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    ‘Basic Instinct’ at 30: A Time Capsule That Can Still Offend

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    Curran brings her in for questioning, resulting in the film’s most famous (and most frequently parodied) sequence: an interrogation in which Tramell uses her feminine wiles and lack of undergarments to fully intimidate every man in the room. (In her memoir, Stone said she was tricked into the scene’s immediately notorious frontal nudity.) Clad in a sleek white dress, her icy blond hair pulled back tight, Stone is the very picture of the ’90s-era femme fatale; she lights up a cigarette, and when she’s warned that smoking is prohibited, she replies, sinfully, “What are you gonna do, charge me with smoking?”

    Her back-and-forth with Curran isn’t exactly James M. Cain, but it’s played the right way: Douglas steams and stammers, a typical film noir heel, while Stone delivers her dialogue with the devilish gleam of a sly actor having a great time. It’s easy to see how the picture made her a star — and how it would have failed without her, both in terms of her outrageous beauty (the entire film hinges on the belief that Curran would literally risk his life to get into her bed) and her deft playing.

    Without the dazzle of Stone’s performance, there’s not much of lasting worth in “Basic Instinct.” It’s so overwrought in its execution — the showiness of Jan de Bont’s camerawork, the thundering strings of Jerry Goldsmith’s score, the absurd plotting of the Eszterhas screenplay — that it almost plays like a goof. (And maybe it is; many critics, then and now, missed the satirical angles of Verhoeven’s dystopian sci-fi films “RoboCop” and “Starship Troopers.”) In the film’s embrace and amplification of the conventions of suspense thrillers, Verhoeven steps into the “Dressed to Kill” director Brian De Palma’s territory. But like De Palma, Verhoeven has some trouble overcoming the ugliest aspects of his story.

    After all, protesters were not wrong about its offenses. The lipstick lesbian material is played solely for the straight thrills of the male gaze, while bisexuality is framed as a symptom of mental instability, if not outright psychopathy; the cruelty with which Curran treats Roxy (Leilani Sarelle), Tramell’s girl on the side, is played for crowd-pleasing, homophobic laughs (“Tell me something, Rocky, man to man”). And the scene in which Curran escalates consensual rough sex with Dr. Garner to explicitly nonconsensual assault is inexcusable and abhorrent, not only for the way we to continue to see an unapologetic date rapist as a sympathetic protagonist, but also for how it is shrugged off afterward (by both perpetrator and victim) as a byproduct of the heat of the moment.

    Perhaps that, then, is the value of “Basic Instinct”: as a time capsule. It speaks volumes about its era, and the strides (minuscule though they may seem) that we’ve made since, that such a reprehensible character as Nick Curran was intended as an audience surrogate, the good guy of a big-budget thriller, simply because he was a straight, white, male cop.

    Or maybe there’s a more direct contrast to note. In the April 28, 1992, issue of The Village Voice, an attack on the film by the writer C. Carr was published alongside a defense of it from the eminent critic Amy Taubin, who “thought it was a gas to see a woman on the screen in a powerful enough position to let it all hang out and not be punished for it in the end.”

    Moreover, it’s not just that it was novel, in 1992, to see a female character framed as unapologetically and frankly sexual; it’s that it’s still uncommon now. And so is the notion of a major motion picture made by, for and about adults, messy, imperfect and insensitive though they may be. “Basic Instinct” is a leftover from an era when filmmakers, even working with big budgets, could take big risks. It makes this slick, provocative dirty movie something its creators could have never imagined: quaint.

    Scientists Discover New Form of Ice – May Be Common on Distant, Water-Rich Planets

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    UNLV physicists pioneered a new laser-heating technique in a diamond anvil cell (pictured here) as part of their discovery of a new form of ice. Credit: Chris Higgins

    Findings could have implications for our understanding of distant, water-rich planets.

    NLV researchers have discovered a new form of ice, redefining the properties of water at high pressures.

    Solid water, or ice, is like many other materials in that it can form different solid materials based on variable temperature and pressure conditions, like carbon forming diamond or graphite. However, water is exceptional in this aspect as there are at least 20 solid forms of ice known to us.

    A team of scientists working in UNLV’s Nevada Extreme Conditions Lab pioneered a new method for measuring the properties of water under high pressure. The water sample was first squeezed between the tips of two opposite-facing diamonds—freezing into several jumbled ice crystals. The ice was then subjected to a laser-heating technique that temporarily melted it before it quickly re-formed into a powder-like collection of tiny crystals.

    By incrementally raising the pressure, and periodically blasting it with the laser beam, the team observed the water ice make the transition from a known cubic phase, Ice-VII, to the newly discovered intermediate, and tetragonal phase, Ice-VIIt, before settling into another known phase, Ice-X. 

    Zach Grande, a UNLV Ph.D. student, led the work which also demonstrated that the transition to Ice-X, when water stiffens aggressively, occurs at much lower pressures than previously thought.

    While it’s unlikely we’ll find this new phase of ice anywhere on the surface of Earth, it is likely a common ingredient within the mantle of Earth as well as in large moons and water-rich planets outside of our solar system.

    The team’s findings were reported in the March 17, 2022 issue of the journal Physical Review B.

    Takeaways

    The research team had been working to understand the behavior of high-pressure water that may be present in the interior of distant planets.

    To do so, Grande and UNLV physicist Ashkan Salamat placed a sample of water between the tips of two round-cut diamonds known as diamond anvil cells, a standard feature in the field of high pressure physics. Applying a little bit of force to the diamonds enabled the researchers to recreate pressures as high as those found at the center of the Earth.

    By squeezing the water sample between these diamonds, scientists drove the oxygen and hydrogen atoms into a variety of different arrangements, including the newly discovered arrangement, Ice-VIIt.

    Not only did the first-of-its-kind laser-heating technique allow scientists to observe a new phase of water ice, but the team also found that the transition to Ice-X occurred at pressures nearly three times lower than previously thought — at 300,000 atmospheres instead of 1 million. This transition has been a highly debated topic in the community for several decades.

    “Zach’s work has demonstrated that this transformation to an ionic state occurs at much, much lower pressures than ever thought before,” Salamat said. “It’s the missing piece, and the most precise measurements ever on water at these conditions.”

    The work also recalibrates our understanding of the composition of exoplanets, Salamat added. Researchers hypothesize that the Ice-VIIt phase of ice could exist in abundance in the crust and upper mantle of expected water-rich planets outside of our solar system, meaning they could have conditions habitable for life.

    Reference: “Pressure driven symmetry transitions in dense H2O ice” by Zachary M. Grande, C. Huy Pham, Dean Smith, John H. Boisvert, Chenliang Huang, Jesse S. Smith, Nir Goldman, Jonathan L. Belof, Oliver Tschauner, Jason H. Steffen, and Ashkan Salamat, 17 March 2022, Physical Review B
    DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.105.104109

    Collaborators at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory used a large supercomputer to simulate the bond rearrangement—predicting that the phase transitions should happen precisely where they were measured by the experiments.

    Additional collaborators include UNLV physicists Jason Steffen and John Boisvert, UNLV mineralogist Oliver Tschauner, and scientists from the Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Arizona.

    Ghulam Nabi Azad hints at ‘retirement’ from politics, says civil society has large role to play

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    Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad on Sunday said that he had serious reservations about the ability of political parties to bring about real transformation and civil society has an important role to play in difficult times. He also said that he often has a longing to retire from politics and be more actively involved in social service.

    While addressing members of civil society at an event, Azad said, “Humko ek samaj mein badlaav lana hai. Kabhi kabhi mein sochta hoon, aur koi badi baat nahi ki, achanak aap samjey ki hum retire ho gaye aur samaj seva mein lag gaye.”(We have to bring about a change in the society. Sometimes I think, and it is not a big deal that suddenly you come to know that I have retired and started doing social service).

    The event was organized by the president of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court Bar Association and senior advocate M K Bhardwaj. People from all walks of life and political affiliations, including Chamber of Commerce President Arun Gupta, former Jammu University vice-chancellors R R Sharma and R D Sharma, former Advocate General Aslam Goni, among others were present at the function organised to honour Azad for getting the Padma Bhushan.

    At the beginning of his 35-minute address, Azad made it clear that he would not deliver a political speech. “Politics in India has become so ugly that sometimes one has to doubt whether we are human,” he said.

    Saying that the average human lifespan is now 80-85 years, he said it makes sense for individuals to use the 20-25-year-long post-retirement period to contribute to nation-building. He added, “Hum sab agar ek shehar ko, ek province ko theek karengey, toh pura Hindustan theek hoga” (If we all reform a city or a province, the entire country will get reformed).

    He ended his speech saying, “Mein apney aap ko apni individual capacity mein…ek insaan ki capacity mein…us asli kaam key liye, seva ke liye, insaan ke liye, apney aap ko samarpit karta hoon. Jab bhi aap chahyengey merey ko aap Apney saath deekhengey.”

    Stating that he had doubts over any political party’s ability to bring about change as they are responsible for most of the evils in the society, Azad said, “Humney ilakey ke naam pe baant liya logo ko…phir region ke naam pe baant liya, gaon aur shehar ke naam pe baant liya’’ (We have divided people on the basis of region, area, village and city). He added, “We have also divided Dalits and upper castes, Hindus, Muslims, Christians and Sikhs. If we reduce people to their case identities only, who is left to be seen as a human being?”

    Political parties will keep dividing people in the name of religion or politics but it is the role of civil society to guide people in difficult times, he said.

    He recalled that many people know that he had been a minister in all Congress governments, right from the time Indira Gandhi was at the helm, and also the party general secretary under many PMs. However, very few people know that his public life started not as a Congressman, but as a follower of Gandhian philosophy, he said. “We all are human beings first, and Hindus and Muslims later,” he added.

    “Even today, I think Gandhi was the greatest Hindu and the biggest follower of secularism. It is wrong to think that any Hindu who worships gods cannot be secular. One can’t see secularism through the prism of religion. Anyone who truly follows religion is truly secular. Those who have little knowledge of their religion are dangerous,” he said.

    Referring to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, he said it is unfathomable that the trail of destruction has been left behind by human beings. “Today our thought and our minds have become so polluted that we do not consider people to be human beings,’’ he said.

    Azad also said that militancy has destroyed lives in Jammu and Kashmir, with Pakistan playing a big role in it. Militants have killed security personnel, cops and left many widowed, be it Kashmiri Pandits or Kashmiri Muslims, he said. He added that it is wrong to lend a religious colour to this narrative of loss as all people in the region have been affected by militancy.

    Chevron begins replacing workers ahead of California refinery strike

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    Chevron Corp’s refinery is shown in Richmond, California August 7, 2012. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

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    March 20 (Reuters) – Chevron Corp began turning over some operations at a California oil refinery to replacement workers on Sunday ahead of a United Steelworkers strike set to begin shortly after 12 a.m. PDT on Monday.

    A union official said it had notified Chevron of its intent to begin a strike at the plant outside of San Francisco after negotiations failed to reach agreement on a new labor contract.

    The existing contract at the Richmond, California, refinery expired Feb. 1. Both sides had agreed to a rolling extension that was not renewed by the union after workers rejected the latest offer.

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    The 245,000 barrel-per-day plant is the second-largest refinery in the state, employs more than 500 union-represented workers and produces gasoline, jet fuel and diesel fuel.

    “It’s disappointing that Chevron would walk away from the table instead of bargaining in good faith,” said Mike Smith, chair of the USW’s National Oil Bargaining Program.

    Chevron is committed to continuing to negotiate toward an agreement, a spokesperson said in a statement on Sunday.

    The San Ramon, California-based company was “prepared to continue normal operations safely and reliably to provide the energy products that are needed by consumers,” the spokesperson added.

    California has some of the highest fuel prices in the nation with a gallon of unleaded regular gasoline on Sunday selling for $5.847 and a gallon of diesel for $6.258, according to motorist group AAA.

    A Chevron turnover team began taking control of refinery operations manned by union workers on Sunday afternoon ahead of the strike deadline, according to a person familiar with the matter.

    The USW and U.S. refiners last month reached a national agreement that provides a 12% pay raise over four years to the union’s about 30,000 members at oil and chemical companies. Each local union separately negotiates a contract covering plant-specific issues, and Richmond workers have twice voted down Chevron proposals. read more

    On Saturday, the union had advised machinists to go to the refinery and remove their personal tools before the contract extension expires.

    Union members have twice voted to reject contract proposals put forward by Chevron. The last vote, completed on Saturday, was overwhelmingly against what was called the company’s last, best and final offer, according to messages posted on-line by USW Local 12-5.

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    Reporting by Gary McWilliams, additional reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by Will Dunham and Diane Craft

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Turn off the debt tap and start mopping up your lifestyle

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    When you feel that you are trying to stop a financial flood with a small bucket while new money problems are flooding out of an open ‘debt -tap’, it’s time to stop and take an honest look at what is causing your financial problems. The uncomfortable truth will probably be that your actions caused the flood.

    Millions of South Africans are ‘payday millionaires’, and that’s where money problems usually start. The only way to change is to understand that if you wish to do great things tomorrow, you must address today’s issues and take the steps needed to make them yesterday’s problems.

    When that payday cheque hits the bank, it’s time for a celebration. For many of us, this means heading for the closest restaurant, spending the money while the going is good, and there is enough money for the luxuries we enjoy. The problem is that we do this while knowing that within a week or so, we are going to be struggling, trying to fill the enormous money sinkhole that is standing between us, our next payday and renewed millionaire status.

    When you reach the point when the sinkhole is opening just after payday and debt is making life unbearable, there is only one survival course available, and that is taking hard decisions and changing your lifestyle from the ground up.

    Survival actions could include:

    • Selling that dream car, you couldn’t afford anyway, settling the outstanding balance and freeing up some cash. Remember, too, that no vehicle also means no more large insurance premiums, no more buying fuel and dreading the thought of what the next car service is going to cost.
    • Realising that those after-work drinks, the steak dinners and fancy whiskies are a thing of the past. Forget being a payday millionaire and start the month as you would normally finish it. Counting the cents and spending cautiously from the beginning will have immediate benefits. The debt sinkhole will get smaller and the days easier to cope with.
    • While you are about it, taking a lunchbox and your own refreshments to work will help. You can always tell your colleagues that it’s all part of your new fitness plan.
    • Downgrading your property or renting it out. It’s much better to let your bank help you sell off a house you can’t afford than wait for the property to be repossessed. Get what you can out of the sale and move to a cheaper area. The ego may take a hit, but extra money in your pocket will make up for it.
    • If you rent, downgrading is even easier. Speak to the landlord and explain your money position and that you want to break the lease agreement. This is better than leaving things and facing the stress of legal action because you are in arrears. Your landlord, who will end up paying these costs, will probably be quite understanding. You can also explore renting your property out to use your rental income to pay your bond.
    • Making sacrifices for your children is what parents do. But when the family’s survival is at stake, perhaps it’s time to be realistic about what that private school is costing you and seek alternatives.
    • Reducing costs by doing the housework yourself and buying cheaper brands. To help the process, ask yourself if you need something before you buy it.
    • Defeating those clothing and grooming addictions that make you feel good, but whose costs are adding to your sleepless nights. Achieve this by shutting down those unnecessary accounts.

    Basically, stopping the flood from the wide-open debt tap means wading through the debt and turning off the tap. Only then can the mopping up truly begin.

    It is also important to realise that once the hard work is underway and recovery is on the horizon, the best way to stop repeating costly mistakes is to empower yourself, assume responsibility for your decisions and equip yourself with the financial education needed to create positive futures for you and your family.  Live a life of investment and not a life of consumption.

    John Manyike is head of financial education at Old Mutual.

    Women’s NCAA Tournament: Creighton Beats Iowa to Reach Sweet 16

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    Tenth-seeded Creighton made its first round of 16, and did it with late-game drama befitting the N.C.A.A. women’s basketball tournament.

    Lauren Jensen, a sophomore who is in her first year playing for Creighton after transferring from Iowa, shut the door on her former team on its home court in Iowa City with a go-ahead 3-pointer in the final minute to help seal a 64-62 victory over the second-seeded Hawkeyes.

    “I honestly didn’t know if it was going to go in,” Jensen said after the game. “It kind of rattled off the back rim there. It wasn’t super clean, but I’m just glad it fell.”

    Iowa was a popular pick to make the Final Four, mostly thanks to the eye-catching play of sophomore guard Caitlin Clark. Clark entered the game as Division I’s leading scorer, averaging 27.4 points per game. Creighton held her to just 15 points on 4-of-19 shooting, although, with 11 assists and eight rebounds, she nearly had a triple-double.

    “I’m not going to sit here and make excuses for how I played,” Clark said. “I think just coming back and working harder than I ever have is really all I can do.”

    Iowa junior Gabbie Marshall’s 3-pointer put the Hawkeyes ahead with just under seven minutes left in the fourth quarter — a lead that briefly made it look like Iowa had finally found its footing after trailing by as many as 12 points, a lead Creighton only reclaimed when there were 12 seconds left in the game on Jensen’s 3-pointer.

    The basket gave Jensen 9 points in the final quarter.

    “Those last few minutes had to be magical and special, and we’re super proud of her and we’re super proud that she’s part of our program,” Creighton Coach Jim Flanery said.

    The Hawkeyes had a few looks at a close last-second shot, but none went in. “I’ve shot a million hook shots in my life and that one happened to not go in,” Monika Czinano, who led Iowa with 27 points, said after the game.

    The Hawkeyes, typically so prolific on offense, made just 35.7 percent of their shot attempts from the field to record their lowest point total at home since 2016.

    In 2021, they were able to ride Clark’s shot to the round of 16, where they lost to Connecticut, a No. 1 seed. This year, their postseason ended in the second round, at the hands of a young group of Creighton players who held onto the lead for nearly 29 of the 40 minutes.

    The Bluejays’ upset win, played before a sold-out had more Carver-Hawkeye Arena, was one of just a few first- and second-round games airing on ABC — mostly because of the buzz surrounding Clark, a semifinalist for the Naismith Trophy for national player of the year.

    “That was the most special environment that I’ve ever played in by far,” Creighton senior Payton Brotzki said.

    Creighton strong-armed Iowa, collectively outrebounding the Hawkeyes by 15 and making it miserable for them to shoot. It was a balanced, collective effort that, in some ways, mirrored Creighton’s first-round victory over No. 7 Colorado. In that game, the Bluejays were also in control almost from the tip-off, and didn’t get flustered when their opponents showed signs of life.

    This is Flanery’s 20th season as Creighton’s head coach, and the team’s fifth N.C.A.A. tournament appearance under his leadership. In the round of 16, the Bluejays will play the winner of No. 3 Iowa State’s game against No. 6 Georgia on Sunday night.

    COVID vaccine side effects: Expert calls for research into possible link between mRNA and tinnitus after after unrelenting pain

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    It was the shock of a loud whistle that almost caused Doctor Gregory Poland to veer off the road as he was driving home after getting his second COVID-19 vaccine.

    “It startled me,” said Dr Poland, who is 66 years old.

    “I thought it was a dog whistle going off right next to me.”

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    It was not a dog whistle; it was a piercing sound his brain conjured up for an unknown reason.

    Dr Poland suspects it may have been a side effect of the vaccine.

    That was one year ago. The noise, he said, has been unrelenting ever since.

    For the record, neither Dr Poland nor the medical community at large can prove that the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine that he received had anything to do with his sudden onset of tinnitus, a condition that is often described as a ringing, buzzing or hissing noise in one or both ears. It can be constant or intermittent.

    The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, and vaccine manufacturers, have investigated anecdotal reports of tinnitus through programs such as the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, or VAERS, following COVID vaccination, but have found no evidence of cause and effect.

    And Poland’s tale might not carry much weight if he weren’t Dr Gregory Poland — a globally respected physician who has dedicated his career to vaccine study and development as founder and director of the Mayo Clinic’s Vaccine Research Group in Rochester, Minnesota.

    Dr Gregory Poland. Credit: Mayo Clinic/ NBC

    What’s more, Dr Poland is a paid scientific adviser for Johnson & Johnson/Janssen Global Services, and acts as a consultant on vaccine development for Moderna, as well as other pharmaceutical companies.

    Given Dr Poland’s interests and the uncertainty of a true link between the vaccine and tinnitus — not to mention a strong anti-vaccine movement — why would he publicise his condition and suspicion that a vaccine could be involved?

    “As a physician who’s taken an oath to first do no harm, I think about these things,” Dr Poland said.

    His day-to-day focus, he said, is to help patients work through the potential risks and benefits of any treatment, including vaccines.

    “I refuse to be anything less than transparent,” he said.

    “I refuse to cherry-pick the information that should be presented to people to make good decisions.”

    What does the science say?

    There is no known cause of tinnitus, though it is often associated with “acoustic trauma”, such as what is experienced by active duty military personnel.

    There is some evidence that COVID-19 itself may worsen the condition in people who have previously suffered from ringing in their ears.

    When it comes to potential auditory side effects of vaccination, research is sparse.

    A study published last month in the medical journal JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, analysed reports of hearing issues following COVID-19 vaccines. The reports had been submitted to VAERS.

    Such reports raise the issue of unexpected problems following any vaccine.

    A gloved doctor or health care professional applies a patch or adhesive bandage to a girl or young woman after vaccination or drug injection. The concept of medicine and health care, vaccination and treatment of diseases. First aid services.
    A gloved doctor or health care professional applies a patch or adhesive bandage to a girl or young woman after vaccination or drug injection. The concept of medicine and health care, vaccination and treatment of diseases. First aid services. Credit: Aleksandr Zubkov/Getty Images

    Scientists are then tasked with reviewing the reports, looking for patterns of unusual side effects.

    The JAMA study, from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, analyzed 555 VAERS reports of hearing loss possibly associated with any of the three COVID vaccines in use in the US between mid-December 2020 and mid-July 2021.

    But the analysis found that hearing loss or other auditory issues were no more prevalent after vaccination than would be expected in the general population.

    Up to 10 per cent of the US population is estimated to have experienced tinnitus from any cause.

    In fact, having a COVID infection has been linked to hearing loss or severe, even unbearable, tinnitus.

    The most notable example was the Texas Roadhouse restaurant chain’s chief executive officer, Kent Taylor.

    The 65-year-old entrepreneur died by suicide one year ago, his family said, following COVID illness, including relentless tinnitus.

    Another study, out of Israel, also published last month in the same JAMA publication, found a slight increase in hearing problems following administration of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. Such reports overall, however, were minimal.

    Vaccine manufacturers respond

    In a statement to NBC News, Pfizer said the company takes reported adverse events “very seriously”.

    “Tinnitus cases have been reviewed and no causal association to the COVID-19 vaccine has been established,” the statement read.

    A statement from Johnson & Johnson said that tinnitus was identified as an adverse event in its phase 3 clinical trials of the COVID-19 vaccine but also maintained that it was impossible to “establish a causal relationship to vaccine exposure”.

    Moderna did not respond to several requests for comment.

    The challenge, Dr Poland said, is “trying to discern what is real and what is coincidental.”

    That is, are such hearing problems so common they would be expected regardless of vaccination?

    It was the shock of a loud whistle that almost caused Doctor Gregory Poland to veer off the road as he was driving home after getting his second COVID-19 vaccine.
    It was the shock of a loud whistle that almost caused Doctor Gregory Poland to veer off the road as he was driving home after getting his second COVID-19 vaccine. Credit: Getty Images

    The CDC also acknowledged reports of tinnitus following COVID-19 vaccinations, specifically the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna.

    A statement from the agency, however, said that “currently, the data from safety monitoring are not sufficient to conclude that a causal relationship exists between vaccination and tinnitus”.

    At Stanford Medicine Molecular Neurotology Laboratory in California, director Dr Konstantina Stankovic, an otolaryngologist-head and neck surgeon, is leading preliminary research to determine the potential impacts of both COVID and its vaccines on auditory function.

    While the scientific process should ultimately determine any true links between the virus, vaccines and potential hearing issues, Stankovic said tinnitus may be an under-recognised side effect of the vaccine.

    “My email is being bombarded by people from across the world who really feel that they don’t have a voice,” she said.

    “They feel that they’re being dismissed, that people don’t take them seriously, and yet they tell me in very moving ways how they can tie it to the vaccine.”

    Dr Stankovic is quick to acknowledge that personal stories do not prove causality.

    “You cannot make big claims based on individual patients,” she said. “But they should not be ignored.”

    Dr Poland’s experience with tinnitus has been borderline traumatic. He’s had previous bouts with ringing in his ears, but nothing as lasting or as intense.

    “I sat one night looking at the stars and tears came to my eyes when the thought occurred to me out of the blue: I may never hear silence again,” he said. He wakes up in the middle of the night, unable to ignore the blaring whistle in his ears.

    In addition to medicine, Dr Poland is also a minister. He even finds the sound of church music intolerable.

    Still, he got his booster and would “not hesitate for a millisecond to recommend the vaccine”.

    “Nobody should be afraid to get a vaccine because of the possibility of some sort of auditory side effect,” Poland said, citing the well-established risks of complications from COVID.

    “A wise person looks at the balance of risks and benefits and says, ‘well, there are some known risks to the vaccine, but they are far lower than the risks of getting the disease,’” he said.

    Germany seals gas deal with Qatar to reduce dependence on Russia | Oil and Gas News

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    Germany has sought to reduce its energy dependence on Russia since Moscow invaded Ukraine.

    Germany and Qatar have reached a long-term energy partnership, a German official has said, as Europe’s biggest economy seeks to become less dependent on Russian energy sources.

    Russia is the largest supplier of gas to Germany and German economy minister Robert Habeck has launched several initiatives to lessen Germany’s energy dependence on Russia since it invaded its neighbour Ukraine.

    Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani met Habeck on Sunday and the two discussed ways to enhance bilateral relations, particularly in the energy sector, the Emiri court said in a statement.

    A spokesperson for the German economics ministry in Berlin confirmed on Sunday that a deal had been clinched.

    “The companies that have come to Qatar with (Habeck) will now enter into contract negotiations with the Qatari side,” the spokesperson said.

    In a statement, Qatar said that for years it had sought to supply Germany but discussions never led to concrete agreements.

    Qatar said it agreed with Germany that “their respective commercial entities would re-engage and progress discussions on long term LNG supplies”.

    Habeck also met Qatari Minister of State for Energy Affairs Saad Sherida al-Kaabi in Doha, where they discussed energy relations and cooperation between Qatar, one of the world’s top natural gas exporters, and Germany, and ways to enhance them, according to a statement from al-Kaabi.

    In late February, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced the construction of two new terminals for liquefied natural gas in response to what some critics said was Germany’s over-reliance on Russian gas. The terminals are to be located in Brunsbuttel and Wilhelmshaven in northern Germany.

    Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Germany put on hold the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project designed to bring Russian natural gas directly to Germany via the Baltic Sea.

    Germany intends to phase out its nuclear power production by the end of this year, leaving observers questioning how Europe’s biggest economy will fulfill all of its energy needs.

    Last Day to Shop Big Bargains on Laptops, TVs, Tablets and More at Best Buy

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    Best Buy/Screenshot by CNET

    Spring is almost here, making it the perfect time to breathe fresh life into your home with updated technology. Best Buy’s latest flash sale features price cuts on a ton of top tech across the store. Find big savings on everything from laptops to TVs, small appliances, tablets, headphones and more. You can shop the entire selection of deals at Best Buy. This sale is only available for this weekend, making today your last chance to take advantage of these great discounts. The sale is set to expire tonight at 12:59 a.m. ET (9:59 p.m. PT).

    Finding the best deals in a sale so expansive can take time and feel like searching for a needle in a haystack. That’s why we’ve gone through Best Buy’s current offers to pick out some of the best deals available. Whether you’re upgrading your laptop or television, getting the latest in smart home technology, snagging a great pair of noise-canceling headphones or something else altogether, now is a great find bargain prices. Check out some of our favorite picks below and take advantage of these deals before they disappear.

    This Chromebook will handle all your basic computing, work and entertainment needs with ease. It features a 14-inch 1920×1080 display. It also has thousands of apps available, built-in virus protection and cloud backups. Many schools use Chromebooks, so it can be an ideal candidate for students. It also includes a built-in HD webcam and microphone so that you can video chat and teleconference without issue. This laptop has 32GB eMMC storage and 4GB of memory (RAM), so you won’t be able to do heavy gaming or video editing, but for everyday tasks and video streaming, this is a great budget computer. 

    Google will continue to provide updates for this model through June 2024.

    The Farenheit Flare is a smokeless, stainless steel, portable fire pit. At just over 10 pounds, this fire pit is light enough to take with you on any outdoor adventure and is ideal for camping or the beach. It is also a great addition to any backyard. It is a wood burning fire pit, so you’ll need wood pellets or small logs for the fire. The design reduces smoke to make the experience of sitting around the fire pit more enjoyable. The stainless steel construction is durable and rust resistant. 

    Clean smarter, not harder. This robot vacuum has a powerful, deep-cleaning suction to pick up large and small debris, including dust, dander, allergens and pet hair. With this Shark EZ Robot, you can set up a cleaning schedule and then forget about vacuuming. It will automatically clean your floors and then return to the base when it needs to recharge. Plus, it has smart technology to know where it left off, so when it is charged it will resume in the right place to keep every area clean. The self-emptying base holds up to 30 days of dirt and debris, meaning you only have to do maintenance once a month. 

    Secure what matters most with the Arlo Pro 4 Security Bundle. This bundle includes 3 Pro 4 indoor/outdoor cameras, 4 rechargeable batteries, a dual battery charging station, 3 anti-theft mounts and a security yard sign (an $800 value when purchased separately at full price). Each of the cameras have a wider, 160-degree view and auto image correction as well as color night vision for better identification in any lighting. There is also an integrated spotlight, 2-way audio and it works with Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, Apple HomeKit and Samsung SmartThings. Your purchase comes with 3-months of Arlo Secure, which comes with 30-day cloud recording, advanced object detection, activity zones, a siren, quick-dial to emergency services and more. Plans start at $3 per month per camera thereafter. 

    The Surface 4 is great for streaming movies, gaming with friends and jumping on video calls. It has HD video and Studio Mics to make sure you come through perfectly clear no matter where you are. Plus, the speakers support Dolby Atmos audio, allowing a cinematic experience right from your lap (or desk). This particular model has 512GB of storage on a solid state drive and 16GB of memory, which is enough to power all your everyday computing tasks and entertainment needs, as well as intense multitasking, video editing, gaming and other big projects. The 13.5-inch display makes it ultra-portable. Plus, this laptop comes with a free upgrade to Windows 11, the latest Windows OS. And with Fast Charging, you can get up to 80% in an hour, giving you more flexibility to stay connected and productive, wherever the day takes you. 

    Check out other great deals on TVs, tablets, headphones and more:

    Anne Hathaway on WeCrashed, Working With Jared Leto, & Building Her Character

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    Created by executive producers and showrunners Lee Eisenberg and Drew Crevello, the eight-episode limited Apple TV+ series WeCrashed tells the story of Adam (Jared Leto) and Rebekah Neumann (Anne Hathaway), a power couple that started with the best of intentions, only to quickly become so power-hungry that it led to the dramatic crash-and-burn of one of the world’s most valuable startups. As the CEO of WeWork, Adam’s natural charisma partnered with Rebekah’s spiritual lifestyle sold a brand that people bought into and that skyrocketed to success until greed led it to spectacularly blow up in their faces.

    During this 1-on-1 interview with Collider, Hathaway talked about why she was immediately fascinated by Rebekah, how she approached learning more about the woman under the surface and apart from the media representation, collaborating with the showrunners to build the character, the partnership she formed working with Leto, and how she loved the experience of making this series so much that she’d be interested in doing another TV project, if she finds herself drawn to another character.

    COLLIDER VIDEO OF THE DAY

    Collider: Phenomenal work in this. This is a fascinating woman and a compelling couple to watch. When this project came your way, what was your first impression of Rebekah, and what ultimately sold you on wanting to play her?

    ANNE HATHAWAY: Thank you so much for your kind words about it. It was an incredible experience, making it. I was fascinated by Rebekah, right off the bat. I didn’t know the WeWork story. I wasn’t familiar with it. I’d never heard of anybody involved. I guess my area of interest didn’t line up with that. So, I met Rebekah through the pilot episode of what I read, and then I Googled her and I met her through the media reaction. And then, I realized that I knew someone that also knew her and I called that person, and the person that they described wasn’t quite like either of those people. I thought, “There’s something really interesting here, about someone who comes off differently, depending on who’s talking to her.”


    So then, I started working with (show creators) Lee [Eisenberg] and Drew [Crevello] and I said, “I think that what you have here is really promising and really quite good, but maybe we could focus on this and drop this a little bit deeper, and see where her story goes.” In the process of getting to know them better as collaborators and building this character, I realized that they were people I could trust, that weren’t there to humiliate or drag anyone, and that they actually were very interested in the complexity and nuance of who she is, as person, and her story. And then, the cherry on top was getting to work with Jared Leto. So, it all just lined up to be a yes.


    wecrashed-anne-hathaway-jared-leto-01
    Image via Apple TV+

    RELATED: ‘WeCrashed’ Review: Jared Leto and Anne Hathaway Are Tremendous in the Best Cringe Drama Series of 2022


    How did you handle playing a character whose life is a drama, but is seen as a comedy to the outside world? How did you figure out what she was feeling, as she was experiencing each moment, separate from how everyone else was viewing her?

    HATHAWAY: One of the key things that I found out by talking to people that knew her was everyone kept saying, “Oh, she’s so sweet. She’s such a sweetheart.” I thought, “Oh, that’s really interesting,” because that adjective never made it into the press coverage of her. That was just very interesting to me, in terms of adding a layer to her. I looked at everything and thought, this thing that’s happening, that seems like it’s not very nice from the outside, what if it was a sweet person doing it with good intentions, but it just went wrong? It just added a dimension to it that I was really interested in. But in terms of the comedy and the drama at the same time, that’s how I experience life anyway. That part came easily to me because that’s the way I just see things anyway.


    It sounds like you didn’t meet Rebekah, but that you clearly studied her. You had material to watch and read, and you spoke to people in her orbit. Would you have wanted to meet her? Are there questions that you would’ve wanted to ask her, or does it feel like it worked more to your advantage to figure her out on your own?

    HATHAWAY: Just given the approach of Lee and Drew, the creators, I didn’t think it was gonna be that helpful. And just being slightly conscious of this part of the process, which I’ve lived through several times, I just thought it would keep it cleaner, if we’d never met. This was just my interpretation of an experience, as opposed to this being the exact observations I made about someone I met.

    Which makes, especially with someone like this. She seems so layered and, at the same time, while I feel for her, I also feel like she’s still a complete mystery.

    HATHAWAY: I think she’s a person. At the end of the day, I just wanted to treat her with the same level of respect and grace that I would hope I would be treated with, if somebody was playing me, which is to say that she is a human being. We are all just human beings. Nobody’s better than anybody else. I find human beings to be a mixture of admirable traits, but also there are aspects of us that are developing. We’re not always the most idealized version of ourselves, at any given moment. That interested me, all of that, and exploring that, and playing a character who is, to me, very, very human.


    wecrashed-anne-hathaway-jared-leto-06-1
    Image via Apple TV+

    What was it like to have this partnership with Jared Leto, throughout the making of this series? Your performance is so intertwined with his.

    HATHAWAY: Yes.

    It really feels like this was a real collaboration between the two of you.

    HATHAWAY: Yeah. Don’t get me wrong, I work very, very hard and I take what I do very seriously, but any part of my performance that you enjoyed, would not have been there without him. We were total partners in this. I was so inspired by him. He sets such a high bar for himself. It’s thrilling. It really is. Just given the nature of our character’s relationships and how much they mean to each other, we really opened ourselves up to just representing their love. We treated each other with respect and gratitude, and it was a beautiful experience. It was wild, and it was really fun to just throw down and be ready for anything. I hope I’m not flattering myself, but I think we complemented each other, in ways that were very meaningful to me.

    How do you think Rebekah viewed Adam, during all of this?

    HATHAWAY: I think she saw him, but she didn’t see him like you see him and she didn’t see him as I see him. She saw him as she sees him. Certainly, in the beginning, she saw greatness in him, right off the bat. And I don’t know that other people had seen that yet.

    You haven’t really done a TV series since Get Real, which is when I first became aware of you and I loved that show.

    HATHAWAY: Oh, wow.

    I loved that show and was crushed when it got canceled.

    HATHAWAY: You must have been two.


    wecrashed-anne-hathaway-jared-leto-04
    Image via Apple TV+

    You’ve done an episode or two, here and there, and I love the episode you did of Solos.

    HATHAWAY: Thank you.

    You’re really getting to live in a character for a longer period of time with this. Is that something you’re open to doing again, if you find yourself attracted to a character whose story can’t be told in the length of a film?

    HATHAWAY: Absolutely. I loved the experience of this. I loved getting to spend six months with a character, just shooting it, let alone the prep that you do with it, developing that level of intimacy and feel for it. Plus, I just loved the people that I worked with on this one, so it was a real joy to do. When I was coming up as an actress, I always observed that British actors weren’t film actors, and they weren’t TV actors and they weren’t theater actors, they were actors. Someone like Helen Mirren, and there are no actual adjectives to describe Helen Mirren because she’s just Helen Mirren, she would do limited series, she would do film, and she be on stage. That always seemed to me to be the most exciting way to be an actor, so I’m just very excited now that that seems to have found its way to America.


    WeCrashed is available to stream at Apple TV+.



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