Tag Archives: trot

Charles III gets to trot out Conservative slogans in first King’s Speech – POLITICO Europe

  1. Charles III gets to trot out Conservative slogans in first King’s Speech POLITICO Europe
  2. King Charles III delivers first King’s Speech in more than 70 years to UK parliament – BBC News BBC News
  3. Charles gives first King’s Speech in 72 years amid parliamentary pomp – The Washington Post The Washington Post
  4. In his speech, King Charles spoke of ‘my government’. Well, it certainly isn’t ours The Guardian
  5. This king’s speech will deliver the final blows from a Tory party facing oblivion The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Watch: BTS’s Jin Drops Trot Song “Super Tuna” In Celebration Of His Birthday

BTS’s Jin surprised fans with a new song on his birthday, December 4!

On the evening of December 4 KST, Jin shared a song called “Super Tuna” on BTS’s official YouTube channel and blog. Jin co-produced the song with BUMZU, who also provided the synthesizer and background vocals. The guitar was provided by Park Gi Tae of PRISMFILTER. The mix and mastering engineer was Anchor at PRISMFILTER MIX LAB and the recording engineer was Son Yoo Jung at HYBE Studio.

“Super Tuna” is a trot song, a genre of Korean pop music known for its distinctive singing style with vocal inflections that was particularly popular in the 1960s and 70s. The genre has recently seen a resurgence in South Korea with the popularity of TV Chosun’s “Miss Trot” and “Mister Trot” series.

The “album photo” for “Super Tuna” also mimics the bright graphics and over-the-top design of older trot albums, along with a photo of Jin fishing, which is one of his hobbies. Jin also shared a fun choreography video of “Super Tuna” for fans!

Check out the videos below:

BTS recently wrapped up their highly successful four-day concert at the SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

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Have you seen tardigrades walk? Scientists decode why they trot like insects

Tardigrades, or water bears, are some of the smallest – and most resilient – creatures on the planet. Though the largest of these microscopic four-legged creatures are no bigger than 1.5 mm, they have been found to withstand extreme temperatures and pressures, air deprivation, radiation, starvation. Not only that, they have successfully survived the vacuums of outer space as well.

However, their survival depends extensively on a ‘slow and controlled dehydration’, which, if rushed through, could prove fatal for the organism. This makes the ability to move around an important factor in managing dehydration and rehydration as well as finding mates, food, and escaping predators.

Their slow gait, which earned them their name (Tardigrada means slow stepper in Italian) as long back as the eighteenth century, has been a matter of inquiry for quite some time. A recent study has found that their gait resembles that of insects that are much bigger than the tardigrade, and have skeletal structures that are remarkably different. Furthermore, there is also a considerable difference in the environment of arthropods and tardigrades.

Tardigrades navigate a heterogeneous environment and their locomotion needs to fit the bill. Different situations also call for different speeds, so locomotive capabilities need to be attuned to that as well. These environments consist of aquatic (both marine and freshwater) as well as terrestrial terrains.

In order to further understand this, the study had examined the walk of Hypsibius exemplaris, a species of tardigrades, on two different substrates made of polyacrylamide gel through a light microscope under different environments. It was observed that the way in which a tardigrade coordinates its leg movements is very similar to that of insects like stick bugs (Carausius morosus). Neither the tardigrade nor do insects show distinct gaits, but instead, show a smooth continuous transition across different speeds. A good example of a distinct, discrete gait for different speeds would be that of a horse: its ‘walk’ is distinct from a ‘trot’, which is again distinct from a ‘gallop’.

Common neural network

Most soft animals like worms are devoid of legs and their style of movement lacks regularity. One of the questions that the study engages with is why a soft, small animal like the tardigrade would need legs – and walk like insects – in the first place? After all, most small organisms lacking a skeleton have a manner of locomotion other than walking. The authors put forward two theories for that. One is that the similarities in the tardigrade gait and that of arthropods stem from a common neural network.

Soft-bodied worms (nematodes and annelids) and insects with an exoskeleton (arthropods), share the ventral nerve cord (VNC), the equivalent of the spinal cord in vertebrates.

While most worms (the study cites the example of the velvet worm) have the VNC remarkably different from that of arthropods, tardigrades, on the other hand, have a VNC ‘strikingly similar’ to that of insects.

In both insects and tardigrades, the VNC is divided, with each division controlling one pair of limbs, and with the right half controlling the left and vice versa (‘contralateral projection’ in scientific jargon). Worms, on the other hand, have an unsegmented VNC.

Parallel evolution

The second theory is that the walking styles of tardigrades and arthropods (insects) are an example of convergent, but independent, evolution whereby two species evolve to develop similar physical characteristics.

In other words, this implies, the common underlying neural circuitry mentioned above might not have a common ancestor, and the similarity in walking patterns might have evolved parallel to each other. This is ‘intriguing,’ the paper states, as arthropods and tardigrades have seemingly diametrically opposite ecologies, skeletal structures, and size differences.

So, does this imply that there may be more to the evolution of four-legged walking that meets the eye? “The preference for tetrapod-like coordination in both tardigrades and far larger species like the stick insect point to [its] importance in… species that regularly navigate variable, three-dimensional terrain,” the paper states.

– The author is a freelance science communicator. (mail[at]ritvikc[dot]com)



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Aaron Judge takes apparent dig at Jose Altuve during home run trot in New York Yankees win

HOUSTON — Let bygones, be bygones? Not for Aaron Judge.

The All-Star outfielder hit his 21st home run of the season against Zack Greinke Saturday night, which was the only run scored by the New York Yankees in their 1-0 win over the Houston Astros in what was a masterful nine-inning shutout by Gerrit Cole.

As Judge rounded third base, he seemed to take a shot at 2017 American League MVP Jose Altuve. Judge briefly held his jersey and seemed to imitate Altuve gesturing to his teammates to not rip off his shirt after his pennant-winning, walk-off homer in the 2019 American League Championship Series.

Altuve purported that a bad tattoo on his collarbone was the reason why the Astros All-Star second baseman did not want his jersey ripped off.

Video replay of Altuve agitatedly motioning to his jersey and shaking his head and finger in a “no” gesture as he rounded third base inspired a debate over whether the Astros were cheating by using buzzers under their jerseys which would let them know what pitch was coming.

“Whenever they keep the roof closed here, it’s pretty chilly. So just letting my team know to button up a little bit,” Judge said, tongue-in-cheek, when asked about whether the gesture was directed towards the opposing team dugout. Teammate Kyle Higashioka, who admitted he did not notice Judge’s gesture, said it was likely just “playful banter.”

An investigation led by Major League Baseball confirmed the Astros had cheated by using a camera-based, sign-stealing system during their 2017 World Series-winning regular season and playoffs, and during part of the 2018 regular season. The investigation detailed that the sign-stealing did not take place in 2019.

Judge was one of the many players that did not mince words when addressing the Astros sign-stealing scandal last year, saying the team should vacate the title and that players should have been punished. Judge also said he believes that the sign-stealing scheme had a direct impact on the 2017 ALCS, which the Yankees lost to Houston in seven games.

Altuve and Judge were both selected as starters for the 2021 All-Star Game. Altuve decided not to play in the Midsummer Classic at Coors Field on Tuesday and will instead remain in Houston to deal with an unspecified left leg injury. Judge is one of three All-Stars for the Yankees this year, alongside Cole and Aroldis Chapman.

Judge’s third-inning home run was all Cole would need after allowing only three hits over nine shutout innings. Cole threw 129 pitches against his former team, a new career high and an MLB season high, and struck out 12 batters. His performance was made all the more impressive by the fact that he had been dealing with an undisclosed illness that severely affected him physically, to the point where he could not keep food down and needed intravenous fluids, leading to his turn in the rotation being questionable at one point.

“It’s probably one of the greatest [performances] I’ve ever seen, certainly in a regular-season setting,” said Boone of Cole’s outing, his first shutout since May 4, 2018, against the Arizona Diamondbacks. “And honestly, two days ago, I didn’t know if he was going to be able to make the start. He was under the weather and getting IVs in Seattle. So it was even questionable whether he’s gonna go out there. Not only does he go out there, he does that. It was that’s about as special as it gets.”

Judge had high praise for Cole’s performance, particularly in response to being one of the starters singled out as having diminished results since the league-wide crackdown on the use of foreign substances on baseballs.

“That took guts. That took heart,” Judge said. “People can say what they want about different things going on or he’s not the same but he’s the same guy. He brought the intensity tonight; we fed off him all night. And to keep a team like the Astros, shut them out for all nine, it’s pretty impressive.

“I know they’re missing a couple of their big bats, [Alex] Bregman and [Carlos] Correa, especially. But that was just an impressive performance all night. And even in the ninth inning trying to get pulled, he said ‘no, this is this is my game.’ You love to see that out of your ace.”

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