Immortality Bestowal | Superpower Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia

Immortality BestowalPower/Ability to:

Grant others immortality.

The ability togrant others the power of immortality. Sub-power of Immortality Manipulation. Variation of Power Bestowal. Opposite to Immortality Removal.

User can grant others the power of immortality of various levels, from simple agelessness to absolute.

Zed (Code:Breaker) using his Death ability to materialize life and retrieve it, and immortalizing anyone who has their "life" extracted via this manner.

Shenron (Dragon Ball) can grant immortality to one who wishes it. Only Garlic Jr. succeeds in making the wish, as all others who tried are impeded by various circumstances.

Utsuro (Gintama) granted Oboro immortality by giving him immortal-enriched blood, allowing the child to survive even fatal wounds, though in the long terms Oboro's mortal flesh is breaking down from the blood's power, and its immortal attributes is only prolonging his suffering.

Trafalgar D. Water Law (One Piece) can use the Perennial Youth Operation of his Ope Ope no Mi to grant everlasting life to another person, though he must sacrificed his life to do so.

The Stone of Righteousness (Stupid Mario Brothers) grants whoever possesses it immortality, protecting them from death and mortal wounds.

The Mark of Cain (Supernatural) granted the bearer Immortality, to the point that not even the horseman Death could kill them.

God (UQ Holder) bestowed absolute immortality on Karin Yuuki as punishment for betraying Christ.

Chione (Valkyrie Crusade) used magic to grant herself eternal immortality in order to stay beautiful forever.

The Grand Pure One (Valkyrie Crusade) is a alchemist that can make Elixirs of Immortality.

Queen Mother (Valkyrie Crusade) is a motherly figure keeper of the Peaches of Immortality and queen of all sages.

Amrit (Valkyrie Crusade) is a mysterious elixir that grants immortality.

The Golden Apples of Idunn (Marvel Comics) give youth, vigor, and virtual immortality.

As Queen of Crystal Tokyo Neo-Queen Serenity (Sailor Moon) Usagi's most powerful form renders the inhabitants of Earth functionally immortal

The Dog Talisman (Jackie Chan Adventure) grants the power of immortality, rendering its wielder completely immune and resistant to otherwise lethal attacks/injuries and also restores youthful energy.

The Yin Blade (Lego Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu) could grant immortality with the usage of Dark Magic. However, extreme usage of it can result in the user becoming a ghost.

The Zombie Tattoo (Marchen Awakens Romance) is a curse which gives the bearer immortality after it completes its process on their body.

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Immortality | VS Battles Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia

Summary

Immortality is the ability to simply not die by natural means for any number of reasons, ranging from simply having no limit to your lifespan, being able to regenerate from wounds that would normally be lethal, or being protected by a higher being, among other possible reasons. It should be noted that no Immortality is truly perfect, and no matter how much a character's immortality is hyped up within their own setting, it is very, very unlikely that they are truly completely unkillable when matched up against characters from other fictions.

1: Eternal Life: Characters gifted with this type of immortality cannot die from natural causes, such as old age or conventional illness, but can be killed by unnatural causes. To clarify, this type of immortality can include both those who do not age at all, and those who still grow old, but will never die of old age. However, in the case of the latter it should be made clear that this is not justLongevity, ascharacters with that ability will eventually die of old age, as opposed to Eternal Life, for which dying of old age is not possible.

2: Resilient Immortality: Characters with this degree of immortality can survive injuries that would otherwise be lethal to a normal person, without needing to heal from it.

3: Immortality via regeneration: Characters with this type of immortality can simply regenerate from wounds that would normally be lethal, though its effectiveness depends on the degree of the regeneration.

4: Immortality via godhood, or protection from a deity: A character that was either granted immortality by a god, or is immortal because of its hierarchical position due to godhood, so that its divine immortality is less a power, and more treated as a consequence of its state of being as a deity.

5: Deathless Immortality: Characters who exist unbound by conventional life or death, or do not exist at all, and thus cannot be traditionally killed. Typically, abilities such asExistence Erasureare needed to destroy them.

6: Parasitic: The character is able to attain a sort of immortality by abandoning bodies whenever necessary to transfer their consciousness to another body, whether they are possessing someone else or switching to a backup body.

7: Undead: Characters who cannot die due to technically being already dead, often overlapping with other forms of immortality.

8: Reliant Immortality: The character cannot die as long as a certain being, object, or even concept exists.

9: Transcendental Immortality: Characters whose true selves exist independently from the plane where they can be killed.

10: Meta-Immortality: Entities that are not alive or dead in a conventional sense, standing outside the ordinary laws of reality, temporality, and dimensionality (of any number). If it is possible to destroy such a character, it can only be accomplished by a being of a similar or higher existence.

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John Keats death anniversary: Remembering the romantic poet and his poetry – Hindustan Times

John Keats, one of the greatest romantic poets, died at 25 from tuberculosis. And yet, death at a tender age could not rob John Keats of his immortality. His verses such as Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn, La Belle Dame sans Merci and On First Looking into Chapmans Homer are considered to be eternal. Born on October 31, 1795, to Thomas Keats and Frances Jennings, he lost his parents early and was left in the custody of his grandmother, along with his siblings.

While originally a volatile character, by the age of 13, John Keats began focusing his energy on reading and studying, winning his first academic prize in 1809.

While Keats registered as a medical student at Guys Hospital in 1815, his calling lay in poetry and despite getting an apothecarys licence, he went on to publish the sonnet O Solitude in The Examiner in May 1816.

In a short career, spanning six years, Keats published 54 poems using a wide range of poetic forms that included odes and sonnets.

Keats wrote poignantly on love and loss, as evident from quotes attributed to the poet.

-- Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard, are sweeter

-- A thing of beauty is a joy forever

-- The poetry of the earth is never dead

-- Touch has a memory

-- I am certain of nothing but the holiness of the Hearts affections and the truth of the Imagination

-- I am in that temper that if I were under water I would scarcely kick to come to the top

-- You are always new. The last of your kisses was even the sweetest; the last smile the brightest; the last movement the gracefullest

-- My love is selfish. I cannot breathe without you

-- My imagination is a monastery, and I am its monk

-- We read fine things but never feel them to the full until we have gone the same steps as the author

The life of Keats was fraught with tragedy. He was engaged to the love of his life, Fanny Brawne. However, their love never ended in marriage.

This was both because of his weak financial stature and that Keats wanted to strongly build his role as a poet and earn money before him and also because he became extremely unwell from tuberculosis.

Keats died in Rome, Italy on February 23, 1821.

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The Stars Of Altered Carbon Season 2 Discuss The Dark Side of Immortality – BET

Written by Jerry L. Barrow

In Altered Carbon, mankind has found a way to cheat death, making life 300 years in the future very different. Thanks to technology, the human consciousness can be downloaded digitally to stacks which can then be transferred to a humanoid sleeve, or body, granting perpetual life. If a sleeve is damaged or destroyed, the consciousness is simply spun-up or revived in a new sleeveif they have the means to obtain one.

Of course, there are tiers to this experience and the higher classes and government officials enjoy the spoils of this infinite existence, being spun-up repeatedly. But even in a world where death is delayed indefinitely, there is a human cost that is both physical and spiritual.

Anthony Mackie (Avengers: Endgame, Striking Vypers) stars in season two as Takeshi Kovacs, the lone surviving soldier of a group of elite interstellar warriors, continuing his centuries old quest to find his lost love Quellcrist Falconer, played by Renee Elise Goldsberry (Waves, Hamilton). After decades of planet-hopping and searching the galaxy, Kovacs finds himself recruited back to his home planet of Harlans World with the promise of finding Quell.

During his journey Takeshi is assisted by a bounty hunter named Trepp, played by Simone Missick (All Rise, Luke Cage) who is trying to secure a future for her family in a world that doesnt care about them.

While living forever seems like a dream for most, in a conversation with BET, the cast shared what they felt was the downside to potentially living forever.

Anthony Mackie:

The pros of [immortality] is if you find that person, find that thing, you find true happiness, you can indulge in it until its no more. The cons [are] you have to live with your faults forever. Every shortcoming you have and every mistake youve made is with you for your entire life.

Simone Missick:

As a person who wants to live to be 106thats my goalI look at the people who do live that long, they lose so many people around them. Its a lonely place, its a lonely thing if the people around you arent also immortal, there to share your memories and remind you of who you are and where you came from. I think that with immortality, if all things are equal and everyone lives forever, you lose the feeling, I think, of passion to achieve, to love fiercely. To cherish each moment. To not know that theyre infinite. You dont have forever. I think [that] is the way that we live our lives and we so greatly want to hold on to those close to us and believe and pray and walk with a certain purpose knowing that were here for a short amount of time. I think that if you dont have that and you have nowhere else greater or better to go, once its all said and done, you create a future where nothing is valued. Life is not precious. And I could look at you and say I like that, give it to me. And take your sleeve. And I think that is a disgusting devaluation of humanity.

Renee Elise Goldsberry:

This is one part of the journey, right? To think that our journey is about what our body is doing is really just because we are so small. Were down here, we cant get higher and see. Our soul is the span of a lifetime. And the idea that we would make this experience in one bodyor many bodiesdefine who we are, probably cheats of the greatest things we will come to know as a spirit when we let this one go.

Season 2 of Altered Carbon premiers on February 28.

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The Stars Of Altered Carbon Season 2 Discuss The Dark Side of Immortality - BET

The African American abolitionists who visited Ireland in the 1800s – IrishCentral

African Americans traveled from the US to Ireland on behalf of anti-slavery groups in the 1800s

February marks the observance of Black History Month, a national celebration in the US honoring African Americans and recognizing their contributions to the history of the United States. In the 1800s, many traveled across the Atlantic on behalf of various American anti-slavery organizations.

Read More: When Frederick Douglass met Ireland's "Liberator" Daniel OConnell in 1845

Ireland was a safe haven for black abolitionist lecturers, both fugitive slaves and free-born persons, who journeyed transatlantically in order to highlight the evils of slavery and to plead the case for the anti-slavery movement with a goal to secure an Irish alliance.

For more than three decades, African-Americans who traveled to various parts of Ireland on their lecture tours found receptive audiences for their anti-slavery discourses as they were treated with tolerance and respect and experienced the freedom and equality denied to them in America.

These transatlantic campaigners, a few of which are highlighted below, were credited with creating deep interest in the anti-slavery causemany [in Ireland] who never thought on the subject at all, are now convinced that it is a sin to neglect.

In 1823, when Daniel OConnell, the Kerry native referred to as the Liberator for his efforts on behalf of Catholic Emancipation and human rights, expanded his portfolio to include abolition, he condemned American slavery as anathema to the fundamental principles upon which the country was established:

"Of all men living, an American citizen, who is the owner of slaves, is the most despicable; he is a political hypocrite of the very worst description. The friends of humanity and liberty, in Europe, should join in one universalcry of shame on the American slaveholders! Base wretches, should we shout in chorus base wretches, how dare you profane the temple of national freedom"

Charles Lenox Remond (Samuel Broadbent / Boston Public Library)

OConnells stirring words reverberated across the Atlantic, beckoning Charles Lenox Remond, the first black lecturer for the American Anti-Slavery Society, to visit Ireland. The son of affluent merchants and staunch abolitionists, and the grandson of a veteran of the Continental Army who served during the American Revolution, Lenox Remond was free-born in Massachusetts. For a black man in antebellum America, his free-status and distinguished lineage, rooted in the founding of the nation, was distinctive.

In a speech in Dublin, Lenox Remond acknowledged Irelands own long-standing pursuit of freedom from oppression, saying, I stand here to advocate a cause, which, above all others, be, and ever has been, dear to the Irish heart the cause of liberty.

When Lenox Remond returned to America, he carried with him a petition signed by OConnell and 60,000 Irishmen urging immigrants in America to join the movement. The document, entitled Address of the Irish People to Their Countrymen and Countrywomen in America and known as the Irish Address, made a plea to Irelands exiles to unite with the abolitionistsuntil perfect liberty be granted tothe black man as well as the white man.

Read More: Galway to honor Virginia slave who died in Ireland, America's first sports star

Frederick Douglass (Public Domain)

In 1845, 27-year-old Frederick Douglass, an escaped slave from Maryland, traveled throughout Ireland, delivering forty, well-attended, lectures in Dublin, Limerick, Belfast, Wexford, and Waterford. Douglass masterful oration skills, combined with his unfaltering commitment to freedom and equality, induced the Liberator to laud Douglass as the black OConnell.

Richard Davis Webb, a Dublin printer and founding member of the Hibernian Anti-Slavery Society, published an Irish edition of Douglass autobiography. The initial run of Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, American Slave sold out quickly.

The second run contained significant additions a preface and an appendix. These modifications enabled Douglass to articulate the political and social changes he envisioned for America, thus making the Irish edition a noteworthy publication in the canon of his works.

The Irish peoples acceptance of Douglass, evident by their crowded to suffocation attendance at his lectures and treatment of him as an equal, although a fugitive slave, had a profound effect on him. He acknowledged to a friend: I seem to have undergone a transformation. In a letter to William Lloyd Garrison, a prominent American abolitionist, Douglass explained the basis for this metamorphosis:

"One of the most pleasing features of my visit, thus far, has been a totalabsence of all manifestations of prejudice against me, on account of mycolor. The change of circumstances, in this, is particularly striking. . . . I find myself not treated as a color, but as a man not as a thing, but as a child of the common Father of us all."

Read More: How an Irish book tour transformed Frederick Douglass

William Wells Brown (Public Domain)

William Wells Brown, an escaped Kentucky-born slave and abolitionist lecturer, was on a tour in Europe when the Fugitive Slave Act was enacted in the U.S. The act required all escaped slaves, once captured, to be returned to their owners. Due to Browns increased risk of apprehension because of his public profile, he chose to remain abroad for an extended period.

Browns travels to Ireland, England and France are recounted in his book, Three Years in Europe: or Places I Have Seen and People I Have Met. In reference to his visit to Dublin in 1849, Brown unequivocally expressed his opinion of the Irish people:

"The Irish are indeed a strange people. How varied their aspect, howcontradictory their character! Ireland, the land of genius and degradation,of great resources and unparalleled poverty, noble deeds and the mostrevolting crimes, the land of distinguished poets, splendid orators, andthe bravest of soldiers, the land of ignorance and beggary!

Samuel Ringgold Ward (Public n)

Similarly, Samuel Ringgold Ward, an abolitionist born into slavery in Maryland, journeyed to Ireland in 1854 as an agent of the Anti-Slavery Society of Canada. A chapter in Wards Autobiography of a Fugitive Negro describes his travels in Ireland, highlighting visits to Dublin, Belfast, Sligo, Mullingar, Limerick, Cork, Cobh, and Mallow.

When visiting Killarney, a tourism destination dating to the 1740s, Ward was struck by the magnificence of the landscape and the friendliness of the people, writing:

"The rich romantic scenery, the beauty of the lakes, the fineold ruins of Mucruss [sic] Abbey and Ross Castle, the beautiful groundsthe affability of the company we met, all gave us avariety of most pleasing sights and sounds; and, being favouredwith extraordinarily fine weather, we could but be gratified withour short sojourn in that picturesque locality."

Read More: Ireland's has only one pro-slavery Confederate memorial - is it next to fall?

Sarah Parker Remond (Public Domain)

Lecture tours were not limited to men. Sarah Parker Remond, a younger sister of Charles Lenox Remond, visited in 1859 on behalf of the American Anti-Slavery Society. Like her brother, she was free-born and had endured cruel acts of discrimination because of an unpopular complexion.

By embarking on a transatlantic voyage to serve the cause of abolition, Parker Remond also hoped that she might for a time enjoy freedom.

After addressing the Dublin Ladies Anti-Slavery Society, Parker Remond spent a month traveling to Waterford, Clonmel and Cork meeting with local societies. Parker Remond used her femininity to expose the horrific miseries endured by female slaves in order to establish an emotional bond of sympathy with the Irish women in her audiences.

Though the subject matter of her talks was intensely sensitive, accolades were bestowed on the speaker for possessing convincing presentation skills, in all she said, there was something so persuasive. Parker Remond transcended the gender barrier at a time when it was uncharacteristic for any woman, particularly an exotic lady of colour, to make a public presentation.

In honor of Black History month, the following powerful words, spoken by Parker Remond in Dublin, may serve as a tribute to the African-American champions of freedom who visited Ireland:

The lives of good men [and women] are not lost when they die for justice sake; for so great is justice that she rewards all who suffer for her with greatness....the just cause for which they rendered up their lives gives them immortality, and their spirits walk the earth.

Black Irish Identities: The complex relationship between Irish and African Americans

This article was submitted to the IrishCentral contributors network by a member of the global Irish community. To become an IrishCentral contributor click here.

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Who Was the Real Governor Tryon From "Outlander"? The True Story – Oprah Mag

Born in 1729, William Tryon was a British general officer who made his career while working in the 13 colonies. Serving as Governor of North Carolina and Governor of New York, Tryon was kind of a big deal across both sides of the pond. In his 1990 academic book about Tryon, Paul David Nelson argues that Tryon excelled at his job because he "understood American thinking."

But until Diana Gabaldon wrote him into her Outlander series, the closest Tryon got to immortality were a few streets, parks, and counties named after him. With the TV show Outlander, Tryon might even become a household nameat least among avid followers of Jamie (Sam Heughan) and Claire Frasers (Caitriona Balfe) adventures in love and historical interventions.

Tryon was first introduced as a minor character in season 4 of Outlander. Come season 5, out February 16, Tryons presence will take on even greater importance. The trouble swirls around Jamie and Tryons deal: In exchange for the land at Frasers Ridge, Jamie will cooperate with Tryon.

Jamie's first assignment from Tryon? Gather a militia to battle the Regulators, a band of North Carolina backcountry farmers who incited riots in the name of political change and fairer taxes. Murtagh (Duncan LaCroix), Jamies long-lost godfather, is a Regulator, along with many other Scottish Highlanders. Do we sense a complication? Indeed, we do.

Based on Gabaldons The Fiery Cross, season 5 of Outlander captures a time when North Carolina actually went to war against itself. The real Tryon played a major role in the matter. Heres what you need to know about him, and thus his place in Outlander.

William Tryon was born in 1729 to a prominent family in Surrey, England. In 1751, when he was about 22 years old, Tryon began his career in the English army, starting in the First Regiment of Foot Guards. He eventually fought against the French in the Seven Years War.

But his career really took off after he married London heiress Margaret Wake. By 1758, Tryon had risen to the level of lieutenant colonel in his regiment by his own effortsbut it was Margaret, with her wealth and connections to royalty and the ruling class, that pushed his career to the next level.

When Arthur Dobbs, the elderly governor of North Carolina, wanted to retire, Margaret's relative, colonial administrator Viscount Hillsborough, likely put in a good word for Tryon. In 1764, Tryon was named lieutenant governor of North Carolina. Tryon, his wife, and their young daughter landed on the shores of North Carolina in 1765.

Tryon would become one of North Carolina's most capable governors, but was not without his controversies.

"He's the figurehead of the machine. He's part of the world's greatest army to the world's greatest empire," Downie says about his character, who is often quite cold, in an interview with Outlander: Behind the Scenes. "If you grow up believing that there's nothing better than the English and your part in it, then your humanity shifts."

Born to a wealthy London family, Margaret Wake Tryon used her privilege to advance her studies.

As politically engaged as her husband, Margaret preferred studying military strategy to keeping company with other wives. Some of her peers called her "mad," but Nelson, Tryon's biographer, called her an "extraordinary woman." Reportedly, she insisted on being called "Your Excellency," like her husband. North Carolina's Wake County is named after her.

The couple had two children together: A daughter, Margaret, and a son who died in infancy. Margaret died at the age of 30 in England.

At first, Tryon won the support of his North Carolina constituents. Tryon landed during the Stamp Act crisis, and was sympathetic to why North Carolinians opposed the tax. Tryon attempted to lessen the effects of the Stamp Tax, but still insisted it be paidever loyal to his superiors' orders.

The real trouble began when he levied his own controversial tax in order to build a lavish capitol and governor's residence. "His crib is really quite something," Downie said.

Suffice to say cash-poor farmers weren't pleased their money was used to fund his new home, nicknamed Tryon's Palace. "This luxurious Governors mansion, known everywhere as Tryons Palace, became a symbol of royal greed and corruption," Meltzer and Josh Mensch write in The First Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill George Washington.

The brewing conflict pitted Tryon and colonial officials against a resistance group called the Regulators, comprised of backcountry farmers who used riots to enact political change.

Print CollectorGetty Images

Season 5 of Outlander will focus on the conflict, and the Regulators' defeat by Tryon's militia at the Battle of Alamance in 1771.

For real. But first, let's back up. As a reward for squashing the Regulators, Tryon was given the governorship of the New York colony.

When he landed in New York, Tryon was jealous that the crowds gathered were not for him, but for the new Commander in Chief of the Continental Army, George Washington, and the future first President of the United States.

Smith Collection/GadoGetty Images

From then on, Washington became Tryon's enemy and target. Thanks to his time in North Carolina, Tryon had grown wary of revolutionary sentiment (in fact, the Battle of Alamance in considered to be one of the sparks of the Revolutionary War). Tryon was determined to strike back at the revolutionaries and reassert his power," according to Meltzerand that meant Washington, along with other revolutionaries.

Tryon developed a network of spies throughout the colonies and worked to recruit rebel soldiers to the Loyalist side, usually through bribery. Two of those soldiers were part of Washington's Life Guard, the elite squad hired to keep Washington safe. They were an essential part of Tryon's 1776 plan to assassinate Washington. When the plot was uncovered, Washington ordered Thomas Hickey, one of the suspected bodyguards, to be executed.

From the point of view of the Americans, [Tryon] can only be viewed as a villain, Meltzer and Mensch write in The First Conspiracy. Nonetheless, he was a man of influence and power, who was often at the center of seismic events. Most important, if his plot was successful, American historyand perhaps America itselfwould not exist today.

Tryon was not the nicest chap. In 1779, he led a series of controversial raids along the Connecticut coast, laying waste far beyond what was ordered.

When he was ordered to destroy rebels' supplies in Danbury, Connecticut in 1777, for example, he instead burned down the entire town. After burning Danbury, Tryon and his 800 soldiers marched to Fairfield and burned down half of its homes, and most of its shops and businesses. Four people died. Allegedly, Tryon also killed women and children.

The American army accused him of committing war crimes, but he was never tried.

Tryon returned to England in 1780. He died there eight years later. After a storied, and controversial, career in North America, his name is still honored in parks, streets, and counties throughout the East Coast.

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Who Was the Real Governor Tryon From "Outlander"? The True Story - Oprah Mag

Why Bill Nunn deserves to be the next Steeler in the Hall of Fame – Behind the Steel Curtain

(Editors Note: This article was written by contributor Chris Ward. He did the back end work on the interview and produced the article for BTSC.)

Earlier this month it was announced that Bill Cowher and Donnie Shell were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame as members of the 2020 Centennial Class. Two other Steelers legends who are among the 15 modern-day finalists Troy Polamalu and Alan Faneca could join Cowher and Shell this summer with enshrinements in Canton if theyre voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame by the Selection Committee on Feb. 1, the day before the Super Bowl.

Polamalu should be a lock for the Hall, Faneca should get in as well unless theres some bias of too many Steelers being in this years class. However, there should be at least three Steelers enshrined into football immortality this summer. Its a real shame that one man wont be joining them though, and its an even bigger travesty that he wasnt even nominated as a contributor for the Centennial Class by the blue-ribbon panel. That man is Bill Nunn, who was a scout for the Steelers and architect of those great teams from the 1970s who went on to win four Super Bowls in six years.

Without Nunn, the Steelers dont find diamonds in the rough like John Stallworth (Alabama A&M), Mel Blount (Southern University), L.C. Greenwood (Arkansas-Pine Bluff), Ernie Holmes (Texas Southern), Dwight White (East Texas State) and Shell (South Carolina State), who played at historically black colleges and universities. And quite frankly, the Steelers 1970s dynasty probably doesnt even exist without Nunn.

Prior to accepting a part-time scouting position with the Steelers in 1967 and eventually a full-time position in the scouting department when Chuck Noll was hired in 1969, Nunn was a sportswriter for the Pittsburgh Courier and from 1950 until the late 1960s, Nunn would select the black college All-American football team for the Courier and held an annual awards ceremony. Nunn would travel all over the South every fall to compile information on players for his All-American team, along with that he built close relationships with coaches and athletic directors at HBCUs.

I think Donnie Shell is a perfect example where he might have not ended up playing in the NFL at all except that his coach in college knew Nunn and knew what the Steelers were doing and Nunn had that connection, so he was able to give him a shot at the NFL, said Andrew Conte, author of The Color of Sundays: The Secret Strategy That Built the Steelers Dynasty, a story that gives an in-depth look at Nunns scouting strategies that helped reshape the franchise, along with breaking racial barriers. There were a few players like that, Sam Davis was another one, guys who went undrafted from small black colleges that have been overlooked, but because of Nunn they were able to get a shot at playing in the NFL.

Teams are fortunate enough if they select one player in a draft class who goes on to have a Hall of Fame career. The Steelers struck gold in 1974, as they would have five future Hall of Famers from their rookie class in Lynn Swann (first round), Jack Lambert (second round), John Stallworth (fourth round), Mike Webster (fifth round) and Shell, who went undrafted. Its by far the greatest rookie class in the history of the NFL and probably all of sports. Its a feat that wont happen again. Theres six Hall of Fame members across the league from the 1974 rookie class, five of them are Steelers and the other member is Dave Casper, who was selected by the Raiders in the second round. That statistic in itself just shows how far in advance the Steelers scouting department was compared to the rest of the league at the time, and Nunn had a lot to do with that.

You look at the 1974 draft, they were able to take Swann so early in the draft and hold off taking Stallworth until later in the draft because Nunn basically figured out that Stallworth was worth taking and nobody else knew that because Nunn held onto the tapes from his tryout at Alabama A&M, Conte said. I think those two things put together, the Shell one that really stands out in my mind, but then the ability to get Stallworth so late in the draft that sort of really allowed them to get four Hall of Famers in their first five picks.

Nunn was able to find superior athletes at small black colleges throughout the South and the rest of the teams around the league knew there was talent there, but they were way behind Nunn.

When Nunn came to black college campuses as a reporter from the Courier he was really seen almost as a celebrity, Conte said. He would end up staying at the athletic directors house or the coachs house, the presidents house. He was really treated like a special person. By the time he became a professional scout, he already had such an advantage because he knew all these people and knew his way around these schools, and at the same time, conversely, a lot of the white scouts felt uncomfortable going into an all-black campus and try to figure out what was going on. Everybody knew that there was talent at black colleges by the point Nunn came around, but they didnt know how to go find it.

In 2014, the Pro Football Hall of Fame decided to add contributor as a category for nomination to make the Hall of Fame in an effort to get more deserving contributor candidates in. Since then, only one scout has made the Hall of Fame and that was Gil Brandt in 2018.

Brandt was an executive and scout with the Cowboys from 1960-1988 and helped pioneer many of the scouting techniques used by NFL teams today. Brandt oversaw the drafting of nine Cowboys players who went on to be Hall of Famers, in addition to constructing two Super Bowl championship teams for the Cowboys in the 1970s. In comparison, the Steelers had 11 players who went on to have Hall of Fame careers under Nunns watch, along with architecting four Steelers Super Bowl championship teams within six years in the 1970s. If Brandt is in the Hall, Nunn should be as well. Making the Hall of Fame as a scout is no easy task, however. Of the 27 contributors in the Hall of Fame, Brandt is the only one that comes from a scouting background.

Its tough, scouts really havent gotten the shot at being in the Hall, Conte said. Its one of those things where we dont see them as much. Whenever I talk about Nunn, I always mention, heres a guy that never threw the ball, caught the ball, never had a breakaway touchdown, didnt stand on the sidelines coaching the players, and yet I think he was as responsible, and in many ways more responsible for the success of the Steelers during the 1970s than almost anyone else.

Nunn had a tremendous eye for talent, but his contributions to the Steelers were more than just helping the team win Super Bowls and building one of the greatest dynasties in the history of the NFL. He was a champion for change. He was a trailblazer to opening the door for players at small black colleges who probably wouldnt have gotten a chance if it wasnt for him. For those two causes, its hard to fathom how Nunn is not in Canton.

If you were standing in the room, making the argument for why Nunn deserves to be in the Hall of Fame, you would point out the players like Stallworth and Shell, the players that Nunn identified that nobody else saw and then you would talk about the players that didnt make the Hall but contributed to the Steelers championships, Conte said. And then you would really remind people that this was a person who contributed in a very special way, at a time thats hard for us to understand exactly today what kind of challenges Nunn was facing at that time.

When he first started out looking at draft boards, teams had markers on the board where they would identify the black players from the white players and that was one of his contribution saying take that marker off there, it doesnt matter what color the guys skin is, its about what he brings to the team. I think thats the greatest contribution he made, this idea that we dont evaluate players based on their skin color or the way they look, we evaluate them on their ability to play and what they can contribute to the team. When you look back across the success that the Steelers had collectively, and now individually, a lot of that goes back to the work that Nunn did, without a lot of fanfare, without a lot of attention, but that has tremendous results that continue to play out decades later here.

The Pro Football Hall of Fames blue-ribbon panel for the 2020 Centennial Class got it wrong with not even nominating Nunn. Hopefully, in the future, the Hall of Fame gets it right and enshrines Nunn into football immortality, as he certainly deserves to be right there along with the 11 other Steelers greats in Canton that he helped bring to Pittsburgh.

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Why Bill Nunn deserves to be the next Steeler in the Hall of Fame - Behind the Steel Curtain

Recounting the 2019 Kansas City Chiefs historic run to a Super Bowl Championship – Arrowhead Addict

(Chiefs) MIAMI, FLORIDA FEBRUARY 02: Head coach Andy Reid of the Kansas City Chiefs celebrates with the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the San Francisco 49ers 31-20 in Super Bowl LIV at Hard Rock Stadium on February 02, 2020 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

This is why were here, dog! You remember that stretch we had in September and October? We knew what team we was, dog! All we had to do was believe in each other and play for each other! I watched a lot of yall drop yall pride this year, dog! I watched a lot of people step up, big time players. Thats what we need today, we need energy, we need oneness. We need to be remembered! Lets go! Tyrann Mathieus (Super Bowl pregame speech)

Immortality. The ability to live forever, even after you have physically passed on from this life. Its a philosophical prospect in life, finding its place in discussions mostly carried on by those of religious presuppositions.

The other place it is often discussed is in sports, often at the end of a season when a players or teams exploits are compared with those from past years and generations now long gone. To obtain a seat at this table of discussion, you must first do something special. You must be a champion. Every member of the 2019 Kansas City Chiefs has just achieved that very requirement.

With 11 minutes and 57 seconds left to go, it didnt seem this ending was probable. The Chiefs offense had fought valiantly, but their normally precise general had made some uncharacteristic mistakes. Some werent surprised. After all, the 49ers defense was one of the best in the league and arguably the best the Chiefs had faced all season. Down the same number of points they had scored in the prior 48 minutes and 3 seconds, the incredible 2019 season seemed on the doorstep of defeat.

Yet the once maligned Chiefs defense stared in the face of competitive death and determined itself unwilling to be overcome. Frank Clark would later recall how angry it had made him seeing the 49ers players celebrating on the sideline, prematurely. With 11 minutes and 57 seconds left, the Niners defense would make what appeared a game sealing interception. The sidelines jubilation was apparent; they thought they had won the game.

With an undying belief of destiny that had formed amongst the Chiefs locker room early in the teams late-season winning streak, now spilling over the threshold of the players minds in the teams darkest moments, Clark let the 49ers offense know what he thought. Theyd be going home disappointed.

The Chiefs, with 10 minutes and 20 seconds and counting. This is a critical drive for them right now, obviously they have to make a stop. They have to make a stop right now! Troy Aikman

The 49ers, a vaunted offense in their own right, would never score again. A Chiefs defense that was an embarrassment a year prior, retooled in every way imaginable, would do everything Chiefs Kingdom could have asked for and more. A league MVP, subdued for three and a half quarters but his iron will still resolute, along with his cohort of talented skill players would unleash one of the greatest scoring onslaughts in Super Bowl history.

As the final seconds ticked away and the red and gold confetti began to rain on the field at Hard Rock Stadium, it was finally clear how special this 2019 Chiefs team is, was and forever will be regarded. Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes, Clark Hunt, and a host of other Chiefs would raise the Lombardi Trophy thanks to legendary feats throughout the year and playoffs.

Obviously, the Chiefs late season push for their first Super Bowl victory in 50 years makes this the most memorable season in decades. That goes without saying. However, there are a handful of reasons why this particular run is so memorable aside from the championship.

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Williams and Baldens new X-FACTOR series to explore mutant immortality in the Marvel U – Comics Beat

One of the biggest game-changers to come out of the recentJonathan Hickman-led relaunch of the X-titles was the introduction of The Five, a group of mutants who, through the combination of their unique abilities (and the psychic back-ups kept of every mutant living on Krakoa by Charles Xavier), can create a perfect copy of any mutant. The Fives powers make all mutants essentially immortal, and weve already seen at least half-a-dozen mutants resurrected by The Five, from Shinobi Shaw to Charles Xavier himself. Now Marvel will be exploring the implications of and rules surrounding those resurrections in X-Factor, their latest addition to the X-line of books, per an announcement made via Polygon.

Written by Leah Williams and illustrated byDavid Balden,X-Factor will follow a team of mutants who investigate missing mutants to determine if theyre deadand thus candidates for resurrection. The team of detectives will be led by Northstar, and include Polaris, Prestige (Rachel Summers), Daken, Prodigy, and Eye Boy. The book will also focus on The Five themselves, to whom the team will report, and explore the impact immortality has on mutant culture on Krakoa.

Along with a focus on the Five, Williams and Balden will also be exploring the relationship dynamics between the members of X-Factor and their significant others. Of particular interest to Williams, according to her interview with Polygon, is the relationship between Northstar and his husband, Kyle, a human living on Krakoa:

Kyleisa human living in a world built for and by mutants comparatively an outsider [], Williams said. Well see a lot of their married life and will be exploring all the important nuance to their living situation in Krakoa. (Well actually see a lot ofeveryX-factor team members romantic life) Tini Howard [Excalibur,Thanos] and I might also be collaborating on a really exciting story involving human existence in Krakoa, so be on the lookout for clues about that in one of our books!

While this newest iteration ofX-Factor is clearly rooted in the current status quo for Marvels merry mutants, it does share some thematic DNA with its predecessors. The title has had an investigative aspect at its core since the second volume of the series launched in 2005, with the mutant-centric P.I. firm X-Factor Investigations serving as the crux of that title.

Check out the cover and a few pages of unfinished preview art by Balden for X-Factor #1 below. The first issue of the series will clock in at 48 pages, and is due out in comic shops and digitally in April.

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Williams and Baldens new X-FACTOR series to explore mutant immortality in the Marvel U - Comics Beat

GELFAND: on Tom Brady and Immortality – Zone Coverage

No quarterback in the NFL playoffs this year looked as lifeless and disconsolate as Tom Brady. If you somehow construe Brady as a sympathetic character, you might feel relieved that the loss in the Wild Card round shielded him from future embarrassment. For the record, the 20-13 defeat yielded Brady 20 completions in 37 attempts for 209 yards, zero touchdowns, one interception and 5.6 yards per attempt.

Of course, Brady is hardly a sympathetic character. Indeed, hes more than just one of the most dominant quarterbacks of all time. He is, in fact, every guys fantasy. Especially if the guy is an adolescent. Hes tall, good looking, a winner, has so much money that he could run for President, and, yeah, theres that super-model thing.

So when Brady says he plans to be an NFL hero for years to come actually, he uses the word quarterback, but thats just a code word we shouldnt be surprised. Hell be 43 in August, which makes him the Methuselah of pro quarterbacks. But age, after all, is just a number.

Remember, facts no longer matter, so even though age is just a number is a palpable lie, its OK to believe it. Plus its Brady.

You might also ask: can a man have more than it all? Is Brady kidding us or himself? What exactly are we looking at? Is it arrogance? Hubris? Self-delusion? Greed?

Maybe all of the above. But one thing seems evident: Brady is looking for something far more than a seventh Super Bowl ring. If I had to guess, Id say that his aging body is chasing the tail of immortality.

You can hardly blame him. In fact, Brady and his mentor, Bill Belichick, deserve nothing less than our undying adulation. Look in any record book and there they are. And yeteven if this past season was just an anomaly, there is no denying the fact that they are the past. The future belongs to the likes of Lamar Jackson, who just turned 23; and Jimmy Garoppolo, who is 28 but had to wait until he found life after Brady before he could prove that he, too, is Super Bowl ready. Then there is Patrick Mahomes, who, at 23, doesnt even have to get better in order to become the greatest quarterback of all time.

The celebrated author, contrarian, wit and atheist Christopher Hitchens, as he was dying of cancer, wrote a book called Mortality. In which he wrote: As with the normal life, one finds that every passing day represents more and more relentlessly subtracted from less and less.

Brady probably doesnt see his career that way. But I cant help but wonder if sometimes he feels like he is. Clearly, he cant imagine life without football. Hes already shopping around for his next team. Hell be an unrestricted free agent for the first time in his career, but from where I sit, his view isnt so expansive any more.

Granted, he didnt have much to throw to this year, but that didnt seem to matter nearly as much in the first half of the season. It was the second half that betrayed an anxious, middle-aged man. Damn, hes got a great head of hair, but its whats under it that matters. In the nine games before the bye, the Patriots averaged 30 points; afterward, and including the Tennessee disaster, the Patriots averaged just over 20 points.

Brady has been the Patriots starting quarterback for 19 seasons but finally you can see the fear in his eyes. He spent much of the year flinging the football into the ground at the mere hint of malicious contact. Nobody in their right mind could blame him for a bunker mentality, yet it was a surprise to note that even with another championship looming on the horizon, he was no longer willing to leave the pocket and risk bodily harm in exchange for a first down.

The NFL is no country for old men. In fact, for all the leagues bluster, there were even more concussions in 2019 than there were the year before. Players have figured out that the penalties for using their helmets to concuss an opponent are relatively mild. Theres even one clown T.J. Watt, the Pittsburgh defensive end who goes around punching anyone holding the ball under the guise that hes trying to cause fumbles. Hell break ribs and mangle hands and perhaps even cause permanent brain damage before his career is over, but the league doesnt seem motivated to put a stop to it. That has to be harbinger of a dangerous future for quarterbacks in their mid-40s.

Bradys determination to play forever reminds me of a lot of losing gamblers Ive known. When things go bad, they never back off; they just double down. Pretty soon theyre chasing their money and wishing theyd quit at the top of their game.

Not that Brady is going to go broke. It seems that he has a new hustle these days: The TB12 Method. Which happens to be the name of the book he sort of wrote which celebrates his recipe for eternal muscles, if not eternal life.

Years ago, Brady fell in with a body coach, Alex Guerrero, who helped Brady develop pliable muscles that are damned near impervious to injury. Not everyone swears by this amazing new method, or, for that matter, Guerrero himself.

Muscle pliability, it seems, isnt actually a thing.

The New York Times review of the book noted as much.

Mr. Brady and Mr. Guerrero have not conducted or published clinical trials of muscle pliability, the reviewer stated. Neither has anyone else. On the huge PubMed online database of published science, I found only one experiment that contains the words pliability and muscles, and it concerned the efficacy of different embalming techniques.

I have to admit that when I perused Bradys website, I wasnt entirely convinced. On the other hand, Im an enfeebled old guy who got a stiff neck just from writing this column. In fact, as I paged through the catalog of Bradys amazing products, the trademarked TV12 Vibrating Pliability Sphere start to look like the cure to at least two or three of my many ailments. Its just that it kind of looks like a tire that wobbles, and Ive got one of those on my 20-year-old Camry.

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What We Learned from the Altered Carbon Season 2 Trailer – TVOvermind

Apart from the date that the next season is coming out the trailer doesnt show much other than the fact that it is coming. With Anthony Mackie leading the way the second season is set to appear this coming February and will be featuring the popular actor as one of the main characters that will be driving the story. According to Scott Snowden of Space.com the second season was approved back in 2018 and has been in the process of being made and released for some time now. Its safe to assume that with each show and movie coming out these days that producers are wanting to be as exacting and as careful as they can since quite often the fans are the deciding factor as to whether a project will succeed or if it might be time to go back to the drawing board. So far with Altered Carbon the general interest of the public has been great enough to keep it around, and while the details of the second season arent being given out in a flood there is just enough to reason that it could possibly be aiming to outdo the first season or at least keep up the intensity that people came to enjoy.

The overall story of Altered Carbon has to do with the idea of achieving a type of immortality, as Dan Girolamo of Screenrant mentions, by downloading their consciousness into cortical stacks that are then able to be transferred to another body that will allow them to live again with the added benefit of experience and learning gained over a lifetime. Its pretty obvious that there are plenty of moral implications to go with this idea since the whole matter of immortality is something that people have been arguing over for some time since the human condition is one that is seen to be anything but conducive to such a concept and the idea of using a blank body, or a sleeve, is bound to be abhorrent to many. Thankfully due to the sleeves and stacks and how they appear to be interchangeable in such an easy way, its not too hard to figure out why Mackie would be cast in the role that Joel Kinnaman helped to make popular since the manner of switching out one sleeve for another was bound to become an easy out and way to explain to people just how this is possible and how it can be made to happen in a way thats easy for the audience to accept.

So far the plot appears to be taking off the end of the first season with Takeshi Kovacs in a new body but still on more or less the same path that fans from the first season can recall. In a big way Altered Carbon is the kind of show that takes a great number of elements from pop culture and slams them all together in a neat, compact showcase that becomes its own entity thanks to the alterations and reshaping of ideas thats becoming even harder as the years go by since so many ideas have come and gone and many of them are being recycled on a continual basis. David Griffin of IGN has his own opinion to share on the show. There are still plenty of stories out there yet to be told, but the trick at this point is to make them all unique in some way so that they can become a fan favorite in their own right or at least have a decent showing that will possibly be remembered and revisited at a later date. Keep in mind its taken two years for Altered Carbon to make a comeback to Netflix, a time in which the buzz has been evident but not quite as forceful as many other shows that have come along. In fact The Witcher was likely one show that managed to eclipse plenty of others when it came along since it even managed to overtake Disney+s The Mandalorian for a while as the two shows vied for dominance in a market where only the most popular is bound to stay the top spot for long. While Altered Carbon is indeed a popular show it hasnt quite managed to reach this distinction, but its been in a comfortable spot all the same.

The second season is bound to take on at least a few new directions given that Anthony Mackie is now on the scene and as weve noticed in many shows when the main actor is switched up there are many instances in which things can never be the same as the story has to change in order to accommodate. That can be a good thing however since bringing in a new experience and a new face can keep the ball rolling and keep it intriguing enough that people will want to come back and see just where the producers and the director are willing to go with this idea.

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What We Learned from the Altered Carbon Season 2 Trailer - TVOvermind

Kiszla: As Broncos protection Steve Atwater knocked patiently on door to Professional Soccer Corridor of Popularity, heaven couldn’t wait to take his…

As Steve Atwater pondered soccer immortality bestowed by way of the Corridor of Popularity, some of the hardest tacklers ever to play within the NFL started to cry, interested by how a lot that gold jacket would have intended to his past due mom.

You were given me all teared up, mentioned Atwater, slipping an index finger underneath his glasses to dab the puddle forming in his proper eye, as we sat in combination at Broncos headquarters.

As probably the most ferocious hitter ever to put on a Denver uniform knocked patiently at the door to the Corridor of Popularity, heaven couldnt wait to take his mom. On Oct. 5, Jessie Atwater gave up the ghost at her house in St. Louis. She was once 75 years outdated, the similar age as franchise proprietor Pat Bowlen when he died.

Similar yr, similar age as Mr. Bowlen, Atwater instructed me. Guy, I might have preferred to gotten in (the Corridor) whilst she was once alive.

The bronze bust sculpted for each participant inducted into the Professional Soccer Corridor of Popularity is constructed to closing 40,000 years. Right through his 2d time as a finalist for the games largest honor, Atwater got here oh-so-close in 2019 to incomes a call for participation to enroll in teammates John Elway, Shannon Sharpe and Terrell Davis in Canton, Ohio.

So this 53-year-old former Broncos protection will once more collect along with his circle of relatives inside of a lodge room in Miami on Tremendous Bowl eve, with one ear angled towards the door, hoping to listen to that glad knock from Corridor president David Baker, with the fantastic information Atwater has been approved into the NFLs maximum unique membership.

In a quest for soccer immortality, whats every other 12 months within the grand scheme of items? Smartly, right heres why ready is the toughest section. The folks we adore arent constructed to closing 40,000 years.

It was once loopy, mentioned Atwater, who nonetheless has issue believing the surreal way wherein he watched his mom die.

The 5th of October is the birthday of Atwaters sister, who was once celebrating at their oldsters dwelling. Overdue that autumn night, the previous Broncos stalwart responded his mobile phone in Indianapolis, the place Atwater was once on a industry go back and forth, for a video convention with family members in St. Louis. His mom had already long gone off to mattress. His sister walked into Jessies bed room, so Steve may just say hi.

My little sister held the telephone subsequent to my mothers mattress, and I mentioned: Mother! Get up, get up! Its me, Steve! However she didnt transfer, even if my sister began shaking her, Atwater mentioned.

When the paramedics were given over there to the home, subsequent factor I do know, my sister video-called me again. The paramedics had my Mother at the flooring by way of her mattress, pumping her chest. I noticed it all, guy.

Roaming the sphere at Mile Prime Stadium, dressed in No. 27 for the Broncos from 1989-1998, he was once fondly referred to as the Smiling Murderer. However on the dinner desk in St. Louis, Atwater was once Jessies little boy. How a mom would have beloved seeing how speeding Steve appeared when fitted for a glittery gold jacket from the Corridor of Popularity.

When the finalists had been introduced, recalled Atwater, she known as me and mentioned: Hiya, Steve. I noticed you had been at the record, Son. Congratulations! And .I mentioned: Oh thank you, Mother. Well see the way it is going this yr.

Because the reminiscence of that dialog with Mother washed over Atwater, he paused, choked again tears and confided: I used to be actually hoping it couldve took place, you already know, right through her time.

After many years that noticed the Broncos develop an inferiority complicated as giant because the Rocky Mountains as a result of a proud, a success franchise felt time and again slighted by way of the Corridor, has orange develop into the brand new black in Canton?

Mr. B and cornerback Champ Bailey had been each commemorated within the Magnificence of 2019. With an expanded roster of inductees coming this yr as a part of the NFLs centennial party, theres authentic hope its high time for Atwater, in addition to Orange Overwhelm linebacker Randy Gradishar and most likely trainer Dan Reeves, to bust down the ones museum doorways.

They higher all get in, mentioned workforce president Joe Ellis, who indexed the accomplishments of overpassed Broncos, then added: We dont have sufficient gamers in there. Pat all the time felt that. And I do, too.

Pins and needles are hotter and fuzzier than the nervousness a finalist feels right through the overall hours sooner than new Corridor contributors are introduced. A yr in the past, Atwater and his circle of relatives huddled inside of a lodge room at the first Saturday of February in Atlanta, web page of Tremendous Bowl LIII.

We had a knock at the door, mentioned Atwater, putting in place the punch line, and it was once the maid.

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One false knock broke each center within the room. Even probably the most devious novelist may just no longer most likely consider the sort of depraved plot twist, so merciless Atwater can do little now apart from snort on the burnt-in-the-memory symbol of opening the door to the face of a maid so apologetic she just about evaporated from embarrassment.

No person requested me, however the Corridor of Popularity has some house-keeping to do. How is it imaginable Atwater, who was once named to the NFLs all-decade workforce of the 1990s and almost invented the idea that of the viral video with an unforgettably loud take on of Kansas Town working again Christian Okoye just about 30 years in the past, doesnt already personal a gold jacket?

This yr, on variety Saturday, after the 48 contributors of a blue-ribbon panel vote 5 modern-era gamers into the Corridor, the knock on Atlwaters door higher be from Baker this time.

No offense to the maid, after all.

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Kiszla: As Broncos protection Steve Atwater knocked patiently on door to Professional Soccer Corridor of Popularity, heaven couldn't wait to take his...

Science News Roundup: Mystery virus in Thailand; Path to immortality for a fee and more – Devdiscourse

Following is a summary of current science news briefs.

U.S. flood risk model to be publicly available in a boon for homebuyers

A climate research organization will offer access to a risk model that predicts the probability of flooding for homes across the United States, giving the public a look at the data institutional investors use to gauge risk. First Street Foundation on Tuesday launched Flood Lab, a research partnership that provides eight universities with its model that maps previous instances of flooding as well as future risks. Using the dataset, Wharton, MIT and John Hopkins University among others will quantify the impacts of flooding on the U.S. economy.

Fly me to the moon: Japanese billionaire Maezawa seeks girlfriend for SpaceX voyage

Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa's search for a girlfriend to join him on a voyage around the moon will be the subject of a new documentary program, in the latest attention-grabbing stunt by the entrepreneur. 44-year-old Maezawa, who sold his online fashion retailer Zozo Inc to SoftBank Group Corp, is seeking single females aged over 20 for the show, which will be shown on streaming service AbemaTV.

Oldest stuff on Earth found inside a meteorite that hit Australia

A meteorite that crashed into rural southeastern Australia in a fireball in 1969 contained the oldest material ever found on Earth, stardust that predated the formation of our solar system by billions of years, scientists said on Monday. The oldest of 40 tiny dust grains trapped inside the meteorite fragments retrieved around the town of Murchison in Victoria state dated from about 7 billion years ago, about 2.5 billion years before the sun, Earth and rest of our solar system formed, the researchers said.

Chinese woman with mystery virus quarantined in Thailand

A Chinese woman has been quarantined in Thailand with a mystery strain of coronavirus, authorities said on Monday, the first time it has been detected outside China. Thai authorities are stepping up monitoring at airports ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday, beginning on Jan. 25, when hundreds of thousands of Chinese tourists are expected to visit.

Brain freeze: Russian firm offers a path to immortality for a fee

When Alexei Voronenkov's 70-year-old mother passed away, he paid to have her brain frozen and stored in the hope breakthroughs in science will one day be able to bring her back to life. It is one of 71 brains and human cadavers - which Russian company KrioRus calls its "patients" - floating in liquid nitrogen in one of several meters-tall vats in a corrugated metal shed outside Moscow.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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Prepare to die from cuteness over this ‘Troop Zero’ trailer – Vanyaland

2019 hasnt been the best year at the movies for Amazon Studios. Their big, splashy Sundance acquisitions the Mindy Kaling vehicle Late Night, Scott Z. Burns The Report, and Brittany Runs a Marathon all flopped in one way or another, so much so that the distributor is shortening the theatrical windows for their titles from now on. One of these casualties is Bert and Berties Troop Zero, which we saw back at Sundance and didnt care much for, but figured it would see a big ol theatrical release given how broadly it appealed to audiences. Sadly, thats not really the case anymore, and Amazon has largely been pretty silent about its release prospects in the intervening months. That changed on Thursday when the distributor finally dropped a trailer for the movie. Your mileage may vary, but a whole lot of you might find it cute.

Take a look:

So, yeah. Youre either going to be with that or not, despite having a cast with the likes of Viola Davis and Allison Janney in it.

But here is what we think will be this movies defining legacy: The fact that it has the single longest synopsis from a distributor that weve ever seen in a press release. Just look at this thing, its massive!

In a tiny Georgia town in 1977, a motherless girl dreams of life beyond the confines of her trailer-park home in Troop Zero. When her quest for connection leads her to reach for the stars in a competition to be included on NASAs landmark Golden Record, it becomes clear she will have to depend on some new friends to take her the last mile.

Every night, Christmas Flint (Mckenna Grace) sits under a starry sky with a flashlight, signaling to extraterrestrial visitors that never arrive. Sensitive, imaginative and deeply lonely, Christmas and her equally eccentric best friend Joseph are the ultimate misfits in their rural hometown of Wiggly, Georgia. When Christmas learns that the winners of the annual Birdie Scout Jamboree talent contest will be included on a recording to be sent into space for posterity, her mission in life becomes to join the Scouts and win Jamboree.

When she is blackballed by the snobbish local Birdie Scout troop and their uptight leader Miss Massey (Allison Janney), Christmas rallies a group of elementary-school outliers to start their own chapter. With grudging help from her dads irascible office manager, Miss Rayleen (Viola Davis), Christmas and her crew have to bypass every roadblock Miss Massey can find in the fine print of the Birdie bylaws in order to reach the Jamboree and their chance at immortality.

From Christmas solitary late-night vigils to a final show-stopping musical performance, Troop Zero is an endearing and magical tale set against a backdrop of beloved hits of the 70s, as Christmas forges friendships that will change her life and help her find a real family.

Jesus Christ, right? Thats practically a fucking novel!

Troop Zero hits Prime Video on January 17.

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Prepare to die from cuteness over this 'Troop Zero' trailer - Vanyaland

Pizza King to close, LeRoy Butler named Hall of Fame finalist: Stories you loved – Post-Crescent

As always, we've rounded up your favorite stories from around Wisconsin this week and some of their top Facebook comments, just for you.

5.The Buzz: Pizza King on Wisconsin Avenue to close

Readers were saddened to hear of the closure of a Fox Cities classic.

"Glad the other 2 stores remain open. It's the best pizza!"

"Love, love Pizza King. Hope Northland Ave. stays open."

"I've been going to Pizza King on Meade since they opened in '76. My favorite is Paula's Perfect. The closure will just mean a little further drive to the Northland location. Enjoy your retirement Dean and Paula."

4.Downtown Green Bay to host Packers pep rally ahead of team's playoff game

The Packers are in the playoffs for the first time since 2016, and fans couldn't be more excited.

"Wish I could be there!GO PACK GO"

"GO PACK GO!! FROM CALIFORNIA!!!"

3.Bought and moved from Fond du Lac, new Sheboygan esports complex is gamer's paradise

If you're into video games, we've found the place for you.

2.Wisconsin residents travel to Illinois for first day of legalized marijuana

Wisconsin continues to stand firm on its marijuana stance, but one of our closest neighbors decided it was time for a change.

"Did you ever notice that marijuana buds are green and gold? And so are the Packers? Can you see the connection here?"

"When I was growing up in Wisconsin, inthe eighties, we went to Illinois for the good fireworks."

1.Former Packers safety LeRoy Butler named Hall of Fame finalist for first time

Wisconsin legend LeRoy Butler is one step closer to football immortality.

"Way overdue. He certainly deserves this honor"

"Should get in as the creator of the Lambeau Leap alone. Was a great player too."

"Very cool. Only Favre, Reggie, and Ron Wolf are in from that era. Keith Jackson, Sean Jones, and Leroy Butler deserve nods as well as Sterling Sharpe."

Our subscribers make this coverage possible. Subscribe to a USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin site today with one of our special offers and support local journalism.

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Jeff Vandermeers Dead Astronauts spins through the postapocalypse – Tampa Bay Times

What is the blue fox a prophet, an alien, a demigod of nature, a hallucination, a genetic experiment gone wrong? If a wandering astronaut sees her own skeleton, turned relic in a city that changes form each time she enters it, does it signal her death or her immortality?

In Jeff VanderMeers new novel, Dead Astronauts, its complicated.

VanderMeer, who lives in Tallahassee, will be one of the eight authors reading from and discussing their work Jan. 9-16 at the University of Tampas free, twice-yearly Lectores series. (See schedule below.)

Dubbed the King of Weird Fiction by the New Yorker, VanderMeer has always dodged literary categories, or mashed them up so exuberantly they seem irrelevant. His Southern Reach trilogy, for example, could be described as postapocalyptic speculative ecofiction with horror elements, more or less.

Dead Astronauts is a prequel of sorts to his 2017 novel, Borne, or maybe a sequel, or maybe it takes place in a parallel universe very like, and sometimes intersecting with, the one in Borne. If that makes you uncomfortable, you aint seen nothing yet.

The first half of Dead Astronauts focuses on a trio of ... well, people is not exactly the word. Most human is a tall black woman of indeterminate age named Grayson. She had no hair on her head because she liked velocity. Her left eye was white and yet still she could see through it; why shouldnt she?

One of her companions is Chen, a stocky man from a country that doesnt exist anymore; he thinks in equations and poetry and has a tendency to dissolve into salamanders. The other is Moss, who, although she presents as an attractive young woman, is both a time traveler and exactly what her name suggests: a plant, albeit one that can do a lot of very unplantlike things.

In a story whose timeline folds in upon itself like an origami centipede, the three cross a barren landscape to enter the City, a ruin laid waste by the activities of the Company. What city, what company? It doesnt matter. The Company, blindly chasing profits as companies do, came to focus upon biotechnology but lost control in spectacular fashion.

The mastermind of that disaster was a man called Charlie X, who created Moss and Chen and countless other creatures, including a savage duck with a broken wing. The trios quest is revenge upon Charlie X, a quest that they have enacted over and over, like avatars in some nightmarish video game (or fictional characters who have gained self-awareness as their author revises and re-revises the plot).

Each had had the experience of self-annihilation," VanderMeer writes. "Chen had killed Chen. Moss had absorbed Moss. Grayson had killed them both. Moss had killed Chen. Chen Moss. Thus their intimacy had become exponential, along with their sadness and their regret.

In the second half of the book, other voices fill in their views of the story. Grayson, Moss and Chen often encountered the leviathan ... almost one hundred years old. Called it Botch, after a long-dead painter. But it wasnt Botched. That was just a personal lexicon, the dark humor of reluctant soldiers.

The gigantic creatures purpose was to live in the poisonous pools outside the Companys facility and consume all its mistakes, manipulated organisms gone horribly wrong. Leviathan tells its story in chapters of fragmented imagery and poetry.

In the books most linear chapters, a homeless woman called Sarah finds a journal that might be an antique, or a missive from the future, and tries to make sense of it and of her own life. We learn the wrenching history of Charlie X and the duck with the broken wing. And we hear from that blue fox, too.

Dead Astronauts is VanderMeers most formally experimental novel, and his most challenging. But it also echoes his constant themes, offering us a vision of a future in which disregard for environmental degradation has the direst of consequences at least for the species that caused it. For the foxes, things might work out.

By Jeff VenderMeer

MCD/Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 323 pages, $27

The University of Tampas low-residency MFA program presents its Lectores reading series this month. All events are free and begin at 7:30 p.m.

Jan. 9: Novelist and memoirist Valeria Luiselli (Lost Children Archives), Crescent Club, Vaughn Center, 401 W Kennedy Blvd., Tampa

Jan. 10: Novelist Jeff VanderMeer (Dead Astronauts), ninth floor, Vaughn Center

Jan. 11: Nonfiction writer Fernanda Santos (The Fire Line: The Story of the Granite Mountain Hotshots), ninth floor, Vaughn Center

Jan. 12: Fiction writer May-lee Chai (Useful Phrases for Immigrants), ninth floor, Vaughn Center

Jan. 14: Poet Marcus Jackson (Pardon My Heart), Scarfone/Hartley Gallery, 310 N Boulevard, Tampa

Jan. 15: Fiction writers Shane Hinton (Pinkies) and Alan Michael Parker (Christmas in July), ninth floor, Vaughn Center

Jan. 16: Fiction writers Alan Michael Parker (Christmas in July) and Aramis Calderon (Dismount), ninth floor, Vaughn Center

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Jeff Vandermeers Dead Astronauts spins through the postapocalypse - Tampa Bay Times

Medals of pilot who tested Spitfires before they returned to the war are going up for sale – Nottinghamshire Live

Churchills 'few', the heroic RAF fighter pilots of the Battle of Britain who displayed indomitable bravery and skill over three frenetic months in the summer of 1940, would scarcely have imagined the immortality their deeds would bestow.

From the Dambusters raid deep in the heart of Nazi Germany, to the early exploits of the SAS and those countless stories of acts of self-sacrifice by both military personnel and civilians, all live long in the memory and imagination.

One group of four or five war medals may seem much like another, but research can uncover the hidden stories of those that received them, writes Nigel Kirk .

The huge collection of militaria and medals currently awaiting sale at The Auction House includes the group of Flight Lieutenant William Alfred Doherty of the RAF.

With them is a splendid 1940s photograph of the handsome young pilot proudly wearing medal ribbons on his chest; Brylcreemed hair and the slightly awkward prop of a pipe, complete the classic portrait of an archetypal WWII British pilot.

Putting a face to the name engraved on the medals personalises them, but of more significance are the four volumes of the Pilots Flying Log Books. They constitute an unbroken record documenting thousands of flying hours in what appears to be every type of aircraft in service with the RAF, from his earliest days as a cadet in March 1938 to April 1948, by which time he was a decorated officer.

His role was to test-fly new or repaired aircraft to ensure they were ready for active service. Not all were, and crashes on take-off and other scary mishaps are logged without further comment.

In 1942 he was in the air many times a day, usually for periods of 25 or 30 minutes putting the latest batch of Spitfires through their paces and test-firing the planes machine guns or canons.

The entry for 16 November 1942, is typical - when he flew six new Spitfires.

In June 1945 he was decorated with the Air Force Cross. The award was reserved for acts of exemplary gallantry in the air when on non-operational missions and meritorious service in flying duties.

A relatively scarce award, only 2,605 were gazetted. The group with his log books is estimated at 2,000-3,000.

Until recent times people in this country, those of Dohertys generation and the next, would speak not of war but 'the War'.

This year the Royal British Legions Poppy Appeal and the nations annual collective act of remembrance of war dead - including those of the 21st century - marks the 80th anniversary of the start of World War Two.

Buying a paper poppy raises money for veterans and their families. Wearing one, whether red or white, is a matter of deeper significance known only to the wearer. It may be a token of respect or thankfulness for the sacrifice of others whether ancestor or unknown, a memorial to the inevitable innocent victims or most profoundly, a commitment to peace.

Politicians and other public figures are amongst the first to be seen sporting a poppy each year. The poppy is a symbol that has become a tradition or an institution, such as the Christmas broadcast of the Queen or the Popes homily.

The fusion of message spoken or unspoken and symbol is powerful, but what of the effect? Millennials are seldom to be seen wearing a poppy. For many of them the wars of the 20th century are either historical facts or dim-remembered events spoken of, if at all, by aged relatives.

Their parents experienced the fear of living under the threat of nuclear war. The Cold War's sudden and unexpecting ending was also celebrated last week on the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Effective and probably new means of teaching the veterans impassioned plea of never again to a society that no longer has any filial connection with veterans or victims, as did their great grandparents, is vitally important in an ever more unfamiliar world.

That will require imagination, dedication and expertise. I can hardly think of a more important subject for the school curriculum.

Two rare and tiny English pewter tankards of indeterminate age sold for a surprising 800 at The Auction House at the end of last month.

The larger of the two, which was about 6cm high, had a charming engraved depiction of a swan on the lid in a manner known as wrigglework. In addition, the front was engraved with the initials of the original owner I T and date 1662.

The bidders clearly thought one or both did indeed date from the era of the diarist Samuel Pepys and Charles II.

Miniature furniture or objects in silver or pewter such as these were known as toys. The concept of childrens toys as we know them is relatively modern, children being given much simpler and inexpensive dolls and games, or more likely making their own play things.

These were destined for the mistress of the house, fancies for display and conversation with friends over that new and costly beverage tea.

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Medals of pilot who tested Spitfires before they returned to the war are going up for sale - Nottinghamshire Live

Run, Baby, Run – East Bay Express

As they sit quietly munching their meals at the quick-service restaurant, we can see that Angela "Queen" Johnson and Ernest "Slim" Hinds' first date is already off to a bad start. Queen winces when Slim pauses to silently say grace, and she can't help needling him for choosing such a cheap eating place. But even though he's a bit defensive, Slim firmly announces there's a point where the criticism needs to stop.

That's our introduction to two characters whom we imagine will have no reason to ever see each other again. Statuesque, haughty, beautiful Angela (Jodie Turner-Smith) and earnest Ernest (Daniel Kaluuya) aren't calling themselves Queen and Slim quite yet. That will come later, after their car gets pulled over by a revved-up white Cleveland, Ohio police officer, in an incident that will change the two young African Americans' destinies permanently. Queen & Slim, one of the year's most provocative films, is powerful stuff, neatly wrapped in realistic yet mythological terms by the players and their director, Melina Matsoukas.

That evening, push comes to shove and our two romantic/heroic figures are obliged to hit the road. Before we can stop and ponder yet another in an endless procession of violent "Black Lives Matter" incidents, Queen and Slim split in his car for points South, trailed every inch of the way by alarmed TV news bulletins. En route they experience the America most of us recognize a little outright hostility, one or two Good Samaritans, some genuine innocent curiosity, a few folks who seem sincere but have ulterior motives.

But as they travel on, from Ohio through Kentucky and Tennessee on the way to New Orleans, they find their notoriety has preceded them and they're already folk heroes in the community. Every Black person in America knows them on sight, but they keep it on the downlow. Overnight, Queen and Slim have truly become the Black Bonnie and Clyde. Whatever they might say or do is now secondary to that.

They make an interesting couple, constantly bickering yet increasingly reliant on each other as they dodge police and nosy strangers. With her majestic face and figure, Turner-Smith is iconic before she even utters a line of dialogue. Meanwhile UK native actor Kaluuya (Get Out, Black Panther) functions convincingly as a well-meaning everyman, in over his head with no way out and everything on the line. Screenwriters Lena Waithe and James Frey, directed by Matsoukas in her feature debut, set up their reluctant rebels as a pair of ordinary young adults who have greatness thrust upon them as well as the threat of instant death every time they go outside.

Queen and Slim's getaway takes them to a remarkable succession of vivid scenes in the heart of the Southern Black community. Their brief stay in the decaying Louisiana Gothic home of Uncle Earl (Bokeem Woodbine, licking his chops) is worth its own movie, as Earl the pimp shows off his stable of girls notably Indya Moore while fending off annoying family ties. Sample dialogue, referring to another relative: "Iraq fucked him up." By the time the fugitives take off in Earl's cherished turquoise Catalina we wish they could have stayed longer.

But the key scene in Queen and Slim's upward trajectory from potential victims to revolutionary martyrs takes place in a little country music club. (They can't help ducking in. All the while they're on the run they inexplicably pull off the road to nonchalantly ride a horse or have sex in the getaway car, almost as if they know they're romantic figures in a movie. It drives us crazy in the middle of this tense, life-or-death scenario.) With a wink, the bartender gives them drinks on the house and lets them know everybody in the place is on their side. Throw in the mesmerizing music of Dev "Blood Orange" Hynes and we've got an irresistible legend. This attractive but otherwise nondescript couple has climbed the heights, unwillingly but unmistakably. Unfortunately, the only way down is to crash out. But they make a splendid subject for murals. Queen & Slim begins with an injustice and climaxes with immortality.

Link:
Run, Baby, Run - East Bay Express

Immortality roadmap | and other thing created by Alexey …

This site is about roadmaps which were created by Alexey Turchin and all his other projects

Links on all maps are in the All map menu. Textual explanations of the roadmaps are published on Less Wrong, and most useful discussion is also happening in LW. SothereareLW links for each roadmap, where you could participate in the discussion. Some roadmaps are translated into Russian, and the correspondingpdfare also linked.

Immortality

Immortality roadmap on English, pdf

Immortality roadmap on Russian, pdf

Existing life extension ways on Russian, pdf, English version

Digital immortality map

Quantum immortality map, on Lesswrong

Identity map on LW,pdf

The map of the resurrection of the dead, pdf

Ageing mechanisms, rus

AI in life extension, rus,eng

X-risks

Typology of x-risks

Typology of human extinction risks on English, on Lesswrong

Typology of human extinction risks on Russian

Prevention plans

Existential risks prevention roadmap on English, pdf, on Lesswrong, longread on EA forum

Existential risks prevention roadmap on Russian, pdf

Plan of prevention of global warming on EA forum, pdf

Different risks

Map of nanotech risks, on LessWrong

Map of biorisks, on LessWrong

Map of nuclear risks,on LessWrong

The map of risks of aliens on LW, pdf

The map of natural risks on LW,pdf

The Map of Impact Risks and Asteroid Defence, pdf

Structure of the global catastrophe: different approaches

Double scenarios of a global catastrophe, on LessWrong

A map: Causal structure of a global catastrophe, on LessWrong

The map of cognitive biases in global risks, on LessWrong

The map of future models, on LessWrong

The map of agents which could create x-risks, on LessWrong

Levels of the global catastrophe

Pdf,On Lesswrong

AI Safety

AGI failures mode and levels, on Lesswrong

AGI safety solutions, on Lesswrong

Social maps

The map of organisation and people involved in x-risks prevention

Probability

Simulation map, on Lesswrong

Doomsday argument map, on Lesswrong

How to survive the end of the universe, on Lesswrong

Miscellaneous

The map of the methods of optimisation (types of intelligence),pdf

The map of future models, pdf

The map of p-zombies, pdf

The map ideas how the universe appeared from nothing, pdf

The map of positive scenarios of the future, on Russian, pdf

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Immortality roadmap | and other thing created by Alexey ...

Watch the live stream of the New Jersey Hall of Fame ceremony tonight at 7 p.m. – NJ.com

Its the Garden State Grammys, the Oscars near the Ocean its the New Jersey Hall of Fame induction ceremony!

Sunday night at the Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park, a new gaggle of great Garden Staters will be heading for Hall immortality, and you catch all the action by playing the YouTube live stream above, starting at 7 p.m.

This years induction class includes:

- George R.R. Martin, renowned author of the Song Of Ice And Fire book series that spawned the mega-popular Game of Thrones TV franchise, who grew up in Bayonne.

- Martha Stewart, the home, garden and culinary mogul and TV personality, who grew up in Nutley.

- Jason Alexander, the actor best-known for playing George Costanza on Seinfeld, who grew up in Livingston.

- Laurie Hernandez, the gold medal-winning Olympic gymnast, who grew up in Old Bridge.

- Jerry Izenberg, longtime Star-Ledger sports columnist, who grew up in Newark

- The Smithereens, the popular rock band from Carteret. Jim Babjak, Mike Mesaros and Dennis Diken will be inducted as well as frontman Pat DiNizio, who died in 2017 at the age of 62.

- Southside Johnny Lyon, the blues-rock stalwart, frontman of the Asbury Jukes and unofficial godfather of the Jersey sound, who grew up in Ocean Grove.

- Peter Benchley, author who wrote Jaws, the 1974 novel that he adapted for the 1975 hit Steven Spielberg film, who lived in Princeton.

The inductees are chosen in part through a public vote, but other factors are involved, including for living nominees whether or not they will be available to attend the induction ceremony.

The honorees are scheduled to attend an induction ceremony at Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park on Oct. 27. Tickets for the induction ceremony will go on sale starting in September. Ticket sales will benefit the upcoming New Jersey Hall of Fame museum, which is being built at the American Dream complex in East Rutherford for a planned opening in 2020. The museum will be the halls first static physical home (a previous mobile museum exhibit was housed in a trailer).

Newark Airports Terminal A is home to the New Jersey Hall of Fame Hologram Time Capsule, a photorealistic holographic experience featuring Steven Van Zandt along with Wyclef Jean, Tommy James, Connie Chung, Mary Higgins Clark and astronaut Mark Kelly. Posters of New Jersey greats also represent the hall at the airport.

NJ Advance Media staff writer Amy Kuperinsky contributed to this report.

Bobby Olivier may be reached at bolivier@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BobbyOlivier and Facebook. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Watch the live stream of the New Jersey Hall of Fame ceremony tonight at 7 p.m. - NJ.com