across all age groups, at least 61 percent of women report mood-related symptoms during every menstrual cycle. Researchers explain this suggests “that premenstrual mood symptoms are a key public health issue globally.”

“Our study demonstrates that premenstrual mood symptoms are incredibly common worldwide,” says senior study author Jennifer L. Payne, MD, director of the Reproductive Psychiatry Research Program at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, in a university release. “More important, a majority of women reported that their premenstrual symptoms interfered with their everyday life at least some of the time.”

Study authors initially set out to better understand the spectrum of PMS symptoms women experience, as well as how those symptoms impact their daily lives. To that end, the team analyzed over 238,000 survey responses from women between the ages of 18 and 55 living in 144 countries. Each participant used the Flo app, which helps women track their menstrual cycle, as well as their mood and physical symptoms during and after pregnancy.

PMS symptoms can change with age

Food cravings came in as the number one most common reported premenstrual symptom (85.28%), followed by mood swings or anxiety (64.18%) and fatigue (57.3%). Also, 28.61 percent of respondents told researchers their premenstrual symptoms interfered with their daily lives during each and every menstrual cycle. Similarly, another 34.84 percent said their premenstrual symptoms interfered with their everyday lives sometimes.

“The incidence of reported premenstrual mood and anxiety symptoms varied significantly by country from a low of 35.1% in Congo to a high of 68.6% in Egypt,” Dr. Payne adds. “Understanding whether differences in biology or culture underlie the country level rates will be an important future research direction.”

The research team notes that a number of PMS symptoms were much more common among older participants. These symptoms included absentmindedness, low libido, sleep changes, gastrointestinal symptoms, weight gain, headaches, sweating or hot flashes, fatigue, hair changes, rashes, and swelling. Study authors explain that the higher rate of physical symptoms among older women “makes sense” because many of those symptoms have a connection to perimenopause, a transition period to menopause which can cause irregular menstrual cycles.

Dr. Payne hopes this work will increase awareness among doctors and healthcare providers regarding the frequency of PMSsymptoms, particularly mood swings and anxiety.

“There are a number of treatment strategies that are available to treat premenstrual symptoms that interfere with a woman’s every day functioning,” the researcher concludes. “Increasing awareness of how common these symptoms are, and that if they impact functioning that there are treatments available, will help women improve their quality of life.”

The study is published in the journal Archives of Women’s Mental Health.



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