Opossums, Hydras And Hummingbirds: What We’re Learning About Aging From Animals | NPR – KCRW

Written by Lulu Miller, Elena Renken Apr. 06, 2020

A stint as lion tamer in Hollywood got Steven Austad interested in animal biology. And soon he turned from training animals to studying them. He's now chair of the biology department at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, where his research focuses on aging.

He's learned that aging happens at different rates in different animals, without following any clear rules. Austad says it's not heart rate that predicts lifespan. An animal's size has something to do with it, but some animals defy that pattern. And even more perplexing are animals that don't seem to age at all like a tiny sea creature called a hydra.

Austad spoke with Invisibilia's Lulu Miller to discuss what science has uncovered about animal aging processes, and how researchers might be able to use what they've learned to extend human lifespans. There's no immortality on the horizon or anything close to it but it's likely science can eventually lengthen our lives by at least a little, Austad says.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

How did you go from lion taming for the movies to studying aging?

I was a reporter for the Oregonian newspaper in Portland. And a friend of mine had a couple of African lions for pets, because he was crazy. He got an offer to use them in a movie, and he needed somebody to help him transport them from Portland to Hollywood. And he talked me into helping out. When I got down there, the movie producer offered me a job and I said, "You understand I don't know anything at all about this, right?" And he said, "that's okay." It awakened my interest in animals and what makes animals tick. After I got fairly seriously injured one time, I thought maybe this is not really what I want to do the rest of my life. So I decided to study animals in graduate school.

What did you like about training lions?

What I liked the most about lions is because they live in social groups, they like contact. They're almost like dogs, more like dogs than cats, except they sometimes will try to kill you. But I just love the intimate contact with them. For the first year, I never took a day off. I worked seven days a week.

How did opossums' short life span get you interested in longevity?

We were working on some animals in South America opossums. I discovered that they age really quickly, almost like mice. And that was so puzzling to me that I completely abandoned what I was working on. It was the size and the longevity combination. I think we all have this kind of intuitive feel from being around animals that smaller animals are going to [have] shorter lives. So you know, a dog has a longer life than a mouse, and a horse has a longer life than a dog, and an elephant has a longer life than a horse. And this just seemed to grossly violate that. I had to recapture them every month, and I would come upon one that was in prime physical health, and two months later it would have cataracts, and it would have lost muscles, and had parasites all over it, and arthritis. It all happened so abruptly.

So, are size and lifespan linked in animals or not?

Yeah, it's a very general pattern. It's true of mammals. It's true of birds. It's true of reptiles. It's true of almost every group of animals. We know that smaller ones are shorter-lived and bigger ones are longer-lived. But there are exceptions, and actually I think the exceptions are the ones that are most interesting from a scientific perspective.

What is the billion beats hypothesis and why do you question it?

I've spent a good deal of my career trying to kill it, but obviously, I haven't been able to. The [idea] is that life is inherently destructive and that burning energy is inherently destructive. Let's say all mammals have a kind of a fixed amount of energy that they can burn over the course of a lifetime. And if they burn it fast, they'll be short-lived, like mice. And if they burn it slow like an elephant, they can live much longer than that. If you actually look at a whole bunch of animals, it turns out that smaller ones actually have more heartbeats and use more energy over the course of a lifetime than large ones.

And then there are these massive exceptions to it. Hummingbirds have a heart rate of over 1,200 beats per minute, which is kind of like a machine gun, but yet they can live in the wild into their teens.

And there's a very small animal that's actually one of the longest lived creatures, right?

Hydras were discovered actually in the early 1700s by Van Leeuwenhoek, who invented the first decent microscope. They're freshwater animals, maybe a quarter to a half inch in length. They almost look like a sea anemone, they're just smaller and skinnier. They really started to be studied in earnest a few years later by a Swiss biologist named Trembley who discovered if he cut them in half across the middle, the bottom would grow a new top, and the top would grow a new bottom. It turns out that you can even treat them with chemicals that basically dissolve all the things that make their cells stick together. You'd make a pile of cells and they will eventually reassemble into a hydra. He started chopping them up in all kinds of ways to see exactly what you needed to regenerate. He eventually created a hydra that had multiple heads. That's how it really came to be [called a] hydra, because a hydra in Greek mythology was this monster that had many heads.

And what did we learn about aging from the hydra? How is it even possible for them to have this kind of longevity?

Hydras have stem cells in them. When they divide, one half of it remains a stem cell, but the other half will eventually turn into part of the tentacle or part of the mouth or part of the body wall. It changed the way we thought about animal development at that point in time. We didn't really know how animals develop [in the 1700s], and one idea was that animals were just very, very tiny replicas of themselves when they were in an embryonic stage, and that pre-formed thing just grew. At that point they thought, maybe inside of a human egg there's a little tiny human and it hatches out into a baby and then it just grows and grows and grows. The hydra pretty much killed that idea because we could take just part of it, which clearly did not contain a whole hydra, and grow a whole new hydra out of it.

Are hydras really immortal?

Rumors really started to accumulate in the 1950s. People had followed individual hydras for a few years, and they didn't seem to die at any higher rates. So there was a rumor that they might be potentially immortal. Daniel Martnez in the late 1990s actually reported that they didn't age. Few people believed him.

At least for as long as anybody's had the patience to follow individual hydras that has been about seven years at the most there's no indication that they age at all. It is possible that if we followed them long enough, we would discover that they aged, but no one has had the patience to do it. Certainly it would be a very, very long time. They're not the only animal that doesn't age, but they're one of the few, and the others that don't appear to age are really close relatives the various kinds of jellyfish, for instance.

What has been unlocked in the science of aging by looking at hydras?

So the idea that if you manipulate single genes, it can have a dramatic effect on aging was really discovered in the late 1980s I would say. And then through the 90s it was confirmed and other genes were discovered.

One of those genes directly interacted with this gene FOXO. Finding this in everything from little worms to people [with long lifespans] suggested that the activity of FOXO might be a key to understanding slow aging. So the hydra work really confirmed what had been seen in a number of other animals.

How has research on slowing aging progressed?

Starting about 30 years ago, people discovered that there were genes that if you either knocked down their activity or souped up their activity could really have a major impact on aging. We started to look at drugs that could affect aging, and we now have at least half a dozen drugs that we know affect aging in a lot of different animals. Some of those things will turn out not to work in humans, but I'm quite confident that we will develop ways to improve human health either by injections, by transfusions, by taking certain pills every day. And that's what the biotech industry is going nuts with right now.

You often hear people fantasize that we're going to live 500 or 1,000 years in the future, and I don't buy that at all. We haven't been able to do that with different species. What we can do is we can increase the longevity of mice, worms and flies let's say by 20% many, many ways. And so I think that's a reasonable idea. What's unclear is how much of that will be healthy life.

Are there drawbacks to potentially extending lifespan?

Let's imagine that we discover a gene mutation that doubles lifespan. If this is so great, why didn't nature do this a long time ago? If it has an effect on reproduction or the [time] to sexual maturity, it may turn out from an evolutionary standpoint not to be a good gene, but to be a bad gene. For all of the benefits that we get in terms of health, there may be some downsides to some of these treatments. We need to be careful.

Knowing everything you do about aging, do you live any differently?

I don't take anything. I don't do any weird diets. I do a lot of sensible stuff. I exercise a lot. I eat right. I don't smoke. Once there's enough evidence, I may try some other stuff. I don't think there's evidence enough in humans to be doing anything else right now.

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Opossums, Hydras And Hummingbirds: What We're Learning About Aging From Animals | NPR - KCRW

Who will be next to join Flyers immortality? – South Philly Review

Two years ago, Eric Lindross No. 88 was raised to the rafters of the Wells Fargo Center as the dynamic center and former hockey child prodigy became the sixth Flyer to have his number retired.

Some, including maybe Lindros himself, thought the day might never come, as his well-documented disputes with former general manager Bobby Clarke at times seemed irreparable.

Bygones eventually became bygones and Lindros joined Bernie Parent, Mark Howe, Barry Ashbee, Bill Barber and Clarke himself in Flyers immortality.

Whos next?

Should there be a next?

You could argue that the Flyers six retired numbers sounds just about right for a franchise that is 52 years old and has won two Stanley Cups. In fact, the Los Angeles Kings and Dallas Stars (formerly Minnesota North Stars), which each entered the league at the same time the Flyers did, will each have six retired numbers once Sergei Zubovs 56 jersey gets raised next season in the Lone Star State.

The St. Louis Blues, also an original expansion team, will have eight retired numbers when Chris Prongers No. 44 is raised next year. The Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, another 1967 expansion team, somehow have only two retired numbers despite five Stanley Cups. Obviously, Nos. 87 and 71 will be added when Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin are finished being Flyers nightmares.

But should those ratios matter? The Buffalo Sabres have seven retired numbers, and the Vancouver Canucks have six despite never winning the Cup and having a slightly shorter history than Philly.

A decent case could be made for several former Flyers, and maybe a few current players, to be the next guy.

Before we dive deep, a few honorable mentions should be named before reaching the top five. Those would be John LeClair, Simon Gagne, Tim Kerr, Reggie Leach and Eric Desjardins. All were great players and are in the Flyers Hall of Fame with the exception of Gagne, whose name should be called soon.

Here are the five with the best odds of being the next Flyer to have his number retired, in alphabetical order.

Claude Giroux If his time with the Flyers ended today, Giroux falls short. But he still holds his destiny in his own hands. Think about if the Flyers do win a Stanley Cup in the next few years and Giroux is the captain who ends a 40-something-year drought the way Mark Messier ended 54 years of torture in New York.

Giroux is currently third in games played in team history, second in assists and fourth in points. By the time he retires, he could be the only player besides Bobby Clarke to finish with 1,000 games and 1,000 points in a Flyers uniform. Bonus points if he ends his career here.

Ron Hextall This is another guy whose story hasnt quite reached completion. Holding the most wins in franchise history (240), Hextall is regarded as the second-best Flyers goalie behind Parent and won the Vezina and Conn Smythe trophies during his time here while taking the Flyers to the Stanley Cup Finals twice.

The second phase of his hockey career was his stint as general manager of the team just a few years ago. Drafting players such as Travis Konecny, Ivan Provorov, Travis Sanheim, Oskar Lindblom, Nolan Patrick, Joel Farabee, Morgan Frost and Carter Hart have set the Flyers up for success. If the team wins a Stanley Cup soon, Hextalls fingerprints will be all over the blueprints.

Rick MacLeish The sun is getting pretty low for the Broad Street Bullies-era guys but MacLeish is still worth mentioning. MacLeish, who died in 2016 at 66, was best known for his performance during both postseasons in which the Flyers won the Stanley Cup, scoring 42 points in 34 games during those two runs. He played in 741 regular season games over a dozen years in Philadelphia and ranks sixth in goals (328) and fifth in points (697).

Perhaps overshadowed by other local heroes of that era, MacLeish never really got the appreciation he deserved. Its now been 36 years since he last played, which probably means the case is closed on MacLeish.

Brian Propp When you talk about stats, Propps jump off the page. In 11 years in Philly, Propp amassed 369 goals, 480 assists and 849 points and was a plus-299 during his time here.

Hes second only to Bill Barber in goals as a Flyer and is a top five in almost every major statistical category. More recently, Propp learned to walk again after recovering from a massive stroke in 2015 and remains a pillar in local philanthropy and a friendly face at Flyers alumni events.

If you need an inspirational hero, look no further.

Mark Recchi Years ago, Recchi might have been considered a long shot, as most of his success had come elsewhere, winning Cups in Pittsburgh, Carolina and Boston. But Recchi was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2017 and played the largest chunk of his career in Philadelphia, which included two stints. Having played for seven NHL teams, Recchis only chance at number retirement is likely in Philadelphia, although only 627 of his 1,533 career points were collected here.

Recchis 123 points during the 1992-93 season remains a team record, and he followed it with 107 points the following year.

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Vikings: Who are the Vikings Gods? From Odin to Thor – Express

The Goddesses

Freyja

Freyja is the Goddess of Fertility and is associated with love, beauty, fertility, sex, war and gold.

She rules over the heavenly field, Flkvangr, where she receives half of those who die in battle.

The other half go to Odins hall in Valhalla.

In Vikings, Freydis (Alica Agnesson) is named after the Viking God Freyja, which impresses her soon to be husband, Ivar the Boneless.

Frigga

Frigga is Odins wife and the Queen of Asgard.

In Norse mythology, she is associated with foresight and wisdom.

The English weekday name, Friday is named after Frigga, previously meaning Friggs Day.

Sif

Sif if Thors wife and a goddess associated with Earth.

Sif is also associated with fertility, family and wedlock.

She is known for her golden hair, which has been associated with golden wheat from the Earth.

Idun

Idun of the keeper of the Apples of Youth and is associated with spring.

In Norse mythology, Idun is believed to be the keeper of the magic apples of immortality, which the gods must eat to preserve their youth.

Vikings is streaming on Amazon Prime now

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Vikings: Who are the Vikings Gods? From Odin to Thor - Express

Flying high: Panthers’ big shot at Immortality – Queensland Times

Penrith's seemingly unstoppable season is poised to have it in Immortal company.

In 1959, a St George Dragons side boasting three future Immortals in Johnny Raper, Norm Provan and Reg Gasnier, went through the season undefeated, with one draw the only blight on an 18-game season.

The Panthers currently sit atop the NRL table with 13 wins, a draw and just one loss.

And with games against Wests Tigers (home), Brisbane (away), Parramatta (home), North Queensland and Canterbury (both away), Penrith is $2.60 with the TAB to win its remaining matches and earn a place in the record books just behind the Dragons.

It will be some feat, given that would make them the first side since the Dragons 61 years to enter the finals with fewer than two losses. And that 1959 outfit was arguably the best of the Red V's 11 consecutive premiership sides as they completed the last unbeaten season in first grade history.

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Penrith are chasing the likes of the 1959 Dragons.

Unheralded at the start of the year, Penrith has stormed into outright premiership favouritism for the first time since 2004.

"It's hard sometimes, you get ahead of yourself," Panthers backrower Liam Martin said. "But a lot of the coaching staff bring us back to earth, we might play well but there's always things to improve on.

"There's still improvement in us. We're building on something, and aiming for something bigger, so we're trying to not get complacent."

Even if the Panthers drop a game between now and then, they'll join some historically dominant regular season teams.

The 1975 Roosters, led by another Immortal in Arthur Beetson, and the 1995 Manly and Canberra outfits are the only teams to go through a regular season with two losses since grand finals became mandatory in 1955.

Given the upheaval the coronavirus pandemic has inflicted on the season it's a remarkable feat of consistency by the Panthers.

If they can finish it off, they'll join the above five teams as the only sides of the grand final era to win 90 per cent or more of their regular season games.

"All the boys drive it, there's a lot of boys with a lot of experience," Martin said. "They lead the way, telling us they've seen this same thing happen and to stay hungry.

Could the Panthers match the feats of Arthur Beetsons legendary Roosters sides?

"Blokes like Jimmy Tamou, he's won a premiership and he's been around for many years.

"He's a great role model for us young boys, we've just got to keep building on what we've built so far and it doesn't matter what you've done the week before, you just have to put it behind you and go out and play your best footy."

Of course, the Panthers would happily lose their shot at history if it helped them towards a premiership, and their regular-season domination is no guarantee of glory on grand final day.

Beetson's team of 1975 stormed to a then-record 38-0 grand final smashing of the Dragons, but only after losing the major-semi final 8-5 to the same club two weeks before.

Those Raiders and Manly teams of 1995 who flew into the finals with a similarly historic dominance?

Neither of them won it all - the Raiders didn't even make the decider, while Manly lost the big one to a Canterbury team who clawed their way up from sixth.

The last team to only lose one match in the regular season, the 1954 Newtown Jets, couldn't do it either and lost the grand final to South Sydney.

It's only natural for the young Panthers to start dreaming big given what they've achieved this year, but Martin said the team will refuse to rest on their laurels.

"It's hard sometimes, you get ahead of yourself," Martin said.

Martin has enjoyed a tremendous season on the right edge. Picture by Phil Hillyard.

"But a lot of the coaching staff bring us back to earth, we might play well but there's always things to improve on.

"You don't brush it aside just because you got the win. There's still improvement in us.

"We're building on something, and aiming for something bigger, so we're trying to not get complacent."

Five more wins would take Penrith's current streak to 16, equalling the third-longest run of victories in first grade history.

If they don't lose a match between now and the end of the season, including the grand final, they'll match the all time record of 19 - which is also held by the 1975 Roosters.

Suffocating early defence has been the key to the club's rise - they've gone 14 games in a row without conceding a point in the first 20 minutes.

"It's the mentality we've had all pre-season, and all season," Martin said.

"To use a boxing analogy - throw the first punch, start fast, go out hard and set the platform early and build off that. I think we've been doing that well, and now the piece of the puzzle is to get it right at the end of halves."

The high-flying Panthers have notched a club record 10 straight wins this season. Picture: Getty Images

THE BENCHMARK

Season - Team - P W D L

1959 St George - 18 17 1 0

1975 Sydney Roosters - 22 20 0 2

1995 Canberra - 22 20 0 2

1995 Manly - 22 20 0 2

1958 St George - 18 16 0 2

2007 Melbourne - 24 21 0 3

2020 Penrith - 15 13 1 1

1974 Sydney Roosters - 22 19 0 3

1971 Manly - 22 19 0 3

1977 Parramatta - 22 19 0 3

Originally published as Flying high: Panthers' big shot at Immortality

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Flying high: Panthers' big shot at Immortality - Queensland Times

Planet Earth Report The Supernova at the Bottom of the Sea to What Covid-19 Autopsies Reveal – The Daily Galaxy –Great Discoveries Channel

Posted on May 22, 2020 in Science

Bow, Humans: Trillions of Cicadas Are Going to Rule America, As humans remain stuck inside or socially distanced, trillions of buzzing cicadas will burst out of the ground across the U.S. between now and summer 2021. Its already starting, reports Motherboard Science.

The Secret History of the Supernova at the Bottom of the SeaHow a star explosion may have shaped life on Earth.reports Julia Rosen for Nautil.us.

Consciousness is Like Spacetime Before Einsteins Relativity The question that has intrigued several of the planets great physicists, including Stanfords Andre Linde and Princetons John Archibald Wheeler in the last decades of his life, was: are life and mind irrelevant to the structure of the universe, or are they central to it? Are we living in a participatory, conscious universe, a cosmos in which all of us are embedded as co-creators, replacing the a purely materialistic universe as out there separate from us.

The ground is softening. Something is shifting in Antarcticas McMurdo Dry Valleys, reports Massive Science,The first water measurements here were taken in 1903. Long-term monitoring since then tells the tale of an abrupt ecosystem shift.

COVID-19: What the Autopsies Reveal-Pathologists are starting to get a closer look at the damage that COVID-19 does to the body by carefully examining the internal organs of people who have died from the novel coronavirus, reports Scientific American.

The Carouser and the Great Astronomer -Its a fine line between oblivion and immortality, reports Nautil.us. What had brought Frederik and Johannes to Prague was the arrival there the year previously of Frederiks third cousin Tycho, a 54-year-old bear of a man with an artificial nose made of gold and silverhis fleshly one had been sliced off in a duel. At the age of 30, in 1576, Tycho Brahe had established the most advanced astronomical observatory in the world, Uraniborg, on the Danish island of Hveen, of which he was Lord.

The giant tectonic plate under the Indian Ocean is going through a rocky breakup with itself.In a short time (geologically speaking) this plate will split in two, a new study finds.

Graduate Student Solves Decades-Old Conway Knot Problem. It took Lisa Piccirillo less than a week to answer a long-standing question about a strange knot discovered over half a century ago by the legendary John Conway, reports Quanta. I didnt allow myself to work on it during the day, she said, because I didnt consider it to be real math. I thought it was, like, my homework.

Will Hot Weather Kill the Coronavirus Where You Live? Asks The New York Times.The forecast from researchers is grim: Warm weather alone will not control the virus in America or abroad. Here are the results for the United States, showing weather on its own cannot meaningfully reduce infections to the rate of 1 new case per every infected person, the point by which the number of infections falls continuously.

So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish Water Worlds Like Earth May Not Be Best Bet for Life

The Last Place on Earth Wed Ever Expect to Find LifeMicrobes are turning up deep beneath the ocean floor, a sign that life might have fewer limits than scientists once thought, reports The Atlantic.

Egg Laying or Live Birth: How Evolution Chooses A lizard that both lays eggs and gives birth to live young is helping scientists understand how and why these forms of reproduction evolved, reports Quanta.

The Fed chief warned of a whole new level of uncertainty as financial pain deepens, reports The New York Times. Mr. Powell said the nations economy was in a downturn without modern precedent.

The U.S. Is Getting Shorter, as Mapmakers Race to Keep Up, reports The New York Times. Scientists are hard at work recalibrating where and how the nation physically sits on the planet. Its not shrinkage its height modernization.

Could science actually make Game of Thrones happen? Sometimes! reports Farah Qaiser for Massive Science,Fire, Ice and Physics breaks down the science behind Game Of Thrones, including beheadings, White Walkers and wildfire.

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Planet Earth Report The Supernova at the Bottom of the Sea to What Covid-19 Autopsies Reveal - The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel

Cardinals Hall of Fame adds Herr, Tudor, and White – KTVI Fox 2 St. Louis

NEW YORK - Major League Baseball owners gave the go-ahead Monday to making a proposal to the players union that could lead to the coronavirus-delayed season starting around the Fourth of July weekend in ballparks without fans, a plan that envisioned expanding the designated hitter to the National League for 2020.

Spring training would start in early to mid-June, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because details of the plan were not announced.

MLB officials are slated to make a presentation to the union on Tuesday. An agreement with the players' association is needed, and talks are expected to be difficult - especially over a proposal for a revenue split that would be unprecedented for baseball.

Each team would play about 82 regular-season games: against opponents in its own division plus interleague matchups limited to AL East vs. NL East, AL Central vs. NL Central and AL West vs. NL West.

Postseason play would be expanded from 10 clubs to 14 by doubling wild cards in each league to four.

Teams would prefer to play at their regular-season ballparks but would switch to spring training stadiums or neutral sites if medical and government approvals cant be obtained for games at home. Toronto might have to play home games in Dunedin, Florida.

The All-Star Game, scheduled for Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on July 14, likely would be called off.

Teams will propose that players receive the percentage of their 2020 salaries based on a 50-50 split of revenues MLB receives during the regular-season and postseason, which likely will be among the most contentious aspects of the proposal during negotiations with the players association.

That proposal would take into account fans being able to return to ballparks at some point, perhaps with a small percentage of seats sold at first and then gradually increasing.

Baseball players have refused to consider even the frameworks for the type of revenue splits that have been agreed to by unions in the NFL, NBA and NHL. The last attempt by baseball owners to gain a salary cap with a revenue split led to a 7 1/2-month strike in 1994-95 that wiped out the World Series for the first time in 90 years.

Rosters would be expanded from 26 to around 30. With minor leagues shuttered, there likely will be the addition of about 20 players per club akin to the NFLs practice squad.

Players and teams agreed to a deal on March 26 that called for each player to receive only a portion of salary, determined by what percentage of a 162-game schedule is played. As part of that deal, if no season is played each player would receive 2020 service time matching what the player earned in 2019.

But that deal is contingent there being no restrictions on mass gatherings at the federal, state, city and local level; no relevant travel restrictions in the U.S. and Canada; and Commissioner Rob Manfred after consulting the union and medical expects, determines there is no risk to playing in front of fans at regular-season ballparks.

Players and teams committed to discuss in good faith the economic feasibility of playing games in the absence of spectators or at appropriate neutral sites. Manfred has said about 40% of MLB revenue is tied to gate, including concessions, parking, ballpark advertising, luxury suites and programs.

Union officials and players have cited the March 26 agreement as setting economic terms and say they have no inclination for additional cuts. Players are more interested in medical protocols and testing designed to protect them from and detect the new coronavirus. The proposal will detail the plan for dealing with players and staff who test positive.

Because players accrue salaries for the regular season only and not for spring training or the postseason, the union may counter by asking for more regular-season games during negotiations that could significantly alter or possibly even scuttle the restart plan.

The DH was adopted by the American League for the 1973 season but has been resisted by National League owners. The players union has favored it because it would create more jobs for high-paying hitters in their 30s, by MLB has looked at it as an economic issue.

Money, however, has disappeared as an issue at this stage for 2020 because nearly all veteran players have agreed to contracts. Yasiel Puig is the most notable exception.

___

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Mystic Karua village near Vaishno Devi in Jammu that tells profound ancient stories – Happytrips

The legend of Karua Jheel and Baba DhansarAs the story goes, an atrocious demon unleashed havoc in Karua village. When the villagers sought refuge at the feet of a saint, Baba Dhansar, for salvation from the wicked demon, the holy man prayed to Lord Shiva for help. And help did come very soon, when Shiva himself came down on earth to kill the demon.Later, a temple of Baba Dhansar was erected near Karau Jheel. There is also a cave where Lord Shiva is worshipped. Karua Jheel itself is believed to be a highly sacred and wish-fulfilling place. However, no one is permitted to take a dip in this lake to maintain its sanctity and cleanliness. Devotees are, however, allowed to bath in the lake downstream. A mela is held every Mahashivratri and in the month of Shravana at Karua Jheel site (which is actually a waterfall).

Other interesting legends narrate the story of Lord Shiva and his spouse Parvati Devi, when they went to Amarnath Cave in Kashmir. Lord Shiva wanted to unveil the secret of his immortality to his divine spouse. Therefore, to keep this a secret, one by one, he removed all his paraphernalia and queer ornaments outside the cave. He also left behind his serpent, which took the form of a man called Vasudev. Soon after, Vasudev became the father of several sons, one of whom was a saintly soul named Dhansar.

Visiting Baba Dhansar

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Wider cost-benefit analysis will determine if WFH is a success – Livemint

NEW DELHI :The bandwagon of opinion that work-from-home is the amrit (nectar of immortality) that the covid manthan (churning) has yielded is growing and speeding down an implementation path that is long on profit-and-loss benefit and short on people-centricity. Corporates love the cost savings, but a fuller analysis will show that it is a double-edged sword to be handled with care, quickly accruing quantifiable savings for companies, but risking slowly accumulating costs for employees and organizations, perhaps not quantifiable early on but not un-measurable. Implement work from home (WFH) by all means, but after data-driven weighing of costs and benefits all around. We would like to see an equivalent level of discussion on the people dimension as we are seeing on cost savings.

Decision-makers, likely older, with older children, better paid, hence living in larger houses with better quality household help, are deciding on WFH from their own contexts, oblivious of employee contexts of smaller homes shared by more family members now also having to double as work spaces, small children demanding attention when they see a parent, and lower quality household help. As for it being a working womans dream, ask them and you will find not all women can manage expected productivity and WFHdisturbing her is the default option if she is at home (surprising how problems resolve themselves when you are at the office !)

People-centricity requires data from the other side and acceptance that there are segments and, so, a one-size policy doesnt fit all. Implicitly assuming that something is workable because it works for the five people who said it to me, or for the mancom, or even worse, that if it has worked in crisis times, it must work all the time, is irresponsible.

So, before jumping to the WFH saves rental cost and delights employees" conclusion and rushing to implement, we suggest a pause to get data on peoples home environments, family demographics, the pain points of WFH and, even more simply, an anonymous employee vote on the matter. Also needed is for HR to develop sound conceptual models on what improves or hampers WFH productivity based on the nature of work of employees in different grades and in different roles and to devise a whole new way of managing productivity.

Neuroscience shows that the chemical balance of the brain shifts when in isolation leading to lower feelings of psychological safety, affecting creativity and openness to change. Social interactions have more to them than video meeting the way they are currently done. Neuroscience theory of mirror neurons" suggests positive benefits of social interaction for teamwork, another holy grail of business leaders (The Star Factor, William Seidman et al and The Tell Tale Brain, V.S. Ramachandran).

Finally, it is also a business leaders responsibility to think about the implicit contract that employers have with employees to provide a work place" that is geared to work needs" (where you do not do meetings with your spouse, mother-in-law or toddler in attendance ). Also, work identity" is a very strong builder of self esteem and social standing, especially in India. Thats why money was spent in the first place on well-designed offices in specific locations that people feel proud to go to. WFH takes these away. Signalling caring for employees cannot be done while ignoring what WFH of the chief wage-earner does to the very structure of the family dynamics.

Rama Bijapurkar is an independent market strategy consultant, and Smita Affinwalla is founder of Illuminos HR Consulting.

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Wider cost-benefit analysis will determine if WFH is a success - Livemint

On This Day: Goalkeeper Jimmy Glass scored the most dramatic of late goals to save Carlisle from relegation – inews

SportFootball8 May 1999: Carlisle were surely on the verge of relegation when an on-loan hero made a 90-yard run into the box and scored.

Friday, 8th May 2020, 7:00 am

If ever a career was distilled into one moment, it was Jimmy Glasss. But what a moment. When the ball dropped to him in the 94th minute, five yards from goal, he dispatched it with a minimum of fuss Carlisle were safe from relegation and Glass had achieved goalkeeping immortality with one swing of his right boot.

Although Glass had just run 100 yards to score, the finish a shot into the bottom corner was arguably the least extraordinary aspect of Carlisles miraculous escape from relegation from the Football League, 21 years ago today.

There was quite a cast at Brunton Park that day in 1999. Nigel Pearson, in his first managerial job, passed the brandy bottle around the dressing room before kick off to try to calm the nerves of his Carlisle players.

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Watching from the stands was Michael Knighton, the chairman. To say he was unpopular with the bulk of the 7,599 crowd would be an understatement. The club was profitable but seemingly about to topple into the abyss.

In those pre-January window days, the transfer deadline fell in late March. It was under Knightons stewardship that Carlisle decided to sell their goalkeeper, Tony Caig, on deadline day and bring in Richard Knight on loan. When Knight was recalled by Derby, Carlisle had to beg the Football League for an emergency loan. Hartlepool protested but, little imagining what might transpire, the League agreed.Thus it was that 25-year-old Glass, who played as a striker at any opportunity in training, arrived from Swindon for the final three games. Carlisle drew the first two but then Scarborough won their game in hand also against Plymouth to move off the bottom.

It was a hot day. Plymouth defender Paul Gibbs broke his leg and the match was delayed, with profound consequences. Lee Phillips put Argyle ahead after half-time, before defender David Brightwell equalised with 28 minutes left.

Scarboroughs game against Peterborough ended 1-1 and they waited on the pitch for 10 minutes for news. They were safe until Carlisle won a corner and Glass sprinted forward. As he recalled: Scott Dobie managed to get a header on target and the goalkeeper parried it straight out. As I arrived into the six-yard box, I was the only one in there. The ball fell to me perfectly. I blasted it in.

Cue pandemonium. Plymouth barely had time to kick off. Glass never played for Carlisle again, though, and two years later, he retired. He gambled heavily and played Sunday League football - as a free-scoring striker.

It took Eddie Howe, a former team-mate, to bring him back into the game in 2016 as a player liaison officer with Bournemouth. One moment ensures he will not be forgotten. It wasnt my goal, it was footballs goal, he said. I just happened to be in the middle of it.

On This Day in sport

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On This Day: Goalkeeper Jimmy Glass scored the most dramatic of late goals to save Carlisle from relegation - inews

Teen paperboy with vampire obsession ripped elderly woman’s heart out and drank her blood to be immortal – MEAWW

A teenage boy who was obsessed with vampires killed an elderly woman, 90, ripped her heart out and drank her blood.

Channel 5's new documentary series 'The Kids Who Kill' looks at the case of Matthew Hardman who had committed one of the most gruesome murders in the UK's legal history in 2001. Hardman was 17 at the time he murdered Mabel Leyshon as he believed he would become immortal.

The documentary looks at the brutality of Hardman's crimes against the pensioner.

The sickening murder took place on the island of Anglesey in North Wales. The crime came as a huge shock to those who knew the boy and describe him as 'remarkably normal'. Hardman was a paperboy and Leyshon knew him. He broke into the elderly woman's home while she was watching tv.

He stabbed Leyshon around 22 times and cut open her chest to remove her heart and drank blood from it.

He then laid down two pokers in a cross shape by her feet. Her body was found two days later.

Hardman had earlier been an art student and had also attacked a German exchange student after she refused to bite him on the neck to make him immortal. The twisted teen had also told the authorities that old people were the kind to have their blood drunk by vampires.

It came to be known that Harman had been smoking cannabis and had been searching through the internet for "vampires, gothic flesh-eating and other macabre things." According to detective Sgt. Lestyn Davies, Hardman had "this deep-rooted insanity".

"He believed if he murdered this old lady of 90, disemboweled her, ripped her heart out and drank her blood, he would be a vampire forever," he shared. "Now, to believe that is insane. He was one of the most violent evil offenders that I have dealt with."

"If he had got away with it, if we had not discovered him, he could have gone on and committed further horrendous crimes," detective Supt Jones revealed. People who knew him had begun to see a change in him. He had developed a fixation on vampires and had started to believe that they may actually exist in reality.

During his trial, the prosecution barrister explained that Hardman "believed they existed, believed they drank human blood and believed most importantly that they could achieve immortality." There was overwhelming evidence that Hardman had committed the crime.

He had left a lot of DNA trail on the scene and had also stored the murder weapon with traces of Leyshon's blood in his bedroom. He was convicted and sentenced to prison for life at the Mold Crown Couty in 2002. At the sentencing, Judge Richards had shared there was enough evidence to indicate that Hardman believed that he could achieve immortality by killing Leyshon and drinking her blood.

Justice Richards said, "You have been convicted by the jury on the strength of the most compelling evidence. The horrific nature of this murder was plain to all. It was a vicious and sustained attack on a vulnerable old lady in her own home, aggravated by the mutilation of her body after she had been killed."

"It was planned and carefully calculated. You hoped for immortality but all you have achieved is the brutal ending of another person's life and the bringing of a life sentence upon yourself," Daily Mail reports.

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Teen paperboy with vampire obsession ripped elderly woman's heart out and drank her blood to be immortal - MEAWW

Dairy drives help keep pride in the dairyland – WAOW

AUBURNDALE, Wis. (WAOW) -- In a time of struggle for dairy farmers, Auburndale High School and many others are doing what they can to show support.

The last month and a half has been a lot of trials and tribulations, said Kylie Brown. She's a teacher, mother, and she milks cows every week on her brother's dairy farm.

She knows in many ways, its just been a stressful time for everybody

Her brother, Adam has been selling his milk for ten dollars per hundredweight. In order to break even, he should be selling for at least sixteen dollars.

Mark Cournoyer, FFA Director at Auburndale High School said, Everybody got quarantined, restaurants closed, and the demand for cheese and other dairy products fell by the waist side.

In the Auburndale School District, families love their farms. When the yearly ride your tractor to school event was canceled this week, they all shared videos online.

There are 76 dairy farms in the school district. So, the FFA and student leadership team started a dairy drive.

The response has been unbelievable, said Cournoyer

They raised $550 dollars for each week of the drive. The school is adding locally-sourced dairy products to the student meals they send home.

Cournoyer said, This week, theyre going to be getting two blocks of cheese, a gallon of butter, and a gallon of milk.

They're focusing mainly on cheese because it cuts down the amount of milk on the market by ninety percent. In other words, ten pounds of milk equals one pound of cheese.

It also has a longer shelf life for families. Cheese is milks step into immortality, said Cournoyer

As the market fills and prices fall, community members in Auburndale and across Wisconsin are rising to the challenge.

Cournoyer said, Ive been here for almost twenty years and Ive never seen people step up in the way that they have for our dairy farmers here in central Wisconsin.

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Dairy drives help keep pride in the dairyland - WAOW

Jellyfish, not the meek, might inherit the Earth – The Economist

Yet there are very few toy jellyfish, Peter Williams observes ruefully

Apr 2nd 2020

Jellyfish. By Peter Williams. Reaktion Books; 224 pages; $19.95 and 12.95.

LACKING BRAINS or much of a gut, jellyfish, which are 95% water, are deceptively simple in structure. Yet they are otherworldly in appearance, as their nameslions mane, flower hatimply. Neither fish nor jelly and rather more like slime, they puzzled Aristotle. Were they animals or plants? Even the father of taxonomy, Carl Linnaeus, was stumped.

In fact, Peter Williams writes in his engaging and handsomely illustrated book, they are animals of surprising sophistication, with an ingenious portfolio of stratagems. Deepstaria enigmatica literally bags its meal by enfolding prey in its sheet-like body and tightening the edge like a drawstring. Erenna, a deepwater species, lures tiny crustaceans to their doom with luminescent tentacles. Turritopsis dohrnii, the immortal jellyfish, pulls off the most stunning ploy of all. When injured, it shifts into developmental reverse, devolving back into a polyp, its earliest stage of life. A Japanese researcher says unlocking the secret of this immortality is the most wonderful dream of mankind.

Until the advent of underwater cameras, their shape-shifting forms frustrated would-be illustrators and researchers. You might as well dissect a soap bubble. Unlike mammals, fish or insects, they could not be stuffed, mounted or pinned. Preservation was tricky; alcohol degraded their colour and translucency. Some of the best early depictions were exquisite 19th-century glass models, now in Harvards Museum of Comparative Zoology, made by father-and-son artists Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka.

Mr Williamss book is an ambivalent experience itself. The reader is by turns wary, repulsed and fascinated by these creatures. They figure in the grand scheme of nature, providing food for sea turtles, penguins, lobsters and (primarily in Asia) humans. They act as a sink for greenhouse gases; they have played a role in Nobel-prizewinning research in chemistry and medicine.

On the sinister side, jellyfish blooms have sometimes created havoc. Forty million Filipinos were left in the dark in 1999 after swarms were sucked into the cooling system of a power plant, sparking fears of a military coup. In 2009 a Japanese trawler traversed an efflorescence of giant jellyfish, some weighing over 200 kilos. When its nets were raised, the boat capsized. Species such as the Portuguese man-of-war and the box jellyfish have a deadly sting, and antidotes remain elusive.

It may be that the meek will not ultimately inherit the Earth: jellyfish will. Because they can tolerate warming seas, acidification and pollution, some scientists believe that they may be set to outlast less robust animals. Others reckon that recent blooms simply reflect natural fluctuations in numbers.

Enduring they may be; endearing they are not. Toy jellyfish, after all, are few and far between. Octopuses, yes, Mr Williams ruefully acknowledges, but very, very few jellyfish. They are too toxic and they look too weird. But, he argues persuasively, if they are ineligible for affection, they at least deserve humanitys respect.

This article appeared in the Books and arts section of the print edition under the headline "Rich and strange"

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Jellyfish, not the meek, might inherit the Earth - The Economist

Boris Johnson is latest PM to face ill health during a national crisis – The Guardian

Prime ministers do not aspire to infallibility or immortality, but a display of mental or physical frailty at a point of national crisis is something any Downing Street spin doctor would dearly wish to avoid, and if possible suppress.

The impression of the ship of state adrift, and the helmsman heading below deck, pleading illness, hardly inspires confidence, however much personal sympathy in this case is felt towards Boris Johnson. With questions being asked about the governments lockdown exit strategy and Labour revitalised by a new leader seeking to make a mark, No 10 needs to be at its most coherent and decisive.

It is also a concern if Johnson as adjudicator is absent just as Whitehall jostling starts between those putting either the interests of the nations health or its economy first.

But the infectiousness of this virus made it practically impossible for Johnson to hide from others in No 10, and the public, that he had contracted it. Once the decision was made for Johnson to go to hospital, No 10 went public within two hours. Little other option was available. Rumours had been circulating for days that his recovery was not under way, highlighted by the return of the health secretary, Matt Hancock.

What is Covid-19?

It is caused by a member of the coronavirus family that has never been encountered before. Like other coronaviruses, it has come from animals. The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared it a pandemic.

What are the symptoms this coronavirus causes?

According to the WHO, the most common symptoms of Covid-19 are fever, tiredness and a dry cough. Some patients may also have a runny nose, sore throat, nasal congestion and aches and pains or diarrhoea. Some people report losing their sense of taste and/or smell. About 80% of people who get Covid-19 experience a mild case about as serious as a regular cold and recover without needing any special treatment.

About one in six people, the WHO says, become seriously ill. The elderly and people with underlying medical problems like high blood pressure, heart problems or diabetes, or chronic respiratory conditions, are at a greater risk of serious illness from Covid-19.

In the UK, the National health Service (NHS) has identified the specific symptoms to look for as experiencing either:

As this is viral pneumonia, antibiotics are of no use. The antiviral drugs we have against flu will not work, and there is currently no vaccine. Recovery depends on the strength of the immune system.

Should I go to the doctor if I have a cough?

Medical advice varies around the world - with many countries imposing travel bans and lockdowns to try and prevent the spread of the virus. In many place people are being told to stay at home rather than visit a doctor of hospital in person. Check with your local authorities.

In the UK, NHS advice is that anyone with symptoms should stay at home for at least 7 days. If you live with other people, they should stay at home for at least 14 days, to avoid spreading the infection outside the home.

How many people have been affected?

Chinas national health commission confirmed human-to-human transmission in January. As of 6 April, more than 1.25m people have been infected in more than 180 countries, according to the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

There have been over 69,500 deaths globally. Just over 3,200 of those deaths have occurred in mainland China. Italy has been worst affected, with over 15,800 fatalities, and there have been over 12,600 deaths in Spain. The US now has more confirmed cases than any other country - more than 335,000. Many of those who have died had underlying health conditions, which the coronavirus complicated.

More than 264,000 people are recorded as having recovered from the coronavirus.

One person closely involved said: The difficulty is that the crisis is so all-enveloping, the PM could not stop working. No one likes to think they are dispensable. The first step was to get him to admit to himself how ill he was becoming. What was subsequently admitted to the nation was a second order issue.

Even now No 10 is reluctant to go into detail on the prime ministers health, stressing in its statement that the hospital admission was simply a precautionary step to undertake tests, rather than an acknowledgement that he had deteriorated. He would continue to be briefed at his hospital bed and was very much in charge.

By contrast, Donald Trump in opening his Sunday press conference provided a dramatic, possibly melodramatic, medical bulletin on Johnsons health, offering the USs prayers to help Johnson in his personal fight with the virus. Trump has a relationship with the truth that could be described as sometimes adjacent, but he did not give the impression that Johnson was going to hospital for routine tests.

If No 10 is being economical about a more serious illness, it would not be the first time the public has been misled by a serving prime minister about his health. The UK may be at war with an invisible virus, but British prime ministers at times of conflict have always been reluctant to admit they have been incapacitated. David Lloyd George in 1918 suffered a bout of influenza so severe his valet said it was touch and go whether he would survive. Medical bulletins at the time made no suggestion he was in any danger.

Andrew Bonar Law resigned in 1923 only on receiving a diagnosis of terminal throat cancer, and Henry Campbell-Bannerman, prime minister from 1905 to 1908, died days after his resignation in 10 Downing Street.

During Winston Churchills two wartime illnesses, the full extent of them was never revealed. In February 1943, after the then 69-year-old contracted pneumonia, his personal physician Charles Wilson drafted a bulletin, but Churchill immediately demanded to see it. He dismissed it as alarmist and liable to cause confusion and despondency and was, in any case, untrue.

Churchill, therefore, dictated his own bulletin, but Wilson said it was inaccurate and misleading and he could not possibly sign it. Elaborate textual negotiations led to a compromise, and subsequent bulletins always referred to his improving condition.

A further bout of pneumonia in August 1944 was not publicised at all, and according to his wife, Clementine, only the smallest circle was informed.

Similarly, the cocktail of drugs being taken by Anthony Eden during the Suez crisis was known only to a few, and even now the impact on his judgment is a matter of dispute.

But these were more discreet times, and the ruling class could form a small circle of trust. That in turn made it easier to put out bland medical bulletins that disguised more than they revealed.

The White House has been equally skilled at suppressing the truth about its presidents health. Franklin D Roosevelt famously had polio, Dwight D Eisenhower had both a heart attack and a stroke while in office. John F Kennedy suffered Addisons disease, hypothyroidism and severe back pain, none of which was publicly disclosed during his lifetime. Grover Cleveland in 1893 even had a secret operation to remove a cancerous growth that took place on a boat, dressed up as a fishing trip on a lake.

The fear that power, credibility and respect will seep away if ill health is revealed remains. Not just the electorate will lose faith, but your cabinet colleagues may sniff a succession. Tony Blair was reluctant to reveal his heart issues for fear allies of the the then chancellor, Gordon Brown, might take advantage.

Hillary Clinton was hammered when she contracted pneumonia, and wobbled in front of the TV cameras when walking to a car. In 2016 news of her illness received 13 times more coverage than revelations about fraud in Trumps charitable foundation. Bernie Sanders has frantically denied his heart attack makes him the weaker of the three septuagenarians seeking the presidency.

But outright suppression of the truth in modern politics has its downsides. Figures such as Peter Mandelson, Gordon Browns chief communicator after the financial crash, have warned the prerequisite for national unity at a time of genuine crisis is a government that levels with the British public about the difficulties the Whitehall machine is facing.

There will come a point when, if Johnsons condition is serious, the medical and spin doctors will have to tell the public as much.

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Boris Johnson is latest PM to face ill health during a national crisis - The Guardian

The Creation Of An Iconic Wine From Umbria, Italy – Forbes

2009 Arnaldo-Caprai, Spinning Beauty Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG

It takes a significant amount of courage and passion to aim for a dream that goes beyond ones own parents realm of possibilities, especially when that parent is already a pioneer in his own right. Marco Caprai said that there was only one time in his life when he disagreed with his father Arnaldo Caprai, the man who brought attention to the quality potential of the Sagrantino red grape that is an indigenous variety of the town of Montefalco in Umbria, Italy; it was the drastic choice to change the trellising of the vines for the 1990 vintage at their Arnaldo-Caprai winery as Marco decided to have each plant grow a lot less grape bunches. Marco described his fathers reaction as disaster and remembered him yelling, Who are you to decide?! But it ended up being a fantastic vintage and it was the first step towards creating an iconic wine in the lesser known wine region of Umbria.

Arnaldo-Caprai

Marco Caprai

My father founded the Arnaldo-Caprai winery in 1971 but he was in the textile business and so when I was very young he left the responsibility of the winery to me, said Marco explaining how it came to pass that he took charge of the winery in 1989 at the tender age of 21. Arnaldo initially only started with 12 acres of vineyards and today the winery has 370 acres and is the beacon of light for serious Sagrantino red wines that other local producers in Montefalco have looked to for inspiration. But the influence of the Arnaldo-Caprai winery extends to other continents as Marco has met producers from Australia, South Africa and North and South America who are working with Sagrantino who also have been inspired by his wines.

Arnaldo-Caprai Wine Lunch at Ai Fiori in New York City

Marco remarked that his father was before his time when he tried to make quality Sagrantino in the 1970s as the focus was more on quantity and not quality because, generally, back then Italy was a poor country where many of the inhabitants drank wines as a food source for calories. But as the demand for higher quality Italian wines grew in the U.S. during the 80s, as well as in Italy, there was a shift in the 1990s to meet that demand according to Marco. This was most noted in export markets with the increased export of quality Sangiovese wines from such areas as Chianti in the region of Tuscany as Sangiovese had already become a staple in the U.S.. But what is interesting about Sagrantino is that it was bordering on extinction at one time as it is a variety that produces small grapes and small bunches and so the yields are low which makes the idea of Marco lowering the yields even more extraordinary. Another issue is that Sagrantino has one of the highest polyphenol contents in the world making the wine very tannic if not handled with great care in the vineyards and cellar.

Spinning Beauty Wines Paired Perfectly with Ai Fiori's Spaghetti with Blue Crab, Lemon, Bottarga and ... [+] Chilies Dish

It is said that Sagrantino was brought to Montefalco by the Franciscan monks during the Middle Ages and that traditionally it was made as a sweet passito (made by dried grapes) that was drunk during special occasions. The passito Sagrantino was a wine that Marco remembers his family drinking for Easter but it was a wine that was only made in minuscule quantities that was falling out of fashion. But Marco and his father looked at the Sagrantino variety as one that had all the key elements that the great dry red wines of the world shared, structure and body, good acidity and a very long capacity for aging.

Improvements Towards Iconic Wine Status

Arnaldo-Caprai Winery and Vineyards

Marco has implemented many changes to unlock the greatest of Montefalcos Sagrantino grape. As mentioned previously, it was vital to setup the vines to produce fewer grapes as there was always an issue with balance between the ripeness of the polyphenols (tannins) and the sugar ripeness. During the summer, the vines would shutdown and not restart until the first rain of autumn so full maturation of the polyphenols did not come about until the beginning of November causing too much sugar ripeness. Once the vines started producing fewer grapes the plants had more energy to continue maturing the grapes throughout the summer and so the polyphenols were ideally ripe in September which kept the sugars from getting too high. Then, starting in 1988, Marco participated in researching various clones of Sagrantino with the University of Milan. After 10 years of research, starting with over 150 clones, Marco chose three with one of them being named the Cobra Sagrantino clone that had become famous among Sagrantino wine lovers.

In the cellar, he works with integral fermentation for his iconic wine where the grapes are kept in barrels that are manually rotated while fermenting for ten days and they are kept in a temperature controlled room and continually rotated until the wine finishes post-fermentation maceration, around 30 to 40 days. The temperature is constantly adjusted depending on the stage of the wine and no pumping over of the juice over the skins takes place. Despite Sagrantino having lots of tannins, the quality of the tannins can be quite smooth when the right clones, growing methods and winemaking techniques are used and hence it can be macerated on the skins for a long time and not suffer from off-putting astringent qualities like other red grape varieties. And finally, his iconic wine ages for at least ten years before it is released onto the market.

Spinning Beauty

2010 Arnaldo-Caprai, Spinning Beauty Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG

Spinning Beauty is the iconic wine that Marco created to show the world that the Sagrantino of Montefalco deserves its spot among the finest international wines across the globe that have reached legendary status. The name is an homage to Marcos father, Arnaldo Caprai, who made his success in the textile business and that sentiment is even further noted on the label that shows a threaded needle. Marco noted that his father always focused on excellence when it came to textiles and that is why Spinning Beauty is the perfect way to honor his legacy; the spinning of cashmere (Umbria is considered the district of cashmere) seems fitting for a winery that was able to find the elegance of one of the most tannic wines of Italy. 2006 was the first vintage and it took the fine wine world by storm on its release, a decade after harvest, by illustrating that there was still another red grape not yet recognized that was ideal for aging.

The Dream of Immortality

Marcos father certainly carved an illustrious name for himself in the textile world yet it was Marco who was the one who needed to take the dream of his fathers small winery and turn it into a milestone for Sagrantino and for the town of Montefalco in Umbria. A lot of people have the passion for wine and to produce wine because they want to have immortality; it is a dream filled with passion, Marco confessed as he presented the 2010, 2009 and 2008 vintages of Spinning Beauty. A dream that was beyond the comprehension of his father as making fine cashmere in Umbria made sense but making a Sagrantino that could compete with other fine wines of the world was another story as other Italian wine regions had already eclipsed Umbria when it came to internationally known wines. But sometimes it takes the new generation to see the potential that is not even considered and hence pioneers new opportunities finding their own sense of immortality; immortality for a man and immortality for the Sagrantino grape.

2008, 2009 and 2010 Vintages of Spinning Beauty

2018 Arnaldo-Caprai, Cuve Secrte Umbria Bianco IGT

2018 Arnaldo-Caprai, Cuve Secrte Umbria Bianco IGT, Umbria: A blend of Grechetto,Viognier, Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and Fiano; every year the blend is different. This project started in 2012 to introduce a high quality white wine from Montefalco. Golden apples with hints of anise and wild flowers on the nose and a creamy body that had mineral laced honey notes on the finish.

2010 Arnaldo-Caprai, Spinning Beauty, Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG, Umbria: 100% Sagrantino (Cobra clone) from Marcos oldest vines in his Monte della Torre vineyard. Marco said that 2010 was considered one of the great vintages in recent times for Montefalco Sagrantino. A big, brooding wine that was powerful yet incredibly elegant with complex notes of graphite, dark chocolate and toasted spices that had a rich mid-palate with brawny tannins that suggested this wine will age for decades. The 2010 has not been officially released onto the market and it is only be previewed by the press and wine buyers at this time.

2009 Arnaldo-Caprai, Spinning Beauty, Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG, Umbria: 100% Sagrantino (Cobra clone) from Marcos oldest vines in his Monte della Torre vineyard. 2009 was a colder vintage according to Marco. This 2009 was much more open than the 2010 which is not a surprise considering the difference in the vintages. Pretty nose with notes of violets, bright red cherries and cinnamon that had finer tannins on the palate with still plenty of structure to age yet it had a more overall graceful quality at this stage of its life.

2008 Arnaldo-Caprai, Spinning Beauty, Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG, Umbria: 100% Sagrantino (Cobra clone) from Marcos oldest vines in his Monte della Torre vineyard. Fresh leather and clove notes initially that evolved into multilayered fruit such as fresh blackberries and plum pie which made this an extremely multifaceted wine that just became more enticing on the finish with compelling notes of saffron and smoldering earth that had a slight grip that gave shape and precision to the finish.

2015 Arnaldo-Caprai, Belcompare Umbria Merlot IGT

2015 Arnaldo-Caprai, Belcompare, Umbria Merlot IGT, Umbria: 100% Merlot. Marco makes a Montefalco Rosso DOC wine that requires anywhere from 60% to 70% Sangiovese, 10% to 15% Sagrantino and then allows a winemakers choice of another red variety and in Marcos case he likes using Merlot to balance out the Sangiovese and Sagrantino. Marco started working with famed wine consultant from Bordeaux, Michele Rolland, and Michele was really impressed with a particular section of the Merlot vineyard and so Marco decided to bottle it separately in this Belcompare selection. This is the first vintage of this wine and it was absolutely a heavenly Merlot with an enchanting perfume with bright acidity that lifted the sweet fruit with delightful hints of blueberry scone and sea salt that had silky tannins and a richly, flavorful finish.

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The Creation Of An Iconic Wine From Umbria, Italy - Forbes

Art In Isolation More Industry Interviews – Oliver Malin – ArtLyst

If this isnt your first time visiting this series, thank you for your returning custom. You may know that it starts with an introduction, which salvages every word from the catacombs of my daily confusion, which isnt becoming any easier. In order to dodge dishing out a lengthy sermon, Ive added an additional contestant from the usual four on this existentialist hamster wheel. The bus first stops at the loafers of Jonny & Joe, the two that make Unit, Londons Instagram fuelled juggernaut contemporary art gallery docked in the heart of Mayfair via more strategic pop-ups (galleries) than a zombie film. Stepping onto the inquisition bus next is Antonia Showering, a gestural figurative hazy painter who conjures up ethereal beauty via the prism of family life with a touch of Paulo Rego in the depths of the colour washes. Taking the baton from her is a Basque maestro & an investigator of human form via paint. This version of paint is thick. Its acrylic. Its big. Its bold. Its known its a painting and it might be Britney Spears with her iconic shaved head or another moment in our recent history immortalised via the volume of memes, in its honour. From Immortality, to enforced Iconography comes Philip Colbert next on the conga line. This Scottish Pop creative instigator guides us through the idiosyncrasies of our artistic culture, sometimes on a roller coast and other times on a pleasure boat slowly meandering around a loch, but often with a Lobster leading the way into the light. Last but by no means least is, Roisin Mcqueriens a fine art enabler, organiser & sweetheart, who has been helping to make projects fly for a decade across all corners of the LDN.

Joe Kennedy & Jonny Burt Co-Founders of Unit London

How have the unforeseen circumstances affected your practice & how have you chosen to respond creatively?

Significant challenges catalyse creative thinking you are forced to think outside the box to circumnavigate the issues at hand. We love a challenge. Were fortunate to have access to great technology that can keep us connected and keep communication constant despite us all being isolated. Our team we have been brilliant in brainstorming ways for the business to find new relevance in these strange times and we are going back to our roots in many ways focusing on the artistic community and arts power to bring people together and create common ground.

How is your mental health at the moment & what are you doing to stay positive?

We are great. This is a challenge and one which we are facing head-on with our tried and tested formula of hard work and creative thinking.

With all this potential free time, what are you going to do/ learn anything new?

We have Lots of ambitions to get back into painting or pick up French and new languages again, but somehow the days are flying by and there is so much to do across our group. Our focus is there. We have all learnt a lot of lessons already about what is really important for us as a society our relationships, the people close to us, the amazing public services we are so fortunate to have, the value of the things we all take for granted. For those who have the time, we would always recommend Masterclasses and Stack. Were addicted.

What advice would you give to your fellow creative practitioners?

Experiment! Now is the time.

What have you been listening to on Spotify since this Madness really kicked off?

All sorts right now listening to Madness which is pretty fitting. Someone sent me a song with 8D audio technology last week, which is fantastic.

Antonia Showering

How have the unforeseen circumstances affected your practice & how have you chosen to respond creatively?

For the past year, I have been painting in the New Contemporaries x SPACE award studio The award ran out today, but under these circumstances, I cant move, so my place of work is definitely trapped in limbo for the time being. Luckily when things started to escalate, I did my own bit of panic buying at GreatArt and stocked up on loads of Old Holland oils so I can see myself through the next few months at home. My solo show was meant to open a few days ago (I had been doing all-nighters preparing for it) so as a change I have recently been writing a bit more, trying to make sense of this mad, sad situation.

How is your mental health at the moment & what are you doing to stay positive?

The anxiety comes in waves, but as things unravel the more, I am coming to terms with this as our reality for now. Its definitely lonely. I thought living on my own and studio-ing on my own meant I was well prepared for a lockdown, but Im definitely missing the hustle and bustle. Day times seem to be better. A friend has been sending daily meditation audio recordings and it appears to be helping with keeping a positive mind.

With all this potential free time, what are you going to do/ learn anything new?

I am going to keep painting, so I dont have much more free time. But for occasional evening entertainment, I joined TikTock and am quite tempted to perfect a couple of dance routines! But dont hold your breath for any evidence of this.

What advice would you give to your fellow creative practitioners?

To try and see this hiatus from your normal routine as a moment to reflect on what really matters. Paint what means something to you. Ive spent recent years trying to depict different ways of expressing intimacy.

Im looking forward to what happens to my practice after being starved of it for a few months!

What have you been listening to on Spotify since this Madness really kicked off?

Ive been going on 3 metres apart walks with my Swiss grandmother. She loves reggae, so we have been listening to quite a bit of Bob Marley from my portable speaker. She usuallys very sociable and Im so impressed at how upbeat she is, making the most of a shit situation! Im trying to adopt this outlook.

Gala Knorr

How have the unforeseen circumstances affected your practice & how have you chosen to respond creatively

I had just finished a series of workshops in secondary schools in Basauri, a small town neighbouring the city of Bilbao. It was part of my commitment with the Juan y Pablo de Otaola Fellowship that took me to the Cit Internationale des Arts in Paris last year, and my exhibition of this project is supposed to be this May in the Basque Country. I flew down right after to my folks. The ambiance was very weird at the airport. I left my hometown Vitoria which at that point was the biggest focus of contagion up north. I had to pick up my things in Mlaga and pack for Lisbon. I was due to be on residency there for three months and have a group show in the summer. Now everything has been postponed with no definite date for the projects to go on. I guess myself and my work are currently on standby since I am quarantined in southern Spain with my family. Now we are all mostly relying on social media to keep up with the life we cant live socially IRL and I am not sure how easy it is to respond creatively to this situation right away. I am actually kind of shocked. I see artists posting online how much work they do during the quarantine. I find that notion of productivity under this situation quite revealing of the late-stage capitalist neoliberal system we all live under. As for myself, I decided to slow down, read, look through my things, things that inspire me and make me happy, process, write, give myself goals for a near-future after all this has passed.

How is your mental health at the moment & what are you doing to stay positive & with all this potential free time, what are you going to do/ learn anything new

It has been nine days since our president Pedro Sanchez announced the state of alarm, I am lucky to not be alone during this terrible time. I am fortunate to be surrounded by family, if this had caught me somewhere else I would have been pacing all day confined in whatever apartment, room, or wherever I would find myself in. I am always in touch with my friends who I already spoke to almost daily. Still, I have created the Cuarentena Breakfast Club which basically is having breakfast with my closest artist and gallery friends with our video chat game on. Chatting about our day while quarantined, keeping our morale up, talking about books we read, movies weve seen, and chat about the situation we are in. We also share a lot of the memes people have been making during quarantine, videos of how witty and funny people can be when things have turned so strange and frightening with the COVID 19 outbreak. Humour is a key element for me and my work already, and it has become a coping mechanism for everybody. I think this is a time of self-care as much as a time for caregiving, contributing to the wellness of our neighbours even if its just through humour brings us all together a lot more. I am taking this time to reflect, to think, to slow down and reassess what I want from my practice. It has also revealed how much I need to get my drivers license, I know it sounds unimportant, but with the state of alarm only one person can be inside a vehicle, and I cant drive to town and get groceries, my mother who is in her sixties has to do it I cant help her, and my dad is in the high-risk group so he cant leave the house at all. I can only go to pharmacies and bread runs by foot, we live quite far from the city centre in the country. This time I think is making everyone reassess how things work, how certain toxic attitudes have been, what things we need to ask our government to fix, it has been showing the beautiful solidarity of people, and how we need to put health and safety into account, stop cutting funds of our healthcare systems, and appreciate those who take care of us in hospitals and clinics during this crisis.

What advice would you give to your fellow creative practitioners?

My advice on the personal side would be to put yourself, your loved ones and your health before anything, take care of yourself, be conscious of those around you, this virus is very contagious and staying home you help those who are in hospitals already swamped. On the work side, I imagine there are many self-employed people such as me suffering cancellations and getting their shows, residencies or compromises postponed. Rely on others like us, ask around how people are coping with this situation, organise, find out what measures your government is implementing for the economic impact this will have on workers. All European countries are reacting differently and implementing different measures, stay up to date with what is happening where you are from. Do not feel obligated or stressed about making, this is not an easy time to be productive if you are quarantined home and cant access your studio like me try to think and reflect on how to resolve your work with what you have around you. Find things that inspire you and hold on to them.

What have you been listening to on Spotify since this Madness really kicked off

Actually, funnily enough, I have not been listening to Spotify that much, I have rediscovered the pleasure of actually listening, of sitting at home in Spain and going through all those records I have collected living the UK for nine years and in France for 5, putting records on and enjoying that moment. My dad lived in London and Cardiff for almost three years during Francos dictatorship and he managed to bring amazing 45s with him, hes been telling me about the first time he saw Tom Jones sing, and all the tricks and random jobs he had to support himself as a student. Going through all the records has brought memories of great times and travels has been quite fun.

How have the unforeseen circumstances affected your practice and how have you chosen to respond creatively?

This situation escalated very quickly for everyone. So Ive had to adapt rapidly & adapt my studio accordingly. I was actually working on a show in Scotland which was going to be launching today, in fact, or opening today, this evening. So I was like full steam working on that. I do actually have a quite significant team who work with me, which makes it more challenging to adapt, whereas, I could individually work anywhere. Still, when you have a team, its been a new dimension working across webcam from home has been a new dimension and challenge. But, amazingly, we are in our current era as so much technology around it, you know, like everyone being on the computer and also using these like sharing apps and stuff, which is quite impressive.

Conversely, Its felt like a new concept of an art studio, working remotely, digitally, effectively. Because I guess when youve built up a team and you sort of on you know, everyone has a set role and an established synergy and a team/ work attitude, which is really cool, in fact. And I think the fact that we were able to sort of in a way adapt to the situation and actually start working on a lot more digital stuff, which is an exciting arena.

To answer the question from another angle, there has been no doubt like for anyone. This is a crazy time to be living in terms of what we are witnessing in a complete global shutdown of our way of life in a way. Its a crazy phenomenon, which will define our time and calls everything into question. I think the general contemporary art world, the rug is slightly pulled from under the sea of people because obviously, you know, people that took art quite seriously suddenly are like; actually, its not that all the museum are closed, there are actually more important things like food, water and safety, stuff like that.

How is your mental health at the moment & what are you doing to stay positive

I have two kids, who are quite young. Two and four homeschooling and balancing my studio practice has been beneficial in not catastrophizing. Some positive projects have also helped such as creating an art against the virus program software and creating a range of merchandise like sculpture & toys with a company in Asia and a variety of like t-shirts, which can be sold with all the profits going to aid charities.

With all this potential free time, what are you going to do/ learn anything new

Ive started reading about artists from other generations & am particularly engrossed in a study of Graham Sutherland and his dialogue with Francis Bacon, both having parallels in a way but equally going on different journeys, Ive also been looking at the connections between art and philosophy.

What advice would you give your fellow creative practitioners?

From an Artists point of view, Its quite a luxury, this whole thing, because its time with the solitude that can really help your practice develop. Crazy restriction can be quite a good thing.

What do you listen to on Spotify since this Madness really kicked off?

I dont actually have a Spotify account, Apple music (I think). Yeah, I havent been listening to much music but did hear a great recording of Richard Burton reading of Dylan Thomas.

Philip Colbert

How have the unforeseen circumstances affected your practice & how have you chosen to respond creatively

I lost work, but I have gained new opportunities. I was working with an artist and planning international museum shows, commissions, collaborations all of which have been postponed. But Ive gone online, done an Instagram takeover for @feministartmuseum,and am planning new projects in London and overseas for when this all blows over. Which it will.

I curated an exhibition of work by the Glasgow based artist Adam Lewis Jacob, called Crud Love, at Peak in Elephant and Castle Shopping Centre, London, which had to close early. We planned a talk which was cancelled so that we will do a podcast instead.Ive also taken up tie-dying.

How is your mental health at the moment & what are you doing to stay positive

Ive had a few out of body experiences where I think Im in a parallel universe. I miss my boyfriend and my family, but I have a dog, hilarious friends and peaceful home, and Im grateful for that. Routine, laughter, music is vital. And burning copious amounts of sage! Also, Capitalism is on pause and nature is allowed to breathe for a while, and we can all take something positive from that.

With all this potential free time, what are you going to do/ learn anything new

Im enjoying connecting with new people. Im working on offering some works by younger artists to try and support us all during this time, and researching all of the amazing artists I often never have time to, and do more tie-dying.

What advice would you give to your fellow creative practitioners?

Dont take any setbacks or job losses during this unique and bizarre time personally. Think ahead. Reach out to one another, start something that you would normally wouldnt do. I feel like social boundaries are being broken down, which is a really positive thing.

What have you been listening to on Spotify since this Madness really kicked off

The Durutti Column, and Snoh Aalegra.

Interviews Oliver Malin Artlyst 2020 Top Photo: Philip Colbert

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Art In Isolation More Industry Interviews - Oliver Malin - ArtLyst

Virus, 19 reasons why we will come out better – Economic Times

We were speaking of near immortality, we were speaking of moving our memories from our brains to an external device. Or even the other way round of moving a human brain inside a computer.

Our life, our health, our rationailty, our future is so exciting because of this relentless march of technology. It truly is.

Yet this non-living protein ball called COVID 19 has given us the perspective that we are right now but just travelers in this lifes journey to nowhere.

Nature has hit the reboot button. Humans better too hit the reset button.Actually we will, and come out better in 19 ways.

1) Trees- Finally we realize. Whether to avert the looming water induced world war or to avert climate change or to keep the wild animals and virus away from human species. We now will know we need the trees.

2) Building hospital infrastructure rather than military infrastructure- We should never again struggle for want of medical facilities from now. Same with R&D spends, shouldnt be a case of thinking what happens to the unsold medicine stock if the virus just goes away one day.

3) Right medical behavior- Whether it will be through telemedicine or otherwise, the unnecessary exploitation of the patients for money to meet targets of business people running hospitals will reduce in large pockets.

4) Education revamp, finally- Enough case studies will by now be generated on digital education. Will truly enable for an inclusive quality education for all, the basic building block to provide every person on this planet a fair chance to succeed.

5) Knowing our inner self- The most difficult part is to do the journey inwards. We will not all come out attaining salvation but for sure many of us will have a lot more perspective and rationality.

6) Digitized payments- We will finally humanize the Information Technology. We will enable people with technology rather than obstructing people with technology. Digital payments will be an imminent example.

7) Formation of true capitalist structure- Its not the governments business to run business. Governments will focus a lot more on health and education. Running businesses will be left to professionals. Government can regulate for security and innovations. Meritocracy will count even more.

8) Universal Basic income- This loss of mass livelihood will fast forward for a basic fund transfer to every individual which will enable everyone a basic dignity always without losing on the desire to work. The daily wage workers will have benefited the most in these situations.

9) Nationalism- We now know that fates of countries are tightly connected with each other. More importantly that just one individual can put the entire human species under threat. We will come out much wiser now.

10) Religion. Much of the virus spread initially have been from mass prayers. The name of the religions and countries have been different, the results were the same. We will now realize that we were responsible for creating gods, we were responsible for creating this virus and we were responsible for spreading it. We will think much more scientifically from now on without blind faiths.

11) Appreciation of limited resources to live with- We got habituated with too much resources, we consumed too much, we wasted too much. We will now know we can live with far less.

12) New ways of working- Work from home and using personal devices to access high-security office networks. Enough use cases will have been developed to carry on with this model permanently at a small scale. The benefits to individuals, family and to the overburdened traffic in the cities will be many. 5G internet will be a reality sooner.

13) Global supply chain- Multiple business continuity plans will emerge across the globe to make sure of a much better disaster recovery in times like these than putting all eggs in one basket. It will lead to more localization in the near term but will propel the world to a more distributed globalized model in the medium term.

14) Humour- Somewhere many places lost out on the humour and ability to laugh at ourselves and to laugh together. We rediscovered them somewhat in these most trying times and we will continue.

15) Personal space- This is especially true for many populous countries and where culture wasnt to provide personal space to one another in public areas. We learnt the virtues and dignities of it through social distancing and we will continue with that habit to an extent.

16) A less chaotic world- Similarly in many congested cities and as a culture. Chaos, car horns, absence of queuing were the norms. We now know what we were missing out. There will be lesser horns, more queueing when people goes back in the roads.

17) Spitting- The spitting is just a habit. Not just a very uncivilized one, but now we know it kills. Surely many places will have a lot less of it.

18) Liberated personal lives- Staying locked up under one roof will force many people into deciding to live real and liberated personal lives. Many drifting couples will fall in love and yet many will separate. A new beginning for many nonetheless.

19) Nature- Dolphins on the shore, penguins in the street, a mountain view from a city two hundred kilometres away. We now know what we missed our entire life. Nature will again recede when we come out, but we will now know we need to rebalance and we will.

Many of these 19 will not be visible immediately, but make no mistakes, the wheels have been put in motion.

Till then we will just stay at home and just get over this COVID 19.

This too will pass and our best is coming.

Watch out!

DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.

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Virus, 19 reasons why we will come out better - Economic Times

Harry Potter: How Long They Really Spent Hunting Voldemort’s Horcruxes – Screen Rant

In order to defeatLord Voldemortonce and for all, Harry Potter, Ron Weasley, and Hermione Granger embarked on a special mission to hunt down the Dark wizard's Horcruxes and destroy them. Horcruxes in the Harry Potter universe were objects in which a Dark wizard or witch would use to hide a piece of their soul, thus obtaining immortality. In total, Voldemort created seven Horcruxes and it later fell to Harry and his friends to seek and destroy the ones that remained.

The Horcrux hunt was first started by Albus Dumbledore in July 1996. By this point, the first Horcrux, Tom Riddle's diary, had already been destroyed by Harry when he stabbed it with one of the Basilisk's fangs. Voldemort used highly coveted artifacts as most of his Horcruxes, but he made so many so that if one was destroyed, it wouldn't be a detriment to his immortality. Dumbledore realized this, which was why he vowed to destroy them all. After researching them, the Hogwarts headmaster discovered that Marvolo Gaunt's ring was a Horcrux. He found it in the Gaunt Shack and later destroyed it with Godric Gryffindor's sword. Dumbledore shared his findings with Harry, and following the wizard's tragic death, the Boy Who Lived took over the key mission.

Related:Harry Potter: Everyone Voldemort Killed To Make Horcruxes (& Why)

Ron and Hermione decided to forgo their final year at Hogwarts to accompany Harry on the Horcrux hunt. The trio was forced to embark on the mission quicker than expected after the fall of the Ministry of Magic the night of Bill Weasley andFleur Delacour's wedding on August 1,1997. Hermione got the group to safety and far away from the Burrow, but Death Eaters weren't far behind. Hermione had a ton of survival supplies, but they needed to hide somewhere not known by the rest of the wizarding world, so they headed to 12 Grimmauld Place. Unfortunately, it would take nearly nine months to complete the mission.

The start of the Horcrux hunt began in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1. While seeking refuge at 12 Grimmauld Place, Harry, Ron, and Hermione found out that Dolores Umbridge had Salazar Slytherin's locket, one of Voldemort's Horcruxes. After infiltrating the Ministry of Magic and acquiring the locket, the trio failed in destroying it. The object had an ill effect on the group, causing Ron to abandon his friends. After that, Harry and Hermione traveled to Godric's Hollow in search of the Sword of Gryffindor to destroy the locket once and for all. After a series of dangerous encounters, Ron saved Harry and helped destroy the Horcrux.

Upon destroying the Horcrux, the three of them learned about the Deathly Hallows before getting taken to Malfoy Manor. They later escaped and their search took them to Gringotts, specifically the Lestrange family vault which launched Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. They recovered Helga Hufflepuff's cup but had no way to destroy the Horcrux. The search then led them back to school mere hours before the Battle of Hogwarts started. During the climactic battle against Voldemort, the cup, Rowena Ravenclaw's diadem, and Nagini were obliterated. Harry also served as a Horcrux and was killed for a brief time. With no chance at immortality without Horcruxes, Harry managed to defeat Voldemort, ending the battle and the Second Wizarding War. With the date being May 2, 1998, the trio spent nine months and one day hunting Voldemort's Horcruxes. When taking into account Dumbledore's time on the hunt, the overall mission within the Harry Potter series lasted 22 total months.

Next:Harry Potter: Dumbledore's Horcrux Theory (& Why Rowling Hates It)

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Kara Hedash is a features writer for Screen Rant. From time to time, she dives into the world's most popular franchises but Kara primarily focuses on evergreen topics. The fact that she gets to write about The Office regularly is like a dream come true. Before joining Screen Rant, Kara served as a contributor for Movie Pilot and had work published on The Mary Sue and Reel Honey. After graduating college, writing began as a part-time hobby for Kara but it quickly turned into a career. She loves binging a new series and watching movies ranging from Hollywood blockbusters to hidden indie gems. She also has a soft spot for horror ever since she started watching it at too young of an age. Her favorite Avenger is Thor and her favorite Disney princess is Leia Organa. When Kara's not busy writing, you can find her doing yoga or hanging out with Gritty. Kara can be found on Twitter @thekaraverse.

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After all he’s dealt with, Teofimo won’t have a problem making weight for Loma – ESPN

9:05 AM ET

Mark KriegelESPN

If boxing had been enjoying a renaissance, it was epitomized by the prospect of Vasiliy Lomachenko and Teofimo Lopez Jr. fighting for a truly unified title -- all four lightweight belts, May 30 at Madison Square Garden.

No, it wasn't yet signed. Nor does Lomachenko's designation as the WBC's "franchise champion" (as opposed to its "champion in recess," whatever that means) merit any discussion here. It's enough to know that unlike the other prospective super fights -- Tyson Fury-Anthony Joshua, Errol Spence-Terence Crawford or even a nascent provocation on social media like Ryan Garcia and Gervonta "Tank" Davis -- neither party has to cross promotional lines. This fight wasn't merely doable. It had the air of inevitability.

According to Lopez, Lomachenko wanted a 70-30 split of a pay-per-view. "He's trying to cash out in case he loses," he says. "Which he will."

2 Related

Lopez was looking for a 55-45 split on free TV. But he'd settle for 60-40. He knows Loma has three belts to his one. But those were just numbers. Whatever the split, the winner would make more than a score. It would confer a kind of immortality. No, really.

For Lopez, it would mean beating a legend.

For Lomachenko, it would mean defying perhaps the oldest script in the game: the young star dispatching with an older one. But Lopez, at 22, isn't merely a decade younger, he's a hell of a lot bigger than Loma, who isn't even a true lightweight.

This fight had everything; not just a stylist versus a slugger, but the two most diametrically opposite boxing dads in their sons' corners. Anatoly Lomachenko, who has won a slew of Trainer of the Year awards, says nothing, and Teofimo Sr. has proven himself unable to stop talking and refrain from antagonizing the Lomachenkos.

Then, of course, came the coronavirus pandemic.

On March 16, the young fighter made a decision that belied both his youth and his reputation for failing to proceed with caution. While Lopez has one-punch power, he also has asthma. "I can't get COVID-19," he says. "Even if I recover, it would scar my lungs permanently. That would affect my career."

Or conceivably -- and anything seems conceivable at this point -- end it.

So he rented a Chrysler minivan, filled it with his newlywed bride, Cynthia, her misgivings at leaving their Brooklyn apartment, their three dogs, and a haul of paper towels, bottled water, disinfectant wipes and frozen bread. In about 17 hours, they'd arrive in Jonesboro, Arkansas at the home of his in-laws. Teofimo was exhausted. He had a pinched nerve in his back, and hadn't been able to workout in a while. But in such less-densely populated surroundings, at least he felt safer.

Then came the tornado. Actually, from what he could see, there were two tornadoes that came together in the distance. It was a bizarre mating dance, as two pillars became a single gargantuan monstrosity, 600 yards wide, headed straight for them. Or so it seemed.

A tornado has a distinct color, that of dirt and dust. But as it approaches, you can also make out a texture defined by the detritus lifted into its swirl. Lopez could see planks of wood from someone's shed, uprooted billboard signs, twisted metal, tires and propellers from aircraft at the local air strip. And it was all coming fast - with winds up to 147 mph.

Everyone in the house -- Cynthia, Lopez's brother-in-law, his niece and nephew, ages 14 and 9, crammed into a coat closet. Lopez held a mattress above them, in case something should come crashing down. Cynthia held onto the kids. They waited, just a little. They prayed. Nothing complicated. Please, Lord protect us ...

He didn't think about dying. "There wasn't really time for that," Lopez says.

He just stood there, holding the mattress over everybody. The house began to vibrate. Then shake. Then the shaking became more violent. You could hear things crashing outside, items dropping off shelves.

0:54

IBF lightweight champion Teofimo Lopez is okay after a tornado struck the town of Jonesboro, Arkansas.

It lasted 16 minutes. But they still didn't feel safe. "We thought we were in the eye of the storm, and it was coming back at any moment," Lopez says. "But we were only on the edge of it."

After a while, they cleaned up as best they could. Outside, a fence had been destroyed. A trampoline had landed upside down, having been tossed across the yard like a small toy.

Jonesboro would report 22 injuries, no fatalities. But the neighborhood was decimated.

Lopez hadn't been able to work out in weeks, thanks to the aforementioned pinched nerve. Social distancing didn't help much, either -- not if you're accustomed to working in a boxing gym. But now Lopez had to take some inventory -- of himself and his situation. His brother-in-law had a treadmill and a weight set. There was a heavy bag in the garage. Time to get back to work.

But he's 160 pounds, 25 pounds over the lightweight limit, and the most he has ever been.

Going back a year, Lopez has said that the only thing that could prevent a showdown with Lomachenko was weight. He was already bursting, ready to go to 140.

Of course. So this was how the great fight wouldn't happen. No one knows when boxing will return, but when it finally does, it was difficult to imagine Lopez still at 135.

"No, I'll make it," he says quietly. "This fight is going to happen."

"As long as we have adequate time to prepare, I don't foresee it being a problem," says his nutritionist, Paulina Indara of Perfecting Athletes. "Teofimo matured so much as a man and a fighter. He knows he's responsible for himself and his wife. He knows how to buckle down. He knows the script he has to follow. As a team, we can do it."

These aren't days that inspire much optimism, of course. But if you think about it, why not?

You stand over your family with a tornado tearing through the town.

You keep doing everything you can to survive a modern-day plague.

After all that, making 135 is nothing.

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After all he's dealt with, Teofimo won't have a problem making weight for Loma - ESPN

Opinion: Kobe Bryant deserved to give what would have been a memorable Hall of Fame speech – USA TODAY

In his last on-camera interview, NBA legend Kobe Bryant talks to USA TODAY's Mark Medina about life after basketball and his daughter Gigi's favorite NBA player. USA TODAY

The entire NBA family has had more than two months to grieve, console each other and share memories. That has not been enough time to fully process Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant, his 13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven others dying in a helicopter crash.

So when the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced Bryant as a first ballot selection Saturday, this was not just a moment to celebrate how Bryant won five NBA championships, became the franchises all-time leading scorer and overcame too many injuries to count. This was also a moment that reopened a wound that may not ever fully heal.

"Obviously we wish he was here with us to celebrate, but its definitely the peak of his NBA career," Bryants wife, Vanessa, told ESPN shortly after the announcement. "Every accomplishment that he had as an athlete was a stepping stone to be here. Were incredibly proud of him. Theres some solace in him knowing he would be a part of the 2020 Hall of Fame class."

But there is also an incredible amount of sorrow that Bryant wont be part of the 2020 class in person. We lived through these same emotions so many times. When the Lakers played their first game following Bryants passing and LeBron James delivered an inspiring speech beforehand. When the NBA honored Bryant at All-Star weekend in Chicago with various video tributes and performances. When the Kobe and Gianna Bryant memorial took place at Staples Center headlined by Vanessas moving speech. Just like those moments, this Hall of Fame ceremony will be cathartic and emotional.

It wasnt supposed to be this way. Bryant was supposed to deliver a speech that fully matched his complex personality. He would share tales on how he stubbornly overcame injuries. He would defend his demanding leadership style. He would express gratitude for the various mentors that shaped him. And after becoming passionate about storytelling following his NBA career, Bryant would deliver a speech that no scriptwriter could ever write.

IMMORTALITY: Kobe, Duncan, KG headline legendary class of 2020

VANESSA BRYANT: Discusses Kobe's induction in emotional interview

Bryant would offer precise details about how he fell in love with basketball as a young kid growing up in Italy and in Philadelphia. Bryant would express gratitude that former Lakers general manager Jerry West secured his draft rights in 1996 by trading fan favorite Vlade Divac to the Charlotte Hornets. Bryant would shout out his other various muses, whether it entailed an NBA star he modeled his game after (Michael Jordan), a coachs wisdom he eventually appreciated (Phil Jackson) or an NBA luminary that played for the hated Boston Celtics (Bill Russell).

Bryant would spin epic tales on how he scored a career-high 81 points, how he overcame a left Achilles injury or how he dropped 60 points in his final game. Bryant would offer defiance, context and perhaps some revisionist history on his clashes with Shaquille ONeal, his trade demands in 2007 or his high-volume shooting. Bryant would surely bring up his battles with other new Hall of Famers in Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett. Bryant would gush about the womens game, including what he admired about inductee Tamika Catchings.

Nearly every NBA fan became familiar with all the intimate details about Bryants career. But the stories never got old. There were always new details to emerge atop the ones we already knew. There were always new anecdotes no one knew about until Bryant and those he impacted eventually shared them.

"Kobe was always one to downplay his professional accomplishments MVPs, NBA championships, gold medals, Oscars, and on and on and on," Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka said in a statement. "But all of us can trust that this Basketball Hall of Fame honor is one Kobe would, and will, deeply appreciate. The highest of congratulations to you, dear friend. This one is so well deserved for all the hard work, sweat and toil. Now, a part of you will live in the Hall with the rest of the all-time greats, where your legend and spirit will continue to grow forever."

Because of that spirit, Bryants Hall of Fame induction will still be memorable. But it would have been much better for him to be there, obviously.

SportsPulse: USA TODAY's Mark Medina interviewed Kobe Bryant just over a week ago to discuss his post career ambitions. On Sunday, he had to cover the tragic helicopter crash that took Bryant's life. Medina attempts to put the basketball icon's legacy into perspective. USA TODAY

There would have been intrigue about whom Bryant would choose as his presenters. Would one of them be Jordan, who delivered a memorable speech at Bryants memorial about how he became a "big brother" to him? Would one of them be Jackson, who eventually inspired Bryant to appreciate his triangle offense and meditation practices? Would one of them be Lower Merion coach Gregg Downer, whom Bryant credited for knowing how to motivate him? Would one of them be Lower Merion English teacher Jeanne Mastriano, whom Bryant said inspired his passion for storytelling? Would one of them have been WNBA star Diana Taurasi, Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma or Oregon star Sabrina Ionescu about how Bryant supported womens basketball?

"No amount of words can fully describe what Kobe Bryant meant to the Los Angeles Lakers," Lakers controlling governor Jeanie Buss said in a statement. "Kobe was not only a proven winner and a champion, he gave everything he had to the game of basketball. His fierce competitiveness, work ethic and drive were unmatched. Those qualities helped Kobe lead us to five titles and have now brought him to the Hall of Fame, where he will be enshrined with the greatest to have ever played the game. No one deserves it more."

And yet Bryant also deserved something more and something so simple. He deserved to be able to stand on stage, accept his award and fully process the significant contributions he made to the game he loved.

Follow USA TODAY Sports' Mark Medina on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

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Opinion: Kobe Bryant deserved to give what would have been a memorable Hall of Fame speech - USA TODAY

Altered Carbon Season 2: 5 Questions That Were Answered (& 5 Questions We Have For Season 3) – Screen Rant

In 2020, we saw the return ofAltered Carbon,a sci-fi cyberpunk television series that follows Envoy-elite fighter, Takesie Kovacs, in his quest to find his love, the visionary Quellcrist Falconer. At the end of the first season, Kovacs learned that his sister, Rei, had been the mastermind behind many crimes committed in and prior to season one. She also was the reason that he had been brought back (his stack, conscious) and put into a new sleeve (body).

RELATED: Netflix's Altered Carbon Who Played Takeshi Kovacs Better

Rei loved her brother, but her love was dangerous. When she and Kovacs were Envoys, Rei was jealous of her brother's love with Quell, the leader/visionary of the Envoy. So, Rei betrayed the Envoys and killed Quellcrist. Fortunately, before Quell could die a real death, Rei had backed-up Quell's consciousness, meaning that Quell was alive. Kovacs decides to search for his love. We begin season two with many questions, and some have been answered. We leave season two with more questions fromboth of the first two seasons.

We know that Quell's consciousness was backed-up by Rei, but we don't know the details about what happened to Quell after that. In Season two, we learn how cruel Rei had really become. Quell was kept in a glass-like coffin, her sleeve made to cool-down and warm-up on repeat, her mind kept awake the whole time. This was for hundreds of years until Rei died, and Quell was freed by another extraordinary force.

All during that time, other than Rei's visits and the elder (the extraordinary force), Quell was kept in solitary. Rei's treatment of Quell further revealed how bad Rei had become, as Quell said, "whatever appetite Reileen harbored for cruelty, immortality made it worse."

Quell was made into a sort of a religious figure in both seasons, as people quote and idolize her. Originally, she had wanted to bring back the real death. While she had been the one who invented stacks (where consciousness can be stored), she discovered that it was being abused by the elite, intensifying class divide. She believed that immortality corrupts; it brings about the worst.

But she was re-sleeved and has now lived for hundreds of years. Her love has been re-sleeved a number of times and lived for hundreds of years. Does she still believe that all must die, including Kovacs and her?

Kovacs thinks of Rei often; it hurts that he was the one to kill his beloved sister. However, he sees it differently. In his memory, he feels like Rei was asking him to kill her. She could have stopped him, but Kovacs believed that she wanted to die. She would never stop what she was doing and the pain she was causing others.

Corrupted by immortality, Kovacs believed that Rei was calling out for help. This idea helps Kovacs deal with the fact that he killed her. Still, Rei's death weighs on him heavily.

Now that Quell is back and that she's revered, quoted, and worshipped, will she create a new Envoy group. While there was a pseudo-group led by a pseudo-leader, Quell could take over and make them a legitimate Envoy group.

RELATED: 10 Shows to Watch If You Like Altered Carbon

What will be her purpose now that she is back? Loving Kovacs is important to her, but it isn't the most important thing. Quell believes in a higher mission, and, while aspects of the world have changed since she was last an active part of it, certain aspects have either stayed the same or gotten worse. This could give Quell enough motivation to begin again.

Season one ended with Kovacs on a quest to find his long-lost love. This is quickly answered: yes, he finds her. While she is in an altered state when he finds her, his love for her gets through to her, awakening her. Later, he finds a way to help her recover her memories. So, not only does Kovacs find Quell, but he gets through to her, bringing all that is Quell, back. Also, their love is still there, strong.

At the end of season one, Ryker's stack is returned to his sleeve. Ryker's body had been the sleeve that Kovacs wore in season one. He also had been Ortega's love. Ryker, considered a corrupt cop, had been framed after his investigation came close to the truth. Ortega, Kovac's friend, tried to preserve Ryker's sleeve because she wanted Ryker back and back in it.

We end season one with that happening. Were Ortega and Ryker able to enjoy their romance? What happened to this couple?

Poe, our favorite AI, seemingly sacrificed himself to protect his friends. However, since he is an AI, we had high hopes that he would survive. Quickly, we found out that he did, and that Kovacs keeps him close. While he did survive, he wasn't in full recovery since he suffered a number of memory and technological glitches all throughout season two.

RELATED: Altered Carbon 10 Poe Facts the Show Left Out

In season two, he appears to help glue/connect the two seasons together.

Kovacs left season one after returning Ryker's sleeve. At first put in the sleeve of a singer as a diagnose, he is later put in the sleeve of an enhanced soldier. The soldier sleeve is strong, has a connection with weapons, and has wolf genes added to it. Most of this comes in handy in the second season except for the wolf gene. When Kovacs runs into the sleeve's former alpha and Kovac's former trainer/father-like figure, he can't fight against him. His sleeve won't let him.

While his sleeve doesn't have the intense back-story of Ryker, a point that seems to make season one just a little stronger, we do learn that Kovac's sleeve was a soldier and had known Quell. While we wish we knew more about this sleeve and the people who were important to the person's life, we weren't told many details. However, what important and interesting thing we learned was that sleeves can have memoriesbody-memories. This idea could be further developed in the third season.

Additionally, now that his season two sleeve died, and it seems like his consciousness was kept safe/backed-up in Poe, he will have another sleeve. So, this question is still pertinent to season three.

Kovacs had been double-sleeved, revealing a younger Kovacs, before Kovacs became part of the Envoy. At first, the younger Kovacs seems like a villain, killing innocent people. However, he changes after realizing that he had been tricked. While this younger Kovac is both the same and different from Kovacs, his storyline could be very different. What will happen to him in season three? Will we get to know more about him and how he also grapples with his sister's death?

NEXT: Altered Carbon Season 2 10 Things That Didn't Make Sense

NextTwo And A Half Men: 5 Of Charlie's Girlfriends We'd Love To Date (& 5 We Wouldn't)

Heather Frankland is a writer, teacher, and public health advocate. She has had creative work published in literary journals and online websites. She enjoys analyzing her favorite shows and movies and is happy to exercise that talent at Screen Rant, previously exercised in long conversations over beer with friends.

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Altered Carbon Season 2: 5 Questions That Were Answered (& 5 Questions We Have For Season 3) - Screen Rant