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Tesla’s $25k Model 2 car expected to be unveiled in 2024

TSLA analysts at Loup Ventures think the Tesla Model 2 will be unveiled in 2024. 

“Tesla will wait until 2024 to announce Model 2,” stated Loup Ventures in its 2022 Predictions letter.

“If the company announces the lower-price[d] car too early, they risk slowing sales of Model 3 while ramping capacity during what is likely to be a broader auto recession,” Loup Ventures explained. 

The venture capital firm expects Tesla to provide a Model 2 preview in early 2024 and start ramping production on the new electric car design in mid-2025.

Tesla Model 2 Details

So far, only a few details have been released about the Model 2. Although Tesla has not really confirmed any of those details. 

Elon Musk has set some goals for the new electric vehicle model that Tesla might focus on during the development of the Model 2. 

First, the Model 2’s price target is $25,000, which would make it Tesla’s most affordable unit yet when it does start selling. Second, the Model 2 will be either a compact car or a subcompact vehicle–a popular design in Europe and Asia. 

Tesla China is reportedly working on Model 2 development. Chinese media have published reports stating that Model 2 development has already started. Speculations in 2022 pointed to a tentative Model 2 release date in 2023. 

The name of Tesla’s $25,000 compact/subcompact vehicle has yet to be officially announced. The terms Model 2 and Model Q have been used to refer to the upcoming electric vehicle, but Tesla has not confirmed the moniker. During his virtual appearance in the 2022 B20 Summit in Indonesia, Elon Musk was asked if Tesla would name the upcoming entry-level EV the Model I. Musk neither confirmed nor denied the name. Instead, he stated that a more economical car made sense. 

Tesla already has a busy schedule coming into 2023. It is working on the Model 3 revamp, a possible Model Y update, and the Cybertruck’s initial production ramp at Giga Texas. The Tesla Cybertruck might be Tesla’s priority in the first half of 2023.

Do you know anything about Tesla’s next gigafactory location? Contact me at maria@teslarati.com or via Twitter @Writer_01001101.

Tesla’s $25k Model 2 car expected to be unveiled in 2024








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Oscars 2023 Shortlists for 95th Academy Awards Unveiled – The Hollywood Reporter

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on Tuesday unveiled its shortlists for the 2023 Oscars in 10 categories, including documentary and international features as well as documentary short subject, makeup and hairstyling, original score, original song, animated short, live-action short, sound and visual effects.

Fifteen international features advanced, out of the films from 92 countries and regions that were eligible. The list includes Close (Belgium), Decision to Leave (South Korea), All Quiet on the Western Front (Germany), Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s Bardo (Mexico) and Joyland, which gives Pakistan its first shortlisted film in the category.

India’s international entry, Last Film Show, also made that list, while another Indian film, RRR, made the shortlist for its energetic song “Naatu Naatu.” All Quiet on the Western Front was additionally shortlisted for makeup and hairstyling, score, sound and VFX.

This year, 144 documentary features were eligible, and 15 advanced, including All That Breathes, Fire of Love and Moonage Daydream (which additionally made the shortlist in the sound category). Among the more surprising omissions was Mars Rover doc Good Night Oppy. Members of the Documentary Branch vote to determine the shortlist and the nominees for documentary feature and well as documentary short (15 films were shortlisted from 98 qualified shorts).

Fifteen scores advanced out of 147 eligible titles; members of the music branch vote to determine the shortlist and the nominees. The list includes several past Oscar winners, including five-time Oscar winner John Williams for The Fablemans (with 53 nominations, Williams is the most-nominated living individual), Ludwig Göransson for Black Panther: Wakanda Forever; Hildur Gudnadóttir for Sarah Polley’s Women Talking (her second film, Todd Field’s Tár, didn’t make it through this round); and Alexandre Desplat for Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (Pinocchio was additionally shortlisted for its song “Ciao Papa” and its sound.)

Meanwhile, 15 songs will advance among the 81 eligible tunes, with members of the Music Branch also selecting these nominees. The shortlist includes star power from the likes of Rihanna, for “Lift Me Up” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever; Lady Gaga, for “Hold My Hand” from Top Gun: Maverick; and Taylor Swift, for “Carolina” from Where the Crawdads Sing.

The Sound Branch, which selects the shortlisted movies and nominees in the sound category, reinstated its bake-off and shortlist a year ago. Branch members will be able to view excerpts from each of the 10 shortlisted films beginning Jan. 12 in the San Francisco Bay area, followed by New York, London and Los Angeles.

Among the individuals to watch is two-time Oscar winner Andy Nelson, who with 22 Academy Award nominations holds the record for the most noms in the sound category and is currently tied with Randy Newman for the third-most noms among living persons. This year, his sound work is shortlisted in three movies: Babylon, The Batman and Elvis.

The VFX shortlist, selected by the VFX branch executive committee, includes presumed frontrunner Avatar: The Way of Water and nine additional movies, including Black Panther: Wakanda Forever and Top Gun: Maverick. The 10 shortlisted titles will be featured in the VFX branches’ Jan. 14 bake-off, involving excerpts from the movies and interviews with the contenders, before branch members vote on the five nominees.

The Academy’s Makeup Artists and Hairstylists Branch will additionally participate in a bake-off, slated for Jan. 15, during which branch members are invited to view excerpts and interviews with the artists from each of the 10 shortlisted films.

The shortlists also include 15 live-action shorts (out of the 200 that qualified for consideration) and 15 animated shorts (81 qualified). Members of the Short Films and Feature Animation, Directors, Producers and Writers Branches vote to determine the shortlist and the nominees.

Nominations voting runs from Jan. 12-17, and nominations will be announced Jan. 24. The 95th Oscars are slated to be held March 12 at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.

The complete shortlists follow. (Read The Hollywood Reporter awards expert Scott Feinberg’s analysis here.)

DOCUMENTARY FEATURE FILM

All That Breathes
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
Bad Axe
Children of the Mist
Descendant
Fire of Love
Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song
Hidden Letters
A House Made of Splinters
The Janes
Last Flight Home
Moonage Daydream
Navalny
Retrograde
The Territory

DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILM

American Justice on Trial: People v. Newton
Anastasia
Angola Do You Hear Us? Voices from a Plantation Prison
As Far as They Can Run
The Elephant Whisperers
The Flagmakers
Happiness Is £4 Million
Haulout
Holding Moses
How Do You Measure a Year?
The Martha Mitchell Effect
Nuisance Bear
Shut Up and Paint
Stranger at the Gate
38 at the Garden

INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM

Argentina, Argentina, 1985
Austria, Corsage
Belgium, Close
Cambodia, Return to Seoul
Denmark, Holy Spider
France, Saint Omer
Germany, All Quiet on the Western Front
India, Last Film Show
Ireland, The Quiet Girl
Mexico, Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths
Morocco, The Blue Caftan
Pakistan, Joyland
Poland, EO
South Korea, Decision to Leave
Sweden, Cairo Conspiracy

MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING

All Quiet on the Western Front
Amsterdam
Babylon
The Batman
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Blonde
Crimes of the Future
Elvis
Emancipation
The Whale

MUSIC (ORIGINAL SCORE)

All Quiet on the Western Front
Avatar: The Way of Water
Babylon
The Banshees of Inisherin
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Devotion
Don’t Worry Darling
Everything Everywhere All at Once
The Fabelmans
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
Nope
She Said
The Woman King
Women Talking

MUSIC (ORIGINAL SONG)

“Time” from Amsterdam
“Nothing Is Lost (You Give Me Strength)” from Avatar: The Way of Water
“Lift Me Up” from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
“This Is A Life” from Everything Everywhere All at Once
“Ciao Papa” from Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
“Til You’re Home” from A Man Called Otto
“Naatu Naatu” from RRR
“My Mind & Me” from Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me
“Good Afternoon” from Spirited
“Applause” from Tell It like a Woman
“Stand Up” from Till
“Hold My Hand” from Top Gun: Maverick
“Dust & Ash” from The Voice of Dust and Ash
“Carolina” from Where the Crawdads Sing
“New Body Rhumba” from White Noise

ANIMATED SHORT FILM

Black Slide
The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
The Debutante
The Flying Sailor
The Garbage Man
Ice Merchants
It’s Nice in Here
More than I Want to Remember
My Year of Dicks
New Moon
An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It
Passenger
Save Ralph
Sierra
Steakhouse

LIVE-ACTION SHORT FILM
Fifteen films will advance in the Live Action Short Film category for the 95th Academy Awards.  Two hundred films qualified in the category.  Members of the Short Films and Feature Animation, Directors, Producers and Writers Branches vote to determine the shortlist and the nominees.

The films, listed in alphabetical order by title, are:

All in Favor
Almost Home
An Irish Goodbye
Ivalu
Le Pupille
The Lone Wolf
Nakam
Night Ride
Plastic Killer
The Red Suitcase
The Right Words
Sideral
The Treatment
Tula
Warsha

SOUND

All Quiet on the Western Front
Avatar: The Way of Water
Babylon
The Batman
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Elvis
Everything Everywhere All at Once
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
Moonage Daydream
Top Gun: Maverick

VISUAL EFFECTS

All Quiet on the Western Front
Avatar: The Way of Water
The Batman
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore
Jurassic World Dominion
Nope
Thirteen Lives
Top Gun: Maverick



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B-21 bomber unveiled by Northrop Grumman in California

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PALMDALE, Calif. — The Pentagon and defense contractor Northrop Grumman unveiled the U.S. military’s bomber of the future on Friday, showcasing an aircraft cloaked in secrecy for years and set to serve as a backbone of Air Force combat operations for decades to come.

The B-21 Raider, with a distinctive batwing shape, was pulled forward out of a hangar here while awash in blue light as cinematic music played and Northrop Grumman employees cheered. The ceremony was held at the company’s facility at Air Force Plant 42, a heavily guarded, government-owned manufacturing facility north of Los Angeles, where some of the military’s most highly classified work occurs.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, speaking in front of the hangar, said that the plane is proof of the Defense Department’s long-term commitment to building advanced capabilities that “will fortify America’s ability to deter aggression, today and into the future.” The stealthy plane, he said, has “50 years of advances in low-observable technology” built in, making it difficult for “even the most sophisticated air-defense systems” to detect a B-21 in the sky.

“The B-21 looks imposing,” Austin said. “But what’s under the frame and the space-age coatings is even more impressive.”

Austin added that U.S. defense is rooted in deterrence, and the development of the B-21 again serves as a symbol.

“We are again making it plain to any potential foe: The risks and costs of aggression far outweigh any conceivable gains,” Austin said.

The program is expected to cost at least $80 billion, with the Air Force seeking at least 100 planes. It marks the U.S. military’s first aircraft with so called sixth-generation technology, relying on advanced artificial intelligence, computer networking and data fusion to assist pilots as they carry out long-range bombing missions requiring them to slip in and out of enemy airspace. The Air Force also is exploring whether the B-21 could be flown remotely, though that would likely occur years after it first takes flight.

Much of the program remains classified, even as senior U.S. defense officials and company executives celebrated its progress. Media attending the event here in Palmdale were required to follow a slew of ground rules, including a ban on cellphones within the viewing area and, for visual journalists, restrictions on how the aircraft could be photographed.

There are six prototypes of the B-21, company officials said. A first test flight is expected next year.

For now, the Raider is in a “ground test” phase, with officials from the Air Force and Northrop Grumman conducting stress tests, evaluating the application of its radar-deflecting paint, and scrutinizing basic functions such as taxiing, Northrop Grumman officials said.

More than 8,000 people are working on aspects of the program, with aircraft parts coming from 40 states.

The Pentagon intends for the Raider to replace aging B-2 Spirit and B-1B Lancer bombers, phasing out the older aircraft by the 2040s. B-52 bombers, many decades old, also could be replaced by the B-21 in coming years. The unveiling event Friday included flyovers by all three aging bombers.

Until 2006, the Defense Department believed it could get by with its existing fleet of bombers until 2037. But the Pentagon began researching alternatives over the next decade, launching a contract competition for a new long-range bomber in 2014.

The U.S. military has for many years encountered costly problems and delays in developing other major weapons systems, including the advanced F-35 fighter likely to be teamed with the B-21 in future operations.

Air Force and company officials said in a panel discussion with reporters on Friday that the program continues to meet service requirements for cost, though the cost per copy has continued to rise. In 2010, the service said it hoped each plane would cost about $550 million. By 2019, the price had risen to $639 million, according to a Congressional Research Service report released last year, and the cost is expected to continue climbing.

Gen. Charles “CQ” Brown, chief of staff of the Air Force, told reporters in Palmdale that the development of the B-21 has been a product of collaboration between the service and Northrop Grumman. He noted that the plane’s Raider nickname is a nod to the Doolittle Raiders, U.S. service members who launched a long, daring bombing raid into Japan in April 1942, just months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii drew the United States into World War II.

“That innovative spirit is sitting behind us right now,” Brown said, speaking in the hangar before the unveiling event as the B-21 sat under a cloak.

Kathy Warden, chief executive of Northrop Grumman, said Friday that the company iterated on thousands of versions of the plane before selecting a design. Some of its testing and development occurs digitally before the company builds hardware, limiting costs.

“In many ways,” Warden said, “we are taking technology from the future and bringing it to the here and now in this aircraft.”

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One thing we learned about each NFL team in Week 12: Chiefs’ major weakness unveiled; Broncos star CB in slump

The NFL certainly had an interesting Week 12 slate of games, including a record number of comebacks. Sunday was the first time in NFL history that four teams won after trailing by seven-plus points in the final two minutes of regulation. In all, five games were decided by a game-winning score in the final two minutes of regulation or in overtime this week.

The Jacksonville Jaguars and Los Angeles Chargers scored the game-winning points on a two-point conversion in the final 15 seconds of the fourth quarter, the first time in NFL history this has occurred on the same day (and just the third and fourth time overall). The league has seen the most comebacks through 12 weeks in history. 

As the league switches into December, here’s one thing we learned about each team in Week 12  with the playoff races heating up. 

Kyler Murray finally has DeAndre Hopkins and Marquise Brown in the lineup: It only took the Cardinals until the last week of November to finally have their top two receivers in the lineup. Hopkins and Brown combined for 10 catches (on 14 targets) for 133 yards and a touchdown in the loss to the Chargers. 

Even with both of his top receivers in the lineup, Murray averaged just 6.6 yards per attempt (slightly above his season average of 6.4). The Cardinals also went three-and-out on their last three possessions, targeting Brown and Hopkins only once. That’s unacceptable. 

Arizona has added weapons in its offense, yet the results remain the same. 

Tackling remains an issue on a tired defense: The Commanders made sure the Falcons defense was on the field for the majority of the second half in Sunday’s loss. The Commanders held the ball for 19:42 in the second half, exposing tackling woes that have plagued the Falcons the majority of the year. 

Atlanta missed seven tackles against the run, and part of that was a result of being on the field for 60 plays as the Commanders won the time of possession battle in the second half. Atlanta hasn’t stopped the run all year (21st in the league) and part of the issue is the missed tackles in run-stop situations. 

The Falcons allow 27.9% of first downs via the rush, the third-highest rate in the league. Not good. 

Red zone issues part of another late-game collapses: This collapse can absolutely be blamed on the defense, but let’s not miss the fact Baltimore went 2 of 5 in the red zone in Sunday’s loss to the Jaguars. In goal-to-go situations, Baltimore was 1 of 3 — as Lamar Jackson was only 1 for 4 for 5 yards in those situations. 

The Ravens are 24th in the NFL in red zone offense (51.7%) and 20th in goal-to-go situations (66.7%). Jackson completed just 46.4% of his passes in the red zone, although he has 13 touchdown passes — but only six since Week 4. 

If the Ravens score more touchdowns in the red zone, perhaps the two-score collapses will be less frequent. That was part of the case this week. 

Welcome back, Tre’Davious White: In his first game this season, White played 15 of the Bills’ 67 defensive snaps in the Thanksgiving win over Detroit. The Bills have been waiting for their superstar cornerback to return from his ACL tear, and it finally happened.

In his first game back, White wasn’t even targeted in his seven coverage snaps. He already earned the respect form the Lions offense, even in a game where he was the most vulnerable. 

White’s snaps will increase during the stretch run, and the Bills pass defense could use him for the playoffs. Buffalo’s 19th in pass yards per game allowed and 13th in passing touchdowns allowed, so White is a more-than-welcome addition. 

Brian Burns is one of the elite pass rushers: Plenty in Carolina know how good Burts is, but is play isn’t nearly talked about enough amongst the elite pass rushers in the game. Burns finished with eight pressures, three quarterback hits, and two sacks to lead a Carolina defense that held the Broncos to just three points in the first  57 minutes.

Burns has been terrorizing quarterbacks all season, as the Pro Bowler now has 10 sacks on the year. He also has 53 pressures, 17 quarterback hits, and a 14.8% pressure rate. Burns is fourth in the NFL in pressures and tied for fifth in sacks. He’s one of the elite pass rushers in a game.

Perhaps Carolina not winning is why he isn’t discussed enough amongst the best at his position. 

Offense has to get Chase Claypool going: Claypool had his best game in his short time with the Bears, finishing with two catches for 51 yards in a game where Justin Fields didn’t play. With Darnell Mooney out for an extended period of time (perhaps the rest of the year), it’s time for Claypool to step up. 

The 51 receiving yards amassed his output through his first three games. Claypool only had just 5 catches for 32 yards in his first three games with the Bears (7 catches for 83 yards overall). If the Bears are going to thrive when Fields gets back, they need to focus on Claypool more and get him acclimated to the offense. 

There are two No. 1 wide receivers on this roster: It didn’t take much to convince most people Tee Higgins would step up in the absence of Ja’Marr Chase, but Higgins put up No. 1 wide receiver numbers in the four games Chase missed. Higgins had 26 catches for 371 yards and two touchdowns over the last four games, averaging 14.3 yards per catch. 

He had 16 catches for 262 yards and a touchdown over the last two games (16.4 yards per catch), Chase-like numbers. The Bengals are going to be even more dangerous when Chase returns, knowing opposing defenses will have to stop Higgins too. 

Good luck. 

Jacoby Brissett gives Browns a shot in 2022 with Deshaun Watson returning: A 4-7 start may still be too much to overcome for the Browns to make the playoffs, but their playoff hopes would have been smashed with a loss to the Buccaneers. Brissett wasn’t great in Sunday’s win (23 of 37, 216 yards, touchdown and interception), but he was 8 of 14 for 116 yards with a touchdown in the fourth quarter and overtime (108.0 rating). 

Brissett held down the fort while Watson was suspended, compiling an 89.1 passer rating in the 11 games he played. With the Browns three games out of a playoff spot and six to play, it may be too late. At least Brissett went out a winner and gave them an outside chance. 

The tight ends are more dangerous than they let on: Dalton Schultz looks back to his 2021 self after catching two touchdown passes against the Giants on Thanksgiving. Schultz had his third touchdown in the last three weeks, while having 13 catches for 107 yards in that span. 

Peyton Hendershot also scored a touchdown on a jet sweep, making him a red zone threat if the Cowboys want to go to two tight end sets. This also includes the dangerous running back tandem of Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard to account for. 

The Cowboys have plenty of dangerous red zone targets, but now defenses have to account for the tight ends. Expect them to be utilized more in the coming weeks. 

Patrick Surtain is in a slump: Surtain is one of the best coverage corners in the game, but his last two games have been far from elite. In Sunday’s loss, Surtain was targeted five times and allowed three catches for 77 yards and a touchdown (104.2 rating when targeted). That touchdown was the five-yard pass to Moore. 

The week prior, Surtain allowed five catches for 106 yards and two touchdowns (118.8 rating). These were the only two games Surtain has allowed over an 80 passer rating all year. Surtain has allowed three touchdowns passes the last two weeks (zero the previous eight). 

Surtain is a great cornerback, but he’s struggled of late. 

The Lions have a significant guard problem: Injuries derailed the Lions at guard on Thanksgiving. Detroit had 71 snaps each from Kayode Awosika and Dan Skipper (along with four more from Logan Stenberg). Awosika and Skipper combined to allow four pressures and two sacks, as Jared Goff faced pressure up the middle throughout the game. 

The Bills also had seven tackles for loss and 10 quarterback hits. The Lions were held to 3.4 yards per carry, but that’s expected when the No. 5 and No. 6 guards are starting. Halapoulivaati Vaitai is likely done for the year and Tommy Kraemer has been out since Week 7. Evan Brown (ankle) and Jonah Jackson (concussion) may be back this week, which will help.

Detroit has a good offensive line, but it needs Brown and Jackson back to get back on the winning track. 

Two-minute defense still isn’t good: The Packers have been abysmal on defense in the final two minutes of the first half this season, allowing 60 points in the 12 games played. That’s five points per game. 

The two-minute defense reared its ugly heading Sunday’s loss to the Eagles, as Philadelphia got the ball with 2:16 left and drove nine plays for 66 yards and a touchdown — picking apart Green Bay’s defense in the process. 

Green Bay had the Eagles facing second-and-10 from the Packers’ 30-yard line with 19 seconds left, but Jalen Hurts threw a ball on the money to Quez Watkins — who made a spectacular catch for the touchdown. Hurts was 5 of 6 for 73 yards on the drive and he was sacked twice. 

The Packers just don’t make plays to end the first half — and they ended up losing by four on Sunday. 

Dameon Pierce has hit the rookie wall: The Texans are already the worst team in the NFL, and their offense is nonexistent when Pierce can’t get going. Pierce has 15 carries for 16 yards over the last two games, and the Texans have averaged just 4.5 points over the first three quarters in that stretch. 

Pierce is still a front-runner to win rookie of the year, but opposing defenses know they have to stop him to shut down the Texans. He has 788 rushing yards and four touchdowns, but the yards per carry average slipped to 4.4.

The Texans have to get more creative to free up Pierce in the final six games. Teams are just loading the box now. 

Run defense had another off night: After allowing 141 rushing yards to the Eagles, conventional wisdom suggested the Colts run defense would bounce back against the Steelers. All Pittsburgh did was rush for 172 yards and average 4.8 yards per carry against Indianapolis — a team that had allowed just 3.9 yards per carry on the year. 

Benny Snell didn’t have a carry all year, yet had 12 carries for 62 yards and a touchdown. The Colts held Najee Harris to 35 yards, but still let the Steelers offensive line bully them on the ground. Kenny Pickett generating 32 yards didn’t help matters. 

Quarterbacks that can run definitely hurt the Colts. Dak Prescott may want to make a note of that this week. 

Jacksonville Jaguars

Trevor Lawrence had his best fourth-quarter performance: Lawrence showcased why he’s the franchise quarterback the Jaguars envisioned he was when they took him No. 1 overall. In the fourth quarter against one of the most aggressive defenses in football, Lawrence went 15 of 19 for 173 yards with two touchdowns to zero interceptions and a 139.7 passer rating 

Sunday was just the second time in Jaguars history they won a game when trailing by seven-plus points in the final two minutes of regulation (first since 1996), all thanks to how Lawrence played. He has completed 66.5% of his passes for 2,655 yards with 16 touchdowns and six interceptions (93.6 rating) — all significant improvements over his disastrous rookie year. 

Over the last three games, Lawrence has completed 28 of 36 passes for 272 yards and three touchdowns in the fourth quarter (125.9 rating). The Jaguars quarterback is figuring out how to perform late in games, an excellent sign.

Special teams is the lone weakness: The Chiefs are last in the league in hidden points at a -9.3 (per Football Outsiders), a sign their special teams is getting taken advantage of by opposing field goals, kickoff distance, and punt distance. Kansas City is at a huge disadvantage here, which is probably why the Rams tried a fake punt against Kansas City in Sunday’s game — and converted. 

Teams have tried to take away possessions from Kansas City to keep Patrick Mahomes and the offense off the field. Special teams could cost the Chiefs a Super Bowl appearance. 

Josh Jacobs bails Josh McDaniels out: McDaniels had a questionable decision in overtime to kick a field goal in fourth-and-2 from the Seahawks’ 38-yard line — and Daniel Carlson missed the 56-yard kick. He’s fortunate to get the ball back after Seattle was held to a three-and-out, which set the stage for Jacobs and his 86-yard winning touchdown. 

With how Jacobs played (313 yards of total offense), giving him the ball in a short-yardage situation seemed like a no-brainer. Not for McDaniels, even though a field goal wasn’t winning that game. McDaniels also passed on challenging a Seattle run defense that can’t stop anyone — with arguably the best running back in the league this year. 

How many wins would this team have without Jacobs? 

Los Angeles Chargers

Justin Herbert finally got going running the football: Due to Herbert’s rib cartilage injury, the Chargers quarterback hasn’t been as mobile as he’s been in previous seasons. Herbert rushed for a season-high 38 yards on four carries (9.5 yards per carry), including a 23-yard run that helped set up a final quarter where he finished 13 of 17 for 84 yards and a touchdown — including a two-point conversion that set the Chargers up for a crucial win. 

Herbert had 536 rushing yards and eight touchdowns in his first two seasons, averaging 4.5 yards per carry. This season, he has just 128 yards and no rushing touchdowns (3.6 yards per carry). What makes Herbert dangerous throwing the football is his ability to extend the pocket and make plays, along with taking off in open space.

Herbert may be getting back to his 2021 version with his rib injury improving by the week. 

Tutu Atwell needs to play more: The Rams already have more injuries at wide receiver than they can handle, but it shouldn’t have taken them this long to give Atwell a shot. Atwell had just two catches for 23 yards Sunday, but caught both his targets. 

Atwell isn’t a one-trick pony and isn’t getting the targets he should be getting. With Allen Robinson and Cooper Kupp out, it’s time to give Atwell a fair shot in the passing game — even with that being limited. The Rams are thinking about 2023 anyway, and Atwell could be a valuable piece in that offense. 

Terron Armstead is the key to this offense: Forget how well Tua Tagovailoa is playing, how dominant Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle are, or how efficient the run game is. This offense doesn’t function as efficiently without Armstead — whose addition arguably was the Dolphins’ best offseason move. 

Armstead suffered a pectoral injury late in the first half and didn’t return, significantly altering the pass offense. Tagovailoa was sacked four times in a span of nine plays, but was 2 of 2 for 21 yards in the second half. The Dolphins were wise to pull Tagovailoa when they did, but Armstead is going to be out for a bit. 

The Dolphins will have to survive without their Pro Bowl left tackle, and keep Tagovailoa upright in the process. This offense doesn’t function consistently if QB1 is pressured. 

Kirk Cousins can perform in prime time after all: The Vikings really shut down the “Kirk Cousins can’t play in prime time” narrative, as the quarterback went 30 of 37 for 299 yards with three touchdowns and one interception (116.5 rating) in a win over a Patriots defense that is one of the best in the league. 

Cousins is just 11-18 as a starter in night games in his career, but he avenged the three-interception performance in a Week 2 loss to the Eagles (which was a night game). He still only has an 81.4 passer rating with four touchdowns and four interceptions in two night games this season, but Cousins got rid of some prime time demons in Week 12. 

Uncharacteristic mistakes from a Bill Belichick team: The Patriots’ two-minute drill in the first half had a few mental lapses, starting with Hunter Henry failing to get out of bounds off a 22-yard catch, forcing Belichick to use a timeout. The next mistake happened later in the drive, as Mac Jones slid on a run rather than force an incomplete pass. 

Belichick was fired up having to use another time out and forcing Nick Folk to convert a field goal on third down. Four points may have been taken off the board in a game New England lost by seven. 

Belichick coached teams just don’t make those mental lapses. Very odd to see that from the Patriots. 

The offense may prevent them from winning another game the rest of the year: As if Sunday’s shutout loss to the 49ers wasn’t bad enough, where do the Saints have another win in them? The offense has averaged just 253 yards per game and 12.5 points per game over the last four weeks, numbers no where near good enough to win games in the NFL. 

Sure, three of the Saints’ last six games are against the NFC South — but can anyone really expect New Orleans to compete with these teams knowing how inconsistent the offense is? Alvin Kamara can’t get going and there aren’t many available options at wide receiver outside of Chris Olave. Andy Dalton hasn’t been good either. 

Pete Carmichael’s future may be in doubt if this play keeps up. 

’21 personnel’ needed to help Saquon Barkley: It’s no coincidence Barkley’s slump is coinciding with the Giants’ first losing streak of the year. Barkley has just 26 carries for 61 yards over his last two games, as defenses have certainly zeroed in on stopping him — and the Giants offense in the process.

The Giants are trying to use ’21 personnel’ — or a two-back system — to combat this. Gary Brightwell was the back paired with Barkley in this set, having five carries for 31 yards late in the game. New York has to get more creative on offense to get Barkley going, which hasn’t been a problem until the last few weeks. 

Perhaps more ’21 personnel’ will do the trick. 

Mike White got Elijah Moore going: The key benefit to Mike White starting over Zach Wilson was that the Jets wide receivers could actually play to their talent level. Just ask Elijah Moore, who finished with two catches for 64 yards and a touchdown in Sunday’s win over Chicago. 

Moore’s had a rough season in New York, but Sunday was his highest yardage output of the year. Not a coincidence when White was starting. Prior to last week, Moore had just three catches for 28 yards since Week 5 and had a public disagreement with the franchise. 

Maybe having a quarterback that can get the ball to his receivers will get Moore back to being the player he was in his rookie year. 

Reed Blankenship may be good enough to start: Blankenship was the man the Eagles called upon when C.J. Gardner-Johnson had to leave Sunday’s game with a lacerated kidney, getting the nod over K’Von Wallace in the role. Blankenship picked off Aaron Rodgers, who had a 0.0 passer rating when targeting him (that was Rodgers’ only target his way). 

Blankenship was going 100 miles per hour at skill position players looking to make plays, a different approach than how most defenders play skill position players in the league. His play may be a breath of fresh air for a defense that could use a hard hitter over the next few weeks. 

The Eagles will need to see more of Blankenship, but he proved he’s good enough to start the next week. There aren’t many other options on the roster, at least until Avonte Maddox comes back (if Philadelphia wants to move him out of the slot). 

Kenny Pickett continues to thrive against the blitz: Pickett has a 71.7% completion rate against the blitz, which is the highest among all NFL quarterbacks. In Monday’s win over the Colts, Pickett went 7 of 9 for 69 yards with a 98.6 passer rating, playing mistake free football when defenses send an extra rusher to challenge him. 

Pickett has a 106.9 rating against the blitz without an interception. Not bad for a rookie quarterback with a poor offensive line. The Steelers quarterback has had his struggles, but facing the blitz is not one of them. 

Defense is on another level: Since allowing 44 points to the Chiefs in Week 7, the 49ers defense has allowed 40 points combined. Part of that is players getting healthy, as this unit is scary good. The 49ers allowed just 258.8 yards per game over the last four contests, including just 59.3 rushing yards per game. 

The 49ers rank first in points allowed, yards allowed, passing touchdowns allowed, rushing yards allowed, yards per carry allowed and points per possession. This unit seems to get better by the week too. 

No wonder the 49ers are on a four-game win streak. They’ll be challenged by Miami, but the Dolphins won’t have Terron Armstead. 

The defensive success in midseason was fools gold: Seattle’s defense was torched by the Raiders offense, as Las Vegas amassed 576 yards against the unit (293 passing, 283 rushing). The Seahawks have allowed 497.5 yards per game over the last two games — both losses — and an astonishing 22 rushing yards per game. 

The defense that allowed 282.8 yards per game in the four contests prior to Munich is long gone. Seattle has been gashed on the ground and the defense can’t get off the field on third down (29th in NFL). Seattle won’t make the playoffs if this defense can’t make stops. 

Tom Brady needs to throw to Chris Godwin and Rachaad White more: Brady was a putrid 9 of 22 when he was throwing to pass catchers that weren’t named White or Godwin — and that includes Mike Evans. While caught all nine of his targets for 45 yards while Godwin caught 12 passes (on 13 targets) for 110 yards and a touchdown.

Brady had a 111.2 rating targeting White and Godwin, two players who are producing more in the offense by the week. If the Buccaneers aren’t going to go deep and use a lot of air yards on Brady’s throws, the slot and underneath route to White and Godwin are the ticket.

Get the yards after the catch. 

Shocking red zone performance: The Titans were the No. 2 team in the red zone going into Sunday, but didn’t score a touchdown on any of their three red zone trips in the loss to the Bengals. The Titans have to settle for three field goals, but only got six points (Caleb Shudak missed a field goal). 

In a four-point loss, the failure to convert in the red zone definitely hurt. Derrick Henry had just three carries for seven yards in the red zone, but most importantly — no touchdowns scored. The Titans will have to get this corrected this week against the Eagles, as 16 points won’t be enough to beat a potent offense. 

Based on how the red zone offense has performed, Tennessee should get back on track. 

The stout run defense hits a snag: Washington’s run defense has been excellent over the last several weeks, allowing just 68.8 rushing yards per game over the last five games — a huge reason the Commanders won 4 of 5 heading into Sunday. 

The Falcons are one of the best running teams in the NFL, finishing with 167 yards against a Commanders run defense that allowed just 171 yards total in the three games prior. Washington’s run defense will face Saquon Barkley and the Giants for the next two games, so there’s a cause for concern against one of the top running backs in the league. 

The run defense will be tested over the next two games. 

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Banksy artwork unveiled in Ukrainian town of Borodianka



CNN
 — 

Renowned street artist Banksy has unveiled his latest artwork in an Instagram post – a mural in the liberated Ukrainian town of Borodianka.

The artwork shows a female gymnast balancing on a pile of rubble on the side of a building damaged by Russian strikes.

The graffiti artist posted three images of the piece Friday on social media, with a simple caption reading “Borodyanka, Ukraine,” using an alternative spelling for the town’s name.

Speculation had been mounting that Banksy was in the war-torn country after a series of murals appeared in Borodianka, located about 35 miles northwest of the capital, Kyiv.

One artwork, not officially claimed by the artist, depicted a man being flipped during a judo match with a little boy.

Another showed two children using a metal tank trap as a seesaw.

Borodianka was hit particularly hard by Russian airstrikes at the start of the invasion of Ukraine in February, with many buildings reduced to piles of rubble by long-range attacks.

It was home to 13,000 people before the war, but most fled after Russia’s invasion. What was left of Borodianka, after intense shelling and devastating strikes, was then occupied by Russian forces, who moved in on February 28.

The town came back into Ukrainian control on April 1, and returning residents found their houses ransacked and shops pillaged with windows broken and contents stolen.

The letter “V” – a symbol used by Russia’s Eastern Military district in concert with the letter “Z,” an emblem for Moscow’s so-called “special military operation” – was found painted on buildings, vehicles and checkpoints.

The town has since been the focus of reconstruction efforts, with several tower blocks demolished as a result of damage caused by the fighting.

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They’re here! | New Bills Stadium renderings unveiled

Featured in the inside bowl rendering is a stacked seating design, which will help to rain crowd noise down onto the playing field. In addition to the stacked seating that will provide protection from the elements, extensive radiant heating will be in place to enhance fan comfort. The Bills are committed to creating an intimate yet intimidating football-first seating bowl that harnesses the energy of the fans. Throughout the project, the team has thought carefully about how to maximize the experience of every fan, bringing fans closer to the action than any other new NFL stadium – this will truly be a football experience unlike any other. The goal is to create the most vibrant, loudest, ground-shaking experience possible.

Tapping into the fan base’s strong familial culture and generosity, the new stadium will have a clear focus on being functional and comfortable to honor the loyalty and pride the Bills Mafia hold for their team and where they’ll soon play when this project is completed. In recognition of the uniquely Western New York culture, throughout the stadium there will be dynamic areas designed to bring Bills fans together to share their love for local food, beverage and camaraderie.

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World’s largest cruise ship unveiled

“With each new ship, we raise the bar in the travel industry while enhancing what our guests know and love,” said Jason Liberty, president and CEO, Royal Caribbean Group.

“From the moment they step on board, every experience is specifically designed to give them the best vacation anywhere on land and at sea. With Icon of the Seas, we’ve taken this to a new level and made the ultimate family vacation.”

The new vessel features adrenaline-pumping thrills, including the largest waterpark at sea, and unrivaled ways to chill with more ocean views and pools than ever before (one for each day of the week). It also offers guests a blend of more than 40 new and returning dining, bar and nightlife options, and cutting-edge entertainment.

“Icon of the Seas is the culmination of more than 50 years of delivering memorable experiences and our next bold commitment to those who love to vacation,” said Michael Bayley, president and CEO, Royal Caribbean International.

“Now more than ever, families and friends are prioritizing experiences where they can bond and enjoy their own adventures. We set out to create a vacation that makes all that possible in one place for the thrill-seekers, the chill enthusiasts and everyone in between, without compromise. It’s this first-of-its-kind combination that makes Icon the future of family vacations, and that future is here.”

Brand new neighborhoods

Royal Caribbean has created five new neighborhoods for the ship each with unique qualities. Thrill Island is home to highlights like Category 6, the largest waterpark at sea, with six record-breaking slides.

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NASA Just Unveiled an Epic 12-Year Timelapse of The Entire Sky : ScienceAlert

NASA continues to outdo itself with the majestic images of space that it keeps releasing – but even by the agency’s high standards, a 12-year timelapse of the entirety of the night sky is an impressive achievement.

The imagery has been captured over those years by the NEOWISE (Near-Earth Object Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer) space telescope, which was originally launched in 2009 under the previous name ‘WISE’ to study the Universe outside of our Solar System.

It has since been repurposed, and renamed, to track near-Earth objects including asteroids and comets.

A mosaic of infrared images put together by the NEOWISE telescope. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA)

Data collected by NEOWISE gives scientists an invaluable insight into how celestial objects are moving and changing over time (time-domain astronomy) – whether that’s stars exploding or wandering across the night sky, or black holes gobbling up gas.

“If you go outside and look at the night sky, it might seem like nothing ever changes, but that’s not the case,” says astronomer Amy Mainzer, from the University of Arizona, which is the principal investigator for NEOWISE.

The readings taken by NEOWISE show the location of hundreds of millions of objects, and the amount of infrared light each one is emitting. This information can then be analyzed to figure out what an object is doing.

An entire sky’s worth of data is collected every six months (the time it takes the telescope to travel half the way around the Sun), and astronomers have now stitched together 18 of these maps to form the time lapse.

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The maps have been particularly useful for studying brown dwarfs – objects that don’t quite have the mass to spark the fusion necessary to become a brightly-burning star, despite starting their existence in similar ways. Those that happen to be closer to Earth appear to zip faster across the sky than more distant objects, enabling NEOWISE to pick them out more easily.

Around 260 brown dwarfs have now been identified by the telescope, and thanks to its investigations we know about twice as many Y-dwarfs – the coldest brown dwarfs that are of particular interest to astronomers, providing clues on the efficiency of star generation and its timing in the evolution of our galaxy.

“We never anticipated that the spacecraft would be operating this long, and I don’t think we could have anticipated the science we’d be able to do with this much data,” says astronomer Peter Eisenhardt, from the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

We’re also learning more about how stars form through the telescope’s sky scanning: protostars stand out as flickering objects before becoming stars, and scientists are now tracking almost 1,000 of them to see how they develop.

Then there’s perhaps the most compelling celestial object of them all – the black hole. Data from NEOWISE can be used to identify the bursts of infrared light from the clouds of matter churning around black holes, allowing us to see these objects at a greater distance.

The work is far from finished, and NEOWISE continues on its mapping journey, with two more sky maps due in March 2023. Expect a lot more to be revealed by the project – activity that you can’t see when gazing up at the stars at night.

“Stars are flaring and exploding,” says Mainzer. “Asteroids are whizzing by. Black holes are tearing stars apart. The Universe is a really busy, active place.”

You can learn more at the NEOWISE Project website.

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Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Trailer Unveiled at San Diego Comic-Con

At San Diego Comic-Con, Marvel went wild, announcing MCU plans and new Avengers movies, but the first trailer for Black Panther: Wakanda Forever arguably stole the show. 

Black Panther was a mega-hit back in 2018, and a sequel seemed an obvious and immediate plan. But then star Chadwick Boseman passed away of colon cancer, and nothing seemed obvious or immediate. Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige promised that Boseman would not be replaced, and future movies would “do Chad proud.”

Based on the trailer alone, it looks like Black Panther Wakanda Forever will do just that.

Just visually, this trailer blew us away. Musically, the seamless transition from Bob Marley to Kendrick Lamar was equally as incredible.

Returning cast members include Lupita Nyong’o as Nakia, Danai Gurira as Okove, Martin Freeman as Everett K. Ross, Letitia Wright as Shuri, and Winston Duke as M’Baku.

It’s just the latest in a massive day for Marvel news. Today we already got insight into the next phase of Marvel movies and TV shows and two new Avengers movies were announced.

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is scheduled to open in theaters on Nov. 11.

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Chapter 4’ Trailer Unveiled At Comic-Con, Keanu Reeves Surprises – Deadline

In what didn’t come as a shocker today at San Diego Comic-Con: Keanu Reeves crashed Collider’s Directors on Directing panel where his John Wick: Chapter 4 Chad Stahelski director was a panelist.

And they showed the first trailer from the Lionsgate movie which doesn’t hit theaters until March 24, 2023. The pic’s title? Simply John Wick. 

“Sorry to crash the party, they threw me out here,” said Reeves.

Stahelski and Reeves said the fourthquel takes place in five locales: Japan, America, Paris, Berlin and Jordan.

Trailer opens with Reeves’ John Wick punching a roped pole.

There’s a voiceover asking John, “Have you given any thought to where this ends? No one, not even you, can kill everyone.” A lot of action scenes taking place in five countries: Japan, Jordon, America, Germany, and France. John fights off enemies with samurai swords, guns, and nunchucks.

We see neon shots of Japan, and sword-fighting and Wick against an Eifel tower in winter. Lots of dogs and archers with bow and arrows.

“Are you ready, John?” booms Laurence Fishburne’s Bowery King.

“Yeah,” answers Wick in a cool tone.

“Lot of nunchucks,” said Stahelski, “We just love nunchucks.”

“I think you just like to torture your lead character,” says Reeves.

Reeves appeared on a Comic-Con panel earlier today to chat up BRZRKR, his comic from Boom! Studios.

While most Hall H panels such as Dungeons & Dragons yesterday and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power today were filled, there was a small turnout in the San Diego Convention Center’s big auditorium for what was an obvious stunt.



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