Henrik Lundqvist reflects on his rise to Rangers immortality ahead of special night – New York Post

And then there was the time Henrik Lundqvist actually tried to score a goal in the NHL, and lived to tell about it after a stern warning from a guy who could put pucks in the net and goes by the name of Jaromir Jagr.

This was from my first or second year. It was early in my career, The King told me Monday. We were up 3-1 and I missed it, and then they came down and scored on me to make it 3-2. And then they came right back down and had a great scoring chance that I just managed to save, so we win the game.

And then in the locker room, Jagr walks up to me and says, Unless youre an MVP in this league, dont fking ever do that again.

You know what? I didnt.

All the seasons, all the games, all the victories, all the highs and all of the crushing lows that were interspersed along the way during one of the great eras in franchise history, they will be memorialized Friday night when Lundqvists No. 30 is raised to the pinwheel ceiling of a Garden that for 15 years was a backdrop to the goaltenders greatness.

Lundqvist may have brought his star with him from Gothenburg, Sweden, but once upon a time at his first Rangers training camp in 2005 he was just another starstruck prospect wanting to make it in the worlds best hockey league and on the worlds biggest stage. Here again, No. 68 makes an appearance.

You obviously have different reasons why you enjoy playing with different guys, but of all my teammates, having the opportunity to play with Jagr was so special for me, Lundqvist said. He is not only one of the greatest ever to play this game, but he also was kind of responsible for my Welcome to the NHL moment.

It was my first camp and the first trip we had was to West Point for team building. We had 30 guys left. And they put me with Jagr as my roommate. Ill never forget it. Im there as part this group, Im nervous and Im checking luggage and I see the other one in my room is Jagr.

I couldnt believe it, I was so excited, said the forevermore No. 30. I ran to call to my brother, that was the first thing I did. Guess what? Im staying with Jagr! It was surreal.

Once he settled in, and it took about a minute-and-half for him to do so, Lundqvist embraced New York. This was no accidental tourist.

I had this conviction immediately that this was the place and Therese [his wife] and I attached ourselves to the city right away. It felt so natural, said the 39-year-old retiree. The intensity of playing here made me feel so alive, and I loved that.

Everything that goes on here is something I appreciated, the big stage, the intensity, the energy, how you can be as a person. At the beginning I felt a little different as a European, but the city allows you to be whoever you want to be. That was very refreshing. You could just be yourself, 100 percent. That was a great feeling.

Had they so chosen, the Lundqvists could have lived life on Page Six. Except for the one time when the goaltender was photographed on celebrity row with Justin Bieber at a Knicks game, his appearances in this paper were pretty much confined to the sports section. That was not by happenstance.

Therese has been very strict with that throughout our time here, said Lundqvist. Weve had people here and in Sweden want to do stories on us, our daughters [9-year-old Charlise and 6-year-old Juli] and our family, and she has always been firm on keeping that part of it for ourselves. She says, Thats our life.

Of course it was different our first seven or eight years here. Social media wasnt as big. Now, you can know what everybody is up to in a way. But we still try to keep a distance and protect our life in a way, if that makes sense. But Therese has always been firm on that and I have always respected that.

So we dont know what we dont know about the Lundqvists. But we do know about the remarkable career the husband constructed in New York. We know about the stunning 15-4 record in elimination games from 2012 to 2015, we know about the run of brilliance in Game 7s, we know about the 459 career victories that is good for sixth in NHL history.

One thing that was different here from in Sweden was that there was so much focus on wins for goalies, Lundqvist said. That was always strange to me because its a team sport, so why do you count the wins for the goalie when its really about what the team is doing? In Sweden, nobody talks about how many wins you have. That was new to me.

It was also a little bit new when John Tortorella, who by the way chastised Lundqvist for that Page Six appearance with young Bieber, replaced professorial Tom Renney behind the bench midway through 2008-09. The Black-and-Blueshirt mentality did not stop at the crease.

I mean, I loved Torts, you should say hello [on Friday], the Swede said, barely suppressing a chuckle. Ill never forget the first time he walked into the locker room, youd heard a lot about him and how things went in Tampa and how he was pretty tough on goalies at times, so there was so much respect there.

You respected him and feared him at the same time. You had to be on your toes. But I loved that. He was so good at motivating the team at critical moments and thats something I really appreciated, too. I was ready to run through a brick wall every time I walked out from the locker room. He was very good at getting everyone to that mindset, where you were preparing for a kind of war. I loved playing for him.

If Tortorella challenged his players, so often did Lundqvist. He was not shy about sharing his opinions on the ice with teammates he may have felt deficient in certain categories. Loudly.

You know me, I was so intense playing the game, I played with a lot of emotions, good and bad, and so many times they would come from here and not from here, Lundqvist said, pointing first at his heart and then at his head. For the most part I was able to take a deep breath and cool down.

But other times, it probably was not easy for guys. I was very demanding on myself and on my teammates, absolutely. I like emotions. I loved reactions. I had guys who played with me for a long time who snapped back and would say, Be quiet and stop the puck.

He stopped the puck. The face of the franchise gains franchise immortality on Friday. The number at the top of the building says it all.

Thirty.

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After 44 years of pain, one win stands between Ash Barty and immortality: Aus Open final LIVE – Fox Sports

After 44 years of pain, only Slam final debutant Danielle Collins stands between Ash Barty and immortality in tonights Australian Open womens singles final.

The French Open and Wimbledon champion is trying to become the first Australian to win the Australian Open since Chris ONeil in 1978.

Follow Ash Barty vs Danielle Collins in the Australian Open final below from 7:30pm EST!

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PREVIEW, via AFP

Multi-talented Ashleigh Barty has been a professional cricketer, won a golf tournament and collected two tennis Grand Slam titles, with a third beckoning at the Australian Open on Saturday night.

Few athletes can boost such a varied sporting resume, but the down-to-earth Australian has taken it in her stride.

Widely seen as one of the nicest players on tour, the 25-year-old began playing tennis as a child in Brisbane.

But it was a trip to the Australian Open for a training camp when she was 11 or 12 that proved to be the spark that drove her to where she is today.

To see how professional it was and to see everyone going about their business was really eye-opening. My first taste of it was in the juniors and I loved it, she said this week.

I think being able to get a taste of that kind of lit the flame. You wonder what you can achieve. You wonder what you can do.

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The Australian went on to win the junior Wimbledon title as a 15-year-old in 2011.

But the expectations that came with success took their toll and she made a shock decision three years later to ditch tennis for cricket, signing for Brisbane Heat in the inaugural Womens Big Bash League.

In short, I think I needed just to find myself, Barty said when reflecting on that time of her life.

I felt like I got twisted and maybe a little bit lost along the way in the first part of my career.

While cricket gave her a different perspective about sport, the lure of tennis was never far away and driven by an ambition to taste success again at Wimbledon she returned after a season away.

The break worked wonders and she went from strength-to-strength. Barty broke through for her maiden Grand Slam triumph at the French Open in 2019, became Australias first womens world number one since Evonne Goolagong-Cawley and finally won a cherished Wimbledon crown last year.

So dominant has she been that she ended 2021 as the top-ranked player for a third consecutive year, joining Steffi Graf, Martina Navratilova, Serena Williams and Chris Evert as the only women to achieve the feat.

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Barty should have returned to Paris to defend her Roland Garros title in 2020, but she pulled out over coronavirus fears and picked up her golf clubs instead.

And on a course designed by Greg Norman near Brisbane, she won the Brookwater Golf Club womens title with a commanding 7 and 5 triumph in the matchplay final.

Is there anything you cant do?, asked one social media user at the time.

Barty finetuned her golf game playing rounds with fellow Grand Slam winner Pat Rafter and her long-time boyfriend Garry Kissick, who has been by her side since 2016 and often posts supportive messages on social media.

They got engaged in November, sparking a frenzy of congratulations from fellow tennis stars.

Barty attributes much of her success to her close-knit team, which includes not just Kissick but her family and long time coach Craig Tyzzer, routinely referring to we rather than I when she speaks of her tennis exploits.

Everyone is equally important. Were all equal, she said of her team. I mean, the experiences weve been able to share together have been remarkable, for my whole team. My family, starts with my family, my sisters.

Obviously my professional team who contribute so much time and energy into my career and help me try and live out my dreams.

I genuinely cannot thank them enough for the time and effort they put in to someone else.

AUSTRALIAN OPEN 2022 - Day 13 - Order of Play and Results

Rod Laver Arena

Day session from 12pm

Junior Girls Singles Final: [1] Petra Marcinko (CRO) vs [8] Sofia Costoulas (BEL)

Junior Boys Singles Final: [1] Bruno Kuzuhara (USA) vs [4] Jakub Mensik (CZE)

Night session from 7:30pm

Womens Singles Final: [1] Ash Barty (AUS) vs [27] Danielle Collins (USA)

Mens Doubles Final: Thanasi Kokkinakis (AUS)/Nick Kyrgios (AUS) vs Matt Ebden (AUS)/Max Purcell (AUS)

Follow all the latest from the Australian Open below!

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The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality: Where to buy in the Philippines – Sports Interactive Network Philippines

ON THE second anniversary of Kobe Bryants untimely death, the tributes keep pouring in.

On Twitter, fellow legend Vince Carter posted a thoughtful message for his late friend. The world is truly missing a great one, the Raptors legends wrote.

The Mavs Luka Doncic posted a pair of pics with both Kobe and his daughter Gianna, who perished with him in that fateful helicopter crash in January 2020.

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Kobes own team posted a simple photo of father and daughter, along with the words, Family is forever. This tweet was later reposted by the Celtics Jayson Tatum, who was among the many players inspired by the late superstars Mamba Mentality mindset.

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But where did this Mamba Mentality come from? A new book attempts to find the answer as it tracks Bryants origin story focusing on the first eighteen years of his life, from Kobes childhood in Italy to his playing days in Lower Merion in Philadelphia, where the seeds of his future greatness took root.

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The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality was written by Mike Sielski, a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, who was able to get access to some never-before-heard interview tapes between Kobe and close confidante Jeremy Treatman. Bryant, who at the time was transitioning from high school to the Lakers, was already thinking about his legacy, and wanted to write a book about his life so far.

You could hear Kobe talking about the first time he met Magic Johnson, the first time he ever met and interacted with Michael Jordan, his relationships with his parents, what it was like to win the state championship as a high school kid, what it was like to be drafted into the NBA and traded to the Lakers, described Sielski in an interview with KTLA 5 LA News.

Even before Kobes glory days at the Lakers, Sielski said, the tapes reaffirmed just how committed he was, particularly at an early age, to being the greatest basketball player in the world.

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However, the book also tackles the vulnerability of being a teenager and a high schooler, which Kobe, despite all his nascent basketball greatness, was not immune to.

This includes episodes in Lower Merion when he and his sister would need to talk to each other in Italian in the school hallways, because that was the language they knew, or how his schoolmates resented how Bryant got to ask out singer Brandy to the prom.

Hes grappling with all the other stuff that teenagers at that time and that age are dealing with: How do I make friends? How do girls factor into my life? But all the while, hes pointing towards this goal of being a great basketball player.

The Rise: Kobe Bryant and the Pursuit of Immortality is out now in Fully Bookeds online store for P1,649.

We are now on Quento! to enjoy more articles and videos from SPIN.ph and other Summit Media websites.

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David Ortiz achieves baseball immortality with Hall of Fame induction – The Boston Globe

The Red Sox icon is scheduled to be inducted July 24. At the age of 46, Ortiz is now a baseball immortal.

Fittingly, Ortizs plaque will be placed on the well-varnished oak walls of the gallery approximately 20 feet from that of his former Red Sox teammate and good friend Pedro Martnez.

The Hall of Fame has been collecting and displaying Ortiz memorabilia for years, cataloging a selection of bats, uniforms, spikes, and other keepsakes that suddenly have considerably more meaning and value.

Ortiz, who told the Globe last week that he has never visited Cooperstown, is eager to get a look.

I know its a special place, he said. As a player, you try not to think about the future too much. But the Hall of Fame is the ultimate.

Interactive: David Ortiz is headed to the Hall of Fame. Explore all of the 558 career home runs that helped get him there.

That Ortiz just cleared the required 75 percent he received 77.9 percent is the story for now. It wont be for long.

Joining Martinez, Wade Boggs, Carl Yastrzemski, and Ted Williams as the only Red Sox players to achieve first-ballot status ultimately will be whats remembered, as will Ortiz becoming just the fourth player from the baseball-crazed Dominican Republic to gain entrance to Cooperstown.

That means everything to me, representing my country like that, he said.

A vast majority of voters understood that the story of baseball in the 21st century couldnt be told without Ortiz as a main character. Its a Hall of Fame, after all, and whos been more famous than Big Papi in that time?

Read more: How Boston Globe writers voted for the 2022 Baseball Hall of Fame

Ortiz may not be the best player in Red Sox history but he is surely the most impactful, given his outsized role in three championships, particularly with the historic 2004 team.

With the Sox trailing, three games to none, in the American League Championship Series against the rival Yankees, Ortiz won Game 4 with a home run in the 12th inning. A day later, his single in the bottom of the 14th inning won Game 5.

The Sox never lost again that October. Ortiz drove in 19 runs in 14 games during that postseason.

If I had to say what was the biggest thing, it was winning in 2004, Ortiz said. A team like the Red Sox went 86 years with no championships, and we did it. Everything changed after that.

Ortiz also helped comfort a bomb-scarred city in 2013, leading the Sox to a cathartic championship. He retired a few years later, still one of the most feared hitters in the game.

Now comes the diamond-studded cap on his career.

The Hall of Fame, its something you learn about when youre a kid, Ortiz said. Its like a storyteller talking to you about a superhero type of thing. When people talk about the Hall of Fame to me, thats how I feel. Youre telling me a story about superheroes.

Ortizs career was a marvel. He had 541 home runs, 632 doubles, 10 All-Star selections, and finished in the top five of the American League MVP voting five times.

When people talk about the Hall of Fame to me, thats how I feel. Youre telling me a story about superheroes.

David Ortiz

Among players with at least 50 career postseason plate appearances, Ortizs 1.372 OPS is a World Series record. In all, he hit .289 with a .947 OPS in 85 postseason games.

We all know what he did on the field. That stuffs easy to see. You can look it up and see all the numbers, said Jon Lester, a teammate for nine seasons and two titles. But to take on the role of a leader, not only in the clubhouse, but in that city we all know how that city can be at times with just how hard they are and accountable that they make players.

For him to do it day in and day out was pretty impressive to watch all those years.

Photos: David Ortizs journey through Major League Baseball to the Hall of Fame

Ortiz already has a significant presence in the Hall, and that becomes clear when you leave the plaque gallery and explore.

Over the years, the Hall has collected 13 pieces of Ortiz memorabilia 3-D artifacts in curator-speak and much of it was on display before the voting results were announced.

Ortizs jersey from the 2004 World Series hangs in the Viva Baseball! exhibit recognizing the vast impact Latin American players have had on the game.

Continue walking, and the spikes he wore at the 2016 All-Star Game during his final season are in a locker along with one of the commemorative baseballs used during the final regular-season game the Sox played that year.

A bat Ortiz used in the 2013 World Series is around another corner. Keep going and there are the spikes Ortiz was wearing in 2009 when he set the record for career home runs by a designated hitter.

Photographs or videos of Ortiz uncoiling his lefthanded swing are included in several exhibits, and he is one of the players featured in the 15-minute welcome film.

Go down some stairs and the Hall of Fames vault reveals more treasures and a few frivolities.

Theres a souvenir Ortiz watch the Sox gave away in 2006 along with an empty bag of Big Papis Tortilla Chips and a bottle of wine he endorsed 16 years ago.

Theres also the batting helmet Ortiz had on when he hit his 43rd home run of the 2005 season, setting a record for designated hitters.

The helmet is sticky with pine tar and theres an inch-long crack on the side.

I was going good that season and I kept using the same helmet, Ortiz said. I probably threw it when I struck out and cracked it, but I kept on using it.

By 2013, as the Red Sox were in a playoff run that culminated with a championship, Ortizs teammates temporarily nicknamed him Cooperstown.

All he did that postseason was go 18 for 51 with 5 home runs and 13 RBIs in 16 games. Ortiz reached base safely in 19 of 25 plate appearance in the World Series.

By Game 6, the Cardinals gave up and walked Ortiz four times, three intentionally.

His career lasted three more seasons, but Ortizs performance that October stamped his Hall of Fame passport.

We called him Cooperstown for a reason, teammate Jonny Gomes said. He belongs there. Ive never been around anybody like him before.

In 13, he invited the entire team to his house every time we clinched something. Wives, kids, everybody. He had a way to connect with everybody in the room.

He was pulled in so many different directions that season but always was as good as he could be on the field.

Ortizs amplified personality can charm a toddler or the president. Without trying to be, he is inclusive.

In 2011, Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, the richest man in the world at the time, had one request when he visited Fenway Park. He wanted to meet Ortiz.

Whats up, man? said Ortiz, who startled the armed guards with Slim when he burst out of the trainers room to say hello.

But Ortiz was a flawed protagonist at times. He was released by the Minnesota Twins after the 2002 season. The team decided he was not complete enough to merit a salary increase.

The Red Sox signed Ortiz to an inexpensive deal and made him earn playing time. Along the way, there were occasional bursts of anger directed at umpires, opposing pitchers who brushed him back, and even his managers.

In 2009, Ortiz was identified in a report as having tested positive for a performance-enhancing substance in what was intended to be an anonymous survey six years earlier.

Ortiz denied taking anything other than over-the-counter supplements. He was deemed clean for 13 seasons after baseball started a testing program in 2004, which backed up that claim.

So did commissioner Rob Manfred, who said in 2016 that the 2003 test had discrepancies in how the results were recorded.

But suspicions and assumptions dogged Ortiz.

The Hall has never instructed voters on how to appraise the Steroid Era. But signs in the stately red-brick building near areas devoted to all-time records inform visitors that the museum acknowledges steroids were part of the game, and the exhibits reflect that time.

Ortiz was primarily a designated hitter throughout his career, and that was a factor some voters held against him.

Lester blasted a hole in that argument.

I think weve got to kind of get over that DH deal, he said. I get it. I understand it. But it wasnt his choice. Its punishing somebody for having a position called designated hitter. I think thats unfair.

In some of the biggest games, he played really good first base for the Red Sox. He would step in in the World Series for us at first base.

Ive never understood that argument. If you dont want to have that position, dont have the position available.

Ortiz also was shot and badly wounded on June 9, 2019, while at a bar in the Dominican Republic. Three surgeries and a six-week stay at Massachusetts General Hospital followed.

Officials in the Dominican claimed the shooting was a case of mistaken identity, an explanation that has invited skepticism but did not seem to affect his Hall candidacy.

It has been an eventful life, far more than he ever expected. Growing up, Ortiz liked to tinker with junk cars and thought his destiny was to inherit the auto-parts store owned by his father, Leo.

On Tuesday, with his father at his side, Ortiz was told he was a Hall of Famer.

You have to pinch yourself, he said last week. How did this happen to me?

Peter Abraham can be reached at peter.abraham@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @PeteAbe.

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Paul deLespinasse: Organizational immortality: NATO and …

Paul F. deLespinasse| The Daily Telegram

One of Vladimir Putin's attempted justifications for Russia's outrageous war is that if Ukraine became a member of NATO it would be an existential threat to neighboring Russia.

This argument ignores the fact that Ukraine was highly unlikely to become a NATO member. Unanimous consent of all current NATO memberswould be requiredand it is very hard to get their unanimous consent to anything. It also ignores the fact that NATO was designed as a defensive alliance and is very poorly organized to engage in military aggression.

One wonders what pretexts Putin could have used to invade Ukraine if it were not for NATO. Or was his argument just a pretext? Could he actually be paranoid enough to think Ukraine, with its tiny population and military force compared with Russia, could be a real threat?

It is not impossible. American fears of atomic weapons in Iran orNorth Koreaare equally exaggerated, but few leaders in Washington would dare to point this out.

Actually, the continuing existence of NATO since the crackup of the USSRcould conceivably give Putin something to worry about. NATO was designed to deter the USSR from attacking Western Europe. The disappearance of the USSR might have been a good time for NATO to declare victory, wind up its affairs, and abolish itself. But it didn't.

Putin might be excused for placing the worst possible interpretation on this fact. After all, he is leader of a country which may suffer from aserious form of collective PTSDthanks to its continual catastrophes since the Communists took power in 1917.

Actually, though, there is a much more likely explanation for the continuation of NATO, one that poses no threat to Russia. To understand this, we need to look at the history, of all things, of the March of Dimes!

The March of Dimes was created by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938 to combat polio. Roosevelt himself suffered from the aftereffects of polio and was very interested in wiping out that horrible disease.

After the polio vaccines were developed in the 1950s, the disease was indeed wiped out in the United States. Mission accomplished! But did the March of Dimes accept this victory and proceed to liquidate itself?

It did not! The people who worked for the March of Dimes were not interested in losing their positions and instead sought to make that organization immortal. So they chose an ambitious new goal, wiping out birth defects. This was a far more complicated goal since birth defects result from many different causes. There was little danger of another total victory!

This quest for organizational immortality was successful. The March of Dimes is still with us today.

The bureaucrats at NATO headquarters were, no doubt, equally uninterested in destroying the organization that gave them status and income. The sudden disappearance of the country their organization was created to defend its members from was an awkwardness, but not an overwhelming one.

It is well known that it is hard to stop a train. Likewise, massive ocean liners cannot turn on a dime. Organizations, by analogy, can have immenseinstitutionalinertia, a tendency to remain the same.

Institutional inertia combined with the self-interest of NATO bureaucrats is probably enough to explain the continuing existence of NATO. And the United States, which like Russia probably suffers fromnational PTSD,could have backed expansion of NATO to former parts of the Soviet Empire because of its own paranoia.

Heaven help us if the mutual psychological problems of our two great countries trap us into policies which are harmful to the legitimate interests of the people in both countries. The situation calls for forbearance and a bit of mutual sympathy all around rather than an escalation of rhetoric and hostility.

Paul F. deLespinasse is professor emeritus of political science and computer science at Adrian College. He can be reached atpdeles@proaxis.com.

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Paul deLespinasse: Organizational immortality: NATO and ...

Violin decomposes as it is eaten by a mushroom in a one-year timelapse – Classic FM

28 January 2022, 12:43

A one-year timelapse of a decomposing violin accompanies German composer, Sven Helbigs, latest work.

The Reishi mushroom is a reddish brown varnished kidney-shaped cap fungus. Nicknamed the mushroom of immortality in English, the mushroom has long been thought to be a talisman of luck, healing, and wellness in Chinese culture.

This fungus is usually found growing on hardwood trees in particular, oaks in warm climates, such as Asia, the South Pacific, Southern Europe and the Southeastern United States.

But one type of wood you probably wouldnt expect to find the fungus on, is the wood of a violin.

In the music video for composer Sven Helbigs latest track,Metamorphosis (meaning a great change in appearance or character), a violin is seen slowly being eaten by aReishi mushroom over the course of a year.

Recorded via timelapse, the result is the eerie decomposition of an instrument like weve never seen before (watch above).

Read more: Funky fungi? Meet the musicians making melodies out of mushrooms

In the music video teaser trailer, Helbig asks the audience, Can you drink a violin?.

For those stumped by his questioning, Reishi mushroom is often made into a tea. According to the tea company Twinings website, Reishi has long been used to manage allergies, autoimmune diseases, sleep patterns, and asthma, due to its immune system-boosting qualities.

The mushroom growing on the Metamorphosis violin is eventually harvested after a year of growth and made into tea. The last imagery we see in the music video is that of a cup of tea being poured.

Seeing the violin used as a type of soil in this scenario perhaps creates more questions than it answers for the viewer. Does the instrument have more value as a part of todays classical music world, or as food for this mushroom of immortality?

Read more: Worlds first vegan violin replaces animal hide glue with wild berries

Helbig is a double ECHO Classical Music Award winner and the co-founder of the Dresdner Sinfoniker, one of the leading symphony orchestras specialising in contemporary music. Other musicians involved in the video include the Mondna Quartet, hornistsAnne Grethen, Jrg Brckner and Robinson Wappler, andtuba player Tom Gtze.

Helbig performs with the London Contemporary Orchestra on 27 April at the Purcell Room, Southbank Centre in London.

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Violin decomposes as it is eaten by a mushroom in a one-year timelapse - Classic FM

‘Her Story’ developer reveals "investigative horror" game …

Immortality, the latest project from Her Story and Telling Lies dev, Sam Barlow, has finally received its first proper reveal.

Two years since it was first teased and nearly a year since it received a name, Immortality will be a FMV narrative mystery. The cinema-inspired investigative horror now has the full name of Immortality: An Interactive Movie Trilogy.

It tells the story of Marissa Marcel, an actress who made three films in her career Ambrosio in 1968, Minsky in 1970 and Two Of Everything in 1999. None of those films were ever released. That means players have to dig through an archive of film clips and behind-the-scenes footage to piece together the plot of each film, as well as find out what happened to Marcel.

While the concept is similar to Barlows other work, its also far more visual thanks to being able to search through archive footage rather than the text-driven means of previous games.

Players can slowly open up footage by passing a sequence on an editing device, before clicking on items of interest. The game then cuts to another bit of footage where the same item appears.

As announced last year, the game also features some significant writers. These include Allan Scott (Queens Gambit and Dont Look Now), Amelia Gray (Mr. Robot and Maniac), and Barry Gifford (Wild at Heart and Lost Highway).

Immortality: An Interactive Movie Trilogy will launch for PC and Xbox Series X|S this summer. An Xbox Game Pass release is expected given the logo on the trailer.

In other gaming news, another major horror game has been teased. Supermassive Games is teasing its next release, The Quarry, with a full reveal coming later today (March 17).

Also, Sniper Elite 5 has a confirmed release date of May 2022.

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'Her Story' developer reveals "investigative horror" game ...

The Price of Immortality: Silicon Valley’s obsession with living forever – Big Think

Excerpted from The Price of Immortality: The Race to Live Forever, written by Peter Ward and published by Melville House.

Since the 1980s, wave after wave of technological change originating from Silicon Valley has crashed over the world. Each jump in progress has spawned new industries, fortunes, and even universes. A growing band of geeks steadily grew wealthier, and their influence expanded alongwith their bank balances. Behind each multibillion-dollar company was a flock of venturecapitalists who readied their checkbooks when young startups needed them most and reaped therewards when they grew into the monoliths that now prop up the American economy. Since the birth of the personal computer, the moment when high-technology made its way into the home,Silicon Valley has swallowed industries whole, one by one. The internet changed commerce forever, enabling all-conquering profit machines like Jeff Bezos Amazon. Ride-hailing apps likeUber and Lyft quickly engulfed the transportation industry, while Airbnb and Seamlessrevolutionized hospitality. Technology transformed finance, logistics, media, and entertainment.It was only a matter of time before Silicon Valley turned its now all-seeing eye to the health care industry, Americas most broken, and profitable, institution. Biotech companies have always fitsnugly into the startup template. They begin as cash-hungry long shots, and when theirtreatments are approved, they pay gigantic dividends. When the men with the money sensed aquickening in anti-aging, they fell over each other to pump cash into young companiesaddressing just the kinds of fields that make immortalists so hopeful.

And so the world of immortalism crashed headlong into Silicon Valley and all its billions, guided by the man who has done more for the cause of immortality than anyone else.Aubrey de Grey, already mentioned in previous chapters, enjoys god-like status in theimmortalist community. Over time hes publicized the goal of defeating aging and even made itsomewhat fashionable. His rejuvenation theories, once scoffed at, were slowly accepted as fact by the scientific community, and he now sits at the center of a network patiently built overdecades, in the middle of the science, the money, and the immortalists, his adoring fans.

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De Grey has always appreciated the value of the media in his quest and has been interviewed for magazines, newspapers, websites, and documentaries countless times. He makes for a great spokesperson for such an eccentric community. Past articles noted his Rasputin-like beard, wild auburn hair, and tendency to crack open a beer at all times of the day. When wespoke on a video call, de Grey dialing in from his Silicon Valley base, I was relieved to see helived up to all the hype. His beard was suitably wizardly, his red hair graying but still untamed, and not long into our call I heard the sound of a beer bottle hissing open at midday, Californiatime. He talked like an idiosyncratic member of the old English aristocracy, rapidly and withoutpause, and at times I got the sense Id signed up for a lecture rather than an interview.

When de Grey was between eight and nine years old, his mother pressured him to practice the piano. The young Englishman resisted, and even at that tender age that instinct intrigued him and warranted further introspection. He concluded he didnt want to practice thepiano because he wanted to improve the quality of life for the whole of humanity. He still doesnt know where that urge comes from, but it has driven him his whole life. It led me to bevery sure I never wanted to have kids, because for sure thats a very time-consuming thing that prevents you from doing other stuff, he told me.

After deciding scientists were the people who made the biggest difference to the world inthe long run, de Grey began learning computer programming when he was fifteen and quicklyfound he was extremely adept at it. He went to the University of Cambridge to study computerscience in the early 1980s, then worked for six or seven years in artificial intelligence research.De Grey always considered aging to be the greatest challenge of humanity but was contentknowing it was covered by the worlds biologists, and he began fixing another issue, the fact that people had to spend so much of their time doing stuff they wouldnt do unless they werebeing paid for it.

But at a graduate party in Cambridge, de Grey met the fruit fly geneticist AdelaideCarpenter, who he later married. His relationship took him into the world of biology academia,and he was shocked when he discovered aging was way down the list of priorities in thediscipline. It took me a couple of years to come to terms with that, really, but once I did Irealized I had no choice, I just had to switch fields, he recalled.

De Grey first gained notoriety when he published his 1999 book The Mitochondrial Free Radical Theory of Aging, in which he argued immortality was theoretically possible for humans.At the center of his thinking was a concept called strategies for engineered negligible senescence, abbreviated to SENS. In 2005, MIT Technology Review announced a $20,000 prizefor anyone who could successfully argue that de Greys theories were more fantasy than science.To claim the prize, the entrants had to prove that SENS was so wrong it was unworthy oflearned debate. There were five submissions, of which three met the terms of the challenge. But the judges decided none of them met the criteria for victory and disproved SENS.

The scientific process requires evidence through independent experimentation orobservation in order to accord credibility to a hypothesis. SENS is a collection of hypotheses thathave mostly not been subjected to that process and thus cannot rise to the level of beingscientifically verified. However, by the same token, the ideas of SENS have not beenconclusively disproved. SENS exists in a middle ground of yet-to-be-tested ideas that somepeople may find intriguing but which others are free to doubt, Nathan Myhrvold, one of thejudges and cofounder of Intellectual Ventures and former chief technology officer of Microsoft,wrote.

In 2009, de Grey set up the SENS Foundation, a nonprofit and the worlds first organization dedicated to curing aging. Through the charity, de Grey was able to place himself ina position to link the scientists working on rejuvenation who could prove him right with sources of investment. None of the labs that received money were required to declare they were workingtoward immortality, or even extended life, and some of the most respected scientists in thegerontology field received funding.

SENS is based in Silicon Valley, where the billionaires have deep pockets and dont shy away from a difficult challenge. De Grey thinks the Valleys forgiving attitude toward failure is the secret to its success. That made Silicon Valley what it is today in IT, and more recently inbiotech, he said. And it continues to be an absolutely essential ingredient for anything whereyoure in the real vanguard. Anything that isnt really a thing yet but is on the way to becoming athing. Of course, longevity is very, very much that.

It does help to have money, as well. More and more of Silicon Valleys billionaires havedeveloped a personal passion in health and extended life over the past decade. Tad Friends 2017 New Yorker article titled Silicon Valleys Quest to Live Forever most notably described theobsession through Friends reporting from a symposium held in an aging experts living room inLos Angeles, where celebrities and Silicon Valley elites gathered to grill the biologists on theirchances of making death optional. Some of the wealthiest people in the technology industry have spent huge sums of money on projects attempting to defeat aging. Some see this as analtruistic endeavor which can help the whole of humanity, others as the quickest route to living longer themselves, while some see it merely as a profitable industry of the future. The technology industrys participation in the field of aging, both in a personal and professional capacity, has been relentlessly mocked the world over. The HBO comedy dramaSilicon Valley featured moguls pumping the blood of the young into their veins to extend theirlifespan, one of the many practices touted as the next big thing in life extension.

One of the characters who is heavily rumored to have invested in this field is Peter Thiel. Thiel cofounded the payment giant PayPal and several other successful startups but is perhapsbest known for his litigiousness and pseudo-libertarianism. He bankrolled the former wrestlerHulk Hogans lawsuit that bankrupted the publisher of Gawker in revenge for an article written about Thiel years earlier that outed him as a homosexual. A self-declared libertarian and asupporter of the Libertarian Party, he migrated quickly in 2016 to feed off Donald Trumps bare faced nationalism and xenophobia. In recent times, his name has been repeatedly linked tostartups offering young blood transfusions similar to those seen on TV, which has only bolsteredhis reputation of having something of the night about him. In short, if ever there was a powerful reason to abandon life extension research, it might be the thought of Peter Thiel living forever.

Experiments in young blood transfusions have shown early promise. In tests on mice, older subjects injected with youthful blood were found to be more active, although any testing inhumans has been less encouraging. That hasnt stopped people profiting from the practice. California-based startup Ambrosia captures the most attention in this field. The company,founded in 2016 by CEO Jesse Karmazin, began by charging patients $8,000 for one liter ofyouthful plasma. Karmazin leaned heavily on the prospect of immortality to sell its services. Thestartup is named after the mythical food that made Greek gods immortal, and the founder said ininterviews the treatment comes pretty close to immortality.

In February 2019, the FDA weighed in on young blood transfusions, declaring the benefits unproven and side effects potentially harmful. Were alerting consumers and healthcare providers that treatments using plasma from young donors have not gone through therigorous testing that the FDA normally requires in order to confirm the therapeutic benefit of a product and to ensure its safety, DA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb and Peter Marks, Director ofFDAs Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, wrote in a statement. Were concerned that some patients are being preyed upon by unscrupulous actors touting treatments of plasmafrom young donors as cures and remedies.

Karmazin said the FDA did not contact him directly before or after issuing the statement and didnt take any action against Ambrosia. Regardless, he put his business on hold almostimmediately after the statement was issued under an abundance of caution. In August thatyear, it was reported the company had shut down entirely and Karmazin had moved on toanother business, Ivy Plasma. The website for the new company suggested it would be offeringthe same services as Ambrosia, but the plasma would not be sourced specifically from youngerpeople. Karmazin later said the Ivy Plasma website was part of an effort to rebrand, but he soondecided customers wanted to buy their blood from Ambrosia, not Ivy Plasma. By October, theold website was operational again, and Ambrosia began to offer its services once more. Despite graduating from Stanford Medical School, Karmazin is not licensed to practice medicine and so cant perform the transfusions himself, so instead he contracts doctors to carry out the procedures. As of 2021, the Ambrosia website is still accepting customers, although the priceshave dropped, and one liter of young blood now costs only $5,000.

Young blood transfusions, despite apparently finding a consumer base in Silicon Valley, remain on the fringes of longevity offerings, and as of now can be safely considered similar to snake oil. But the technology industrys march into life extension is not limited to crazedopportunists; some of the biggest names in the world are involved. Like Google.

The founders of the search engine giant, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, announced theirintention to cure death in 2013, when they created Calico. Bill Maris, the CEO of Googles venture capital arm, did the initial legwork. His father died of a brain tumor when Maris wastwenty-six, an event that forced him to confront the finality of death. Maris built a reputation asa shrewd investor in young technology companies that went on to be massive like Uber and thesmart thermostat startup Nest. When he made the decision to build a company that would tackledeath, he consulted Ray Kurzweil, one of the most revered figures in the immortalist community.

Kurzweil first popularized the concept of the technological singularity, a single moment whereprogress explodes and artificial intelligence surpasses that of humans, leading to us merging with computers to become superpowered immortals. He is a renowned inventor and technologist whohas produced many best-selling books. In 2012, Page personally hired Kurzweil to work atGoogle. Kurzweil is also a registered member of Alcor and will be cryopreserved if he diesbefore the singularity. He predicted in the year 2000 that cryonics would figure out how toreanimate patients within forty to fifty years.

Kurzweil approved of the idea, but Andy Conrad, a geneticist who led Verily, the lifesciences division of Alphabet, Googles parent company, told Maris how difficult his task wouldbe to execute. Unperturbed, Maris pitched his idea to one of Googles top investors, John Doerr,in 2011, asking the billionaire why hed ever want to die if he was so wealthy. Of course, Doerrlapped it up and took the pitch to Googles founders, Brin and Page. The duo soon declared the plan would be executed in-house at Google.

Calico, which is short for the California Life Company, launched shortly after with $1 billion in funding. Anti-aging advocates, gerontologists, immortalists, and other groups grew excited at the thought of such a gigantic company entering into this field of work. Calico addeda tremendous amount of validation to aging research, George Vlasuk, the head of a biotechstartup called Navitor, told The New Yorker.

But their hopes were soon dashed when it became clear Calico intended to keep almost all of its progress completely secret. The company vacuumed up a lot of talent from labs all over the world but has released barely any details about its work.

And even for those with the inside track on what was going on, the company has turnedout to be a bitter disappointment. They have totally fucked it up. I mean, they have royallyfucked it up, de Grey told me. Basically, just by not listening to me and deciding that I wasactually a bit too crazy for their taste. And theyve ended up completely blowing it.

De Grey insisted it would be an extremely unlikely accident if Calico ever contributedanything significant to the quest to end aging, simply because of the way its organized. He said the company is set up to conduct discovery-based research, where researchers find things out for the sake of finding things out, the way people do in academia, and then develop the meansto turn proof of concept into a product at the end. But the middle section, where concept isconverted to proof of concept, is completely missing. De Grey is clearly furious at how the company turned out. Its fucked up. Its absolutely unforgivable, and its all Larry and Sergeysfault, he fumed.

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The Price of Immortality: Silicon Valley's obsession with living forever - Big Think

Nike Giannis Immortality 2 Emerges In Blue And Crimson – Sneaker News

Giannis Antetokounmpo put on a textbook superstar performance this past weekend, powering the Milwaukee Bucks to a commanding 3-1 lead in the Bucks Playoffs series against the Bulls. One more dub puts Milwaukee into the conference semi-finals and one step closer to a back-to-back championship the first such occurrence since Golden State pulled it off in 2018.

As the Bucks continue their quest, sneaker fans are receiving newly revealed colorways of the Nike Giannis Immortality 2, the sequel to the Swooshs lower-budget take-down model that runs parallel to the Zoom Freak signature series. Revealed just a few days ago, the Immortality 2 now appears in an energetic navy blue, crimson, and light green mix, with the over-sized reverse Swoosh sitting on the engineered mesh upper.

Currently, the Giannis Immortality 2 is expected to release this summer, with this particular colorway confirmed to release in full-family sizes. See the official images ahead and well update you on release date and pricing info.

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Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

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Jesse Terry covers 22 songs, makes them his own in new CD set – Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel

I first became aware of Jesse Terry almost a year ago when he was releasing his seventh album, When We Wander, it was during the pandemic when touring was impossible and he and his family were in Prosperity, S.C. working on a couple of musical projects. Little did I know then that one of those projects a double-CD set titled Forget-Me-Nots: Volumes 1 & 2 would arrive in my mail box in March of this year. Made up of 22 songs by artists like Joni Mitchell (A Case of You), Bob Dylan (My Back Pages), The Bee Gees (Immortality), Eric Clapton (Let It Grow), Elton John (Goodbye Yellow Brick Road), George and Ira Gershwin (Someone to Watch Over Me), and many more. This collection of covers was refreshing in its simplicity and the fact that Terry made each one his own with his arrangements and oh-so-easy-to-take vocal stylings in short, it is not to be missed. Upon hearing it, I immediately arranged a phone interview with him from his home in Pawcatuck, Connecticut, to let him know my feelings about this delightful release.

Q: Under normal circumstances I prefer original material over covers but what youve done with this new 2-CD set is take 22 popular songs and made them your own thats no small task, if you know what I mean.Terry: Thank you, that means a lot.

Q: And the variety of styles and genres really makes it a special project.Terry: When I first started thinking about it, I was like, Maybe Ill do a certain era or maybe Ill have a real theme. I quickly abandoned that, though, because I started making a list of songs and realized that they were all over the map and I cant bear to lose this one from Crowded House but yet I didnt want to lose Some Enchanted Evening from South Pacific. So I decided that I was just going to do whatever I wanted to do and somehow try to bring it all together.

Q: Another aspect of this set is the visual element. With the first album I covered of yours, When We Wander, it was the handbook that came in the packaging that grabbed my attention; the artistic presentation, not only musically but visually, was wonderful, and this one is just as good if not better.Terry: I had this wonderful designer and he found these beautiful, vintage seed and flower illustrations and thats where it was inspired from, and I just love that. We definitely invest in packaging and presentation because a lot of times these days people buy a CD and dont have a CD player, so you want them to have a keepsake. These albums are such labors of love and if you dont have something really beautiful to commemorate it with, it doesnt feel complete to me.

Q: When we first chatted, about a year ago, one of the reoccurring themes was your desire to connect to your listeners through your music, and this new album just reinforces that, I believe.Terry: I remember that interview well and loved it, and we were recording Forget-Me-Nots at that time. We were at the lake house in Prosperity, South Carolina, my wife and my daughter, and it was just a really special time in my life. I cant wait to go back to that place sometime because that six weeks there recording this album were so intense and so wonderful, Ill remember it forever and I think that comes through in the music, as well.

Q: It certainly does, for sure. Have you gotten any feedback from folks who have heard it?Terry: Yeah, weve had some really lovely reviews and the coolest thing for me, of course, is getting to play live again and to play some of these songs off the album that people werent expecting.

Q: Now, the last time we talked you were working on a project, this very collection, in fact, so I have to ask: are you working on something new or are you taking a well-deserved break?Terry: No, I never take a break nor do I ever want to (chuckle). Its wild but its been over two years since Ive really written songs and Ive never had that kind of (pause), I dont want to call it a drought because I was doing other things intentionally. First I was just surviving and figuring out if we were going to be able to make it through the pandemic, which we did thanks to the support of my fans, and then I had the ability to make these two pandemic albums: Forget-Me-Nots and my Christmas album, Peace. So now I finally have a chance to sit down with all my guitars and start writing again for me now, its just about how I can push myself to be a better songwriter, a better guitarist and singer, and how I can stretch myself. For me, thats very exciting.

Q: Now that youre able to perform live again, what does your gigging schedule look like in the months to come?Terry: Im looking forward to so many shows and tours this year overseas that are the biggest tours Ive ever had. I think its up to 30 shows in the U.K. in October, its almost every day now, so I have to stay really focused and take stock of life. Over the past two years Ive learned how to prepare, Ive learned how to meditate, Ive learned out to take care of my voice a little better, and think of the performances better, and hopefully I can connect with people better because thats what this is all about. Im grateful for the time we had and now Im ready to get back out there now.

Q: Is there anything, Jesse, that youd like me to pass on to the folks reading this article?Terry: Umm, as always, I just love being able to connect with people. I love it when they get in touch with me because thats what its all about. jesseterrymusic.com

Lucky Clark, a 2018 Keeping the Blues Alive Award winner, has spent more than 50 years writing about good music and the people who make it. He can be reached at [emailprotected] if you have any questions, comments or suggestions.

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Jesse Terry covers 22 songs, makes them his own in new CD set - Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel

‘Rafael Nadal is on the cusp of tennis immortality’, says former Top 5 – Tennis World USA

Rafael Nadal became the protagonist of a fabulous start to the season. After opening his season with a victory at the ATP 250 in Melbourne, the Spanish phenomenon literally blew the bank at the Australian Open. In a tournament that had often been hostile to him in the past, the former world number 1 achieved one of the most incredible feats of his entire career.

The 35-year-old Majorcan recovered two sets of disadvantage from Daniil Medvedev in the final, finding the energy to overturn a challenge that is now almost lost. By winning the Happy Slam for the second time, Rafa overtook Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic in the all-time rankings of the Majors.

The Manacor veteran has also become the fourth man in history to have won all Grand Slams at least twice (along with Djokovic, Rod Laver and Roy Emerson). As if that were not enough, the Iberian also won in the prestigious Acapulco tournament.

His streak of unbeaten came to a halt in the Indian Wells final, where he was defeated by host Taylor Fritz (also due to a fractured rib). In a recent interview with the 'Ol' portal, former ATP number 4 Jose Luis Clerc said that Nadal would put an end to the GOAT debate by triumphing again at Roland Garros.

"If Rafael Nadal wins Roland Garros, he will be the greatest of all time. The one who I don't think will win another Grand Slam is Roger. Those of us who love the sport want Federer to be eternal, but he is not.

People tell me 'Batata , Roger is the best,' but for me the one who wins the most Grand Slam titles is going to be the greatest in history," Clerc said. Rafael Nadal has made a dream start to his 2022 campaign.

After opening his season with the Melbourne 250 title, the Spaniard recovered from two sets and a break point down to triumph for the second time at the Australian Open. Rafael Nadal had one of the most remarkable starts to his 2022 season.

Returning to the tour after a long injury layoff, the Spaniard won three back-to-back hardcourt titles including his recording-breaking 21st Major win at the Australian Open. He was on course for his 4th consecutive title win at the Indian Wells Masters, but suffered an injury setback in the final and subsequently succumbed to his first and only loss of the 2022 season.

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'Rafael Nadal is on the cusp of tennis immortality', says former Top 5 - Tennis World USA

PlayStation Plus May 2022 Free Games Reportedly Leak: FIFA 22 and More – iPhone in Canada

Sonys lineup of free PlayStation Plus games for May has apparently been leaked, and will include a FIFA game for the first time in history reports Dealabs.

PS Plus is Sonys premium subscription service for its PlayStation consoles. The $69.99/year subscription unlocks online multiplayer, and also gives members access to a set of games every month that they can claim and install for free. Installed games will continue to be accessible to players for as long as they remain subscribed to PlayStation Plus.

Sonys free PlayStation Plus offerings for May 2022 will reportedly be available to claim between May 3 and June 7, and will include:

Powered by Football, EA SPORTS FIFA 22 gives you an exceptional level of realism with fundamental new features and innovations in all modes.

New in FIFA 22 gives you greater consistency in the nets with an overhaul of goalkeepers that allows them to display greater serenity. In addition, new ball physics and searing acceleration more accurately reflect the speed of the best players. Finally, the new offensive tactics give you greater freedom in your game systems.

Your quest for wealth, immortality and divine power has brought you to the gates of this cursed temple. An endless maze, infested with monsters and deadly traps.

Your greed will be your downfall. But death does not mean the end. Return to life again and again, and dive deep within the temple to defeat the hordes of cursed deities lurking in the shadows. Survive the deadly traps of the temple, between two incendiary statues and hidden blades trying to skewer you

Tribes of Midgard is a co-op game featuring a unique blend of action, survival, and roguelite elements. Players must defend their village each night against hordes of invaders, murderous spirits and gigantic bullies who threaten to destroy the Sprout of Yggdrasil, the sacred tree you are sworn to protect. Only by achieving this can you and your tribe prevent Ragnark: Doomsday!

If the leaked selection of free games ends up being accurate, PS Plus subscribers are in for a treat this May. Subscribers also still have time to claim Aprils PS Plus freebies, which include Hood: Outlaws & Legends,SpongeBob SquarePants: Battle for Bikini Bottom Rehydrated, andSlay the Spire.

Last month, Sony announced a complete overhaul of its PlayStation Plus service. Starting in June, PlayStation Plus and PlayStation Now will be merged into a brand new three-tiered subscription service.

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PlayStation Plus May 2022 Free Games Reportedly Leak: FIFA 22 and More - iPhone in Canada

You Should (Probably) Read: Endymion by Dan Simmons – Hipsters of the Coast

Sequels are notoriously hard, perhaps even impossible, to pull off in a satisfying manner. Should you hew closely to the formula that resulted in your initial success? How much can you evolve your work while retaining as many fans as possible? Can anything really live up to the original?

Enter Dan Simmons and Endymion (Bookshop.org | Amazon), the 1996 follow up to the Nebula and Locus award winning Hyperion. Simmonss approach to (hopefully) avoiding a sophomore slump was to write a 1,000-page book, split it in half, and publish it as two separate books. The Fall of Hyperion may technically be the sequel to Hyperion, but it is really the conclusion of the original story. Thus, Endymionthe third book of four in the Hyperion Cantos, followed by the finale, The Rise of Endymionis the work that actually bears the burden of a traditional sequel.

Simmons chose to evolve his formula for Hyperions sequel as Endymion takes place in the same universe but is set hundreds of years after the events of the first two books. The events and characters of the original story have faded into legend since the fall of humanitys intergalactic empire at the conclusion of The Fall of Hyperion, though theycontinue to haunt Endymions story at various points. A resurgent Catholic Church, thanks to its mastery of the mysterious resurrection parasite called the cruciform, has filled the void left after the fall and has become the dominant political power in the universe in the form of a theocratic government called the Pax.

MORE: Dont miss our review of Hyperion by Dan Simmons.

The story uses a dual hunter/hunted point of view as its structure to tell the story of Raul Endymion and the messianic Aenea as they flee from Pax forces led by Father Captain Federico de Soya. The Pax believes that Aenea is a threat to the Churchs dominance in human affairs and has chosen de Soya to capture her. But Simmons tries the same trick with this book that he did with Hyperion and The Fall of Hyperionit turns out that the 600 pages of Endymion is just the first half of the story. An additional 800 pages in The Rise of Endymion is required to complete the story.

The hunter/hunted structure serves Endymion well as the cat-and-mouse game provides enough tension to push the book towards its end and give its characters (especially de Soya) room to develop. Unfortunately, this structure continues into The Rise of Endymion and begins to collapse under its own weight, resulting in a 1,400-page story that could easily be cut down by 400 pages. This is especially apparent when, at multiple points, Simmons resorts to 20-page sections of dialog to explain some mysteries and conclude an act of the story, separated by hundreds of pages describing planets and characters in immense detail despite the fact that they dont have any significant impact on the story.

The original covers for Endymion and The Rise of Endymion.

The de Soya and the Pax plot lines are a highlight throughout both books. They are tight, full of mystery and intrigue, and driven by interesting characters. (I have no idea why the Pax point of view is unceremoniously abandoned halfway through The Rise of Endymion.) Raul, on the other hand, is both the protagonist and the flattest, must uninteresting character in the story. This makes it particularly difficult to make it through the more plodding sections of The Rise of Endymion, so feel free to skim as you see fit.

Aenea is more interesting as a quasi-messiah who can see potential futures. But her character falls prey to the lack of development that characters who can see the future often suffer from. Simmons (somehow) didnt find the space in either book to deconstruct the ability to see the future and the impact that ability can have on a character (like Frank Herbert did with Paul Atreides in Dune and its sequels), leaving Aenea to conclude The Rise of Endymion as more or less in the same person as she was at the beginning of Endymion.

The aforementioned issues help explain the polarized reception Endymion and The Rise of Endymion have received since their release in 1996 and 1998, respectively. The universe Simmons has created is still top-notch and worthy of additional stories set within it, but the story of Endymion and The Rise of Endymion is uneven and often boring. The antagonistsde Soya and his Pax allieslive up to the potential of the universe, while the protagonists fall far short as they meander their way towards the storys climax.

And it really doesnt help that Raul (in his late 20s and early 30s) and Aenea (a pre-teen and teenager) have the seeds of a romantic relationship throughout the first book and a half. Even when Aenea is of age, Simmonss portrayal of their romance is clunky and the scenes depicting their more intimate moments are extremely cringeworthy.

In their more focused moments, Endymion and The Rise of Endymion are interested in deconstructing the ideas of religion and faith. In this story, the Catholic Church has achieved immortality for its adherents thanks to the cruciform parasite and Simmons uses that setup to explore the consequences of immortality on a religion and society. He also uses Aeneas messianic arc to highlight the moral clarity of personal faith by contrasting it to the danger and amorality of organized religion-cum-theocracy. These themes are just as fertile as those in Hyperion and The Fall of Hyperion, but Simmons makes you work significantly harder to engage with them in Endymion and The Rise of Endymion.

Ultimately, both Endymion and The Rise of Endymion are let down by their length, wandering of focus, and lacking protagonists. Simmonss writing style is easy to digest and lends itself to extended reading sessions, so both books are worth your time if youd like answers to the most interesting questions Hyperions universe has to offer. Just dont be afraid to start skimming when Rauls narrative beings to drag. And it willIm looking at you, Book 2 of The Rise of Endymion. But the books dont stand on their own, meaning your enjoyment of the final two installments of the Hyperion Cantos will likely hinge on how interested you are in the larger story and characters that span the entire series.

Rating: for Endymion and forThe Rise of Endymion. Buy or rent ebook versions so that you can complete the saga.

You can buy Endymion Bookshop.org or Amazon.

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You Should (Probably) Read: Endymion by Dan Simmons - Hipsters of the Coast

Downton 2 is the perfect escapists paradise – Sydney Morning Herald

DOWNTON ABBEY: A NEW ERAPG, 125 minutes, in cinemas April 28

In Downton Abbeys first excursion on the big screen in 2019, the upstairs and downstairs families battled the implacable forces of the Buckingham Palace bureaucracy in the lead-up to a visit from King George V and Queen Mary.

This time, they face an equally powerful but much more modern institution with an aristocracy all its own the moving pictures.

All the familiar faces have turned up for the occasion.Credit:Ben Blackall

A film is to be shot at Downton, a prospect that fills Hugh Bonnevilles Lord Grantham with revulsion. The place will be overrun, he snorts, by actresses plastered in make-up and actors just plastered.

Then, just in time, a diversion presents itself. His mother, Maggie Smiths Lady Violet Crawley, receives the news shes been gifted a villa in the south of France. Why? This question is a cue for Downtons creator, Julian Fellowes, to introduce one of his most reliable plot devices, the long-buried family secret. A Crawley party sets out for the Riviera to find out more, leaving Lady Mary (Michelle Dockery) to watch over the film-making.

The mere fact Violet has fronted up for the sequel verges on a minor miracle. At the end of the last film, she was dealing with the revelation she probably had just a few months to live news that would surely have pleased Maggie Smith herself. When the series finished in 2015, she told chat show host Graham Norton that she was glad that it was over, partly because Violet had to be about 110 by then and her continued good health didnt make a lot of sense. Even on Downtons rarefied plane of existence, immortality isnt yet in the offing.

Penelope Wilton stars as Isobel Merton and Maggie Smith as Violet Grantham.Credit:Ben Blackall

But here she is, saddling up again, ready to fire off a new quiver full of Violets characteristic zingers with all her old elan. Just before the film crew is due to arrive, she gives Mary a sage piece of advice. Women like us, she says, fall into two categories dragons and fools. You must make sure they think of you as a dragon.

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Downton 2 is the perfect escapists paradise - Sydney Morning Herald

New hard kombucha brand by St. Paul native launches in the Twin Cities – Yahoo News

A new alcoholic beverage is bubbling in the Twin Cities. Hooch Booch, a hard kombucha brand coming out of Denver, Colo., made its Minnesota debut this April.

Created by Anna Zesbaugh, a born-and-raised Minnesotan, the idea to create a Prohibition-inspired hard kombucha percolated when she was furloughed during the beginning of the pandemic. The frenzy to rush to the liquor stores and stock up on alcohol as the pandemic began to close businesses, including liquor stores, reminded Zesbaugh of the Prohibition era. I wanted to create a drink that was a nod to the past but that was crafted for modern times, says Zesbaugh.

Hooch Boochs hard kombucha comes in three vegan and gluten-free flavors: Clover Club, Bees Knees and Old Fashioned. Clocking in at 8.5% ABV, the beverage undergoes two fermentations (nonalcoholic kombucha usually undergoes only one), is brewed with fresh Rocky Mountain spring water and incorporates real fruit purees and local-to-Colorado ingredients.

You can find Hooch Booch at the following Minnesota locations: Union 32 Craft House, Merwin Liquors, Eagans Big Discount Liquor, Highland Parks Haskells, Sharretts Liquor, Midway Liquor, Kowalskis on Grand Avenue, Wildcats Bar and Grill, Eagans Atomic Liquors and St. Pauls Liquor Vault.

In recent years, kombucha and the fermented tea-based beverages boozy alternatives, have created a significant wedge in the beverage market. According to Market Watch, hard kombucha sales grew from $1.7 million in 2017 to $12 million in 2019.

The probiotic beverage has witnessed a substantial rise in popularity this past decade alone, as many health gurus have made kombucha a part of their diet. Kombucha has been around long before the LuluLemon yoga pant-wearing type found out about its health benefits. The nearly 2000-year-old beverage was deemed the tea of immortality by Qin dynasty-era brewers when it was created in 221 BCE, according to Vox.

Hooch Booch: More info about Hooch Boochs hard kombucha at Drinkhoochbooch.com or on Hooch Boochs Facebook page.

Restaurants, Food and Drink | Longtime owner of Josephs Family Restaurant in Oak Park Heights is retiring

Restaurants, Food and Drink | Recipe: Josephs Family Restaurants famous rhubarb pie

Restaurants, Food and Drink | St. Paul Farmers Market opens with vendors, shoppers, music and more

Restaurants, Food and Drink | Smile, youre on calcium camera: Milk drinkers shamed on social media

Restaurants, Food and Drink | Grand Catch, seafood boil restaurant on Grand Avenue, is closing

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New hard kombucha brand by St. Paul native launches in the Twin Cities - Yahoo News

Immortality (TV series) – Wikipedia

Television series

Immortality (Chinese: ; pinyin: Hoy Xng) is an upcoming Chinese television series based on the BL xianxia novel The Husky and His White Cat Shizun (Chinese: ; pinyin: r H H T De Bi Mo Sh Zn) by Meatbun Doesn't Eat Meat (Chinese: ; pinyin: Rubo Bch Ru) starring Luo Yunxi and Chen Feiyu.[2][3] The series is expected to air on Tencent Video with 50 episodes.[1]

The story is set in a tumultuous era where the world is facing a probable invasion by the demon world due to a rift in the heavens. The world's most powerful cultivator Chu Wanning (Luo Yunxi) did not forget his original intention of joining the world to help the Dao cultivation and sets out on a mission to protect the beings of the world. He uses his abilities to prevent the heavens from splitting and at the same time, his compassion and love influences his misguided disciple Mo Ran (Chen Feiyu) to return to the righteous path he has strayed from. Chu Wanning also successfully imparts the value of putting the greater good before personal desires to Mo Ran. In the end, the pair of teacher and disciple dedicate their lives and work together with the rest of the cultivating heroes to stop the villains' conspiracy and protect the world.[2]

Also known as Yuheng of the Night Sky () and the Beidou Immortal (), he is a grandmaster of the cultivation world who hides his caring and sensitive nature behind a cold exterior. He devotes his time to the thankless task of sealing the rifts in the barrier between the ghost realm and the mortal realm and often spends his spare time creating affordable mechanical devices such as the Holy Night Guardian so ordinary people can protect themselves from ghosts. Chu Wanning takes it upon himself to protect the people and rid the world of evil even if it means sacrificing himself.

Courtesy name: Mo Weiyu ()Mo Ran is Chu Wanning's third disciple, a confident, mischievous, and cheeky cultivator who isn't the brightest student in the sect. By chance, he gains mysterious memories of himself as Lord Taxian (), an immoral and murderous ruler who loathes Chu Wanning and vows to murder all the cultivators in the world. His personality slowly changes after being influenced by the fragmented memories implanted in his mind, and he must fight to regain his own consciousness as the kind and upright Mo Ran.

Courtesy name: Shi Mingjing ()Shi Mei presents herself as a kind-hearted, polite, and reasonable person who avoids conflict. She doesn't hold grudges and is often the mediator for Mo Ran and Xue Meng when they argue. However, she actually harbors a deadly secret, and must ultimately decide between revenge and life as she knows it.

Courtesy name: Xue Ziming ()The narcissistic young master of the Summit of Life and Death who is actually responsible and kind at heart. He respects his teacher Chu Wanning deeply and dearly loves his parents Xue Zhengyong and Madam Wang. Despite a carefree childhood, he is forced to grow up when disaster strikes his sect.

Master of the Summit of Life and DeathA kind and good-natured cultivator, he founds the Summit of Life and Death to protect the lower cultivation world from the ghost realm. He persuades Chu Wanning to join the sect after the latter leaves Rufeng Sect out of disgust.

Mistress of the Summit of Life and DeathA former senior disciple of the Lone Moon Night sect who loses the ability to cultivate in her youth. She is married to Xue Zhengyong.

He appears to be a gentleman, yet is in fact a hypocritical and ruthless leader who will sacrifice anyone for personal gain. He harbours a deep resentment against Chu Wanning.

A talented cultivator, he was betrayed by his older brother Nangong Liu and is exiled from Rufeng Sect. He later returns for revenge.

Founder of Rufeng Sect.

On January 6, 2020, CD HOME STUDIO released a casting call for the series, along with information of the participating staffs.[4] The series is produced jointly by Tencent Penguin Pictures and Otters Studio.[2] The series is directed by He Shupei,[4] and the main producers are credited to be Qi Shuai, Ye Fangcang and Wang Yirong.[4] On January 8, it was revealed that the drama has been filed on record at State Administration of Film Radio and Television (China).[1]

The series began filming on April 24, 2020 at Hengdian World Studios.

On January 21, 2020, Luo Yunxi and Chen Feiyu were announced as the main leads.[5]

A majority of the crew members, including world view design team Hua Tian, visual effects team TimeAxis, hair and makeup director Zeng Minghui and still photographer Li Ruoyu worked on 2018 fantasy romance drama Ashes of Love.[2] Chen Xin serves as the art director of the series, while Huang Wei is in charge of costume designs.[4][2] On January 21, 2020, the concept arts designed by Hua Tian were released on the series' official weibo.[6]

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Immortality (TV series) - Wikipedia

One-Liners In a World Without End – Splice Today

A solitary dancer, another hapless soul going through the macabre motions, choreographed movement within and without. A little soft shoe routine, well-seasoned hoofers, belting out old show tunes from forgotten days. A tap dance to the grave. The herky-jerky. The last act, a final curtain. Like theres no tomorrow for a show stoppers big finish. With aflair for drama, the pageantry, a parade of one, dancing solo, a backward journey going forward. No encores.

A cortge bier, funeral pyre, to burn without fire. Its the only way to go. So this is how it is, on days like this, to come and go, until they carry you away? All the pomp of a down-and-dirty dirge. A slow march into the unknown. Signing off on the lease of lifes temporary rental. Twists, turns, too many dead ends. No outlet, or egress, tread softly, upon the earth for those interred in it. Ash to dust, its sublime. Point A to point B? Any directions as good as another. Getting lost on a living map. Nobody goes out in alphabetical order. The directory, an obituary, listed A to Z. Well-spent long sojourns, stopping along way to smell the coffee, the flowers, the manure in a ragged world cafe. Who put the fun in funerals?

Death, dont be cruel. It takes all the fun out of living. Therere no rules. Like when someone answers the phone, Hello, were the undertakers, Diggs, Graves, & Berry. You plug em, we plant em! You whack em, we stack em. You stab em, we slab em. You kill em, we chill em. No hurry, Morts my name, buryings my game. A drunken wake for the recently deceased. If only for poor unfortunates left behind to fend for themselves. Just when you think its over, it begins. This could be the start of something big. Just get up, and leave without saying a word. Disappearing into the loamy scenery, a hubris of humus, the eternal dirt nap. Lay down your burden, by the riverside.

Theres speculation floating around that an unusual parallel universe exists, one that only moves backwards. A reverse time heading to the past, canceling out the future. Time as we know it is irrelevant. Theres a possibility. No time like the present. Tell that to your boss the next time youre late for work. Theyll dock your pay for time that never passed. Youre there but not there. Research claims its possible time may not exist at all. Dark matter may be the vacuum that sucks past, present, and future events into itself. A soap opera gumbo, inside a warped consciousness of existential mumbo jumbo. Released, with time served for good behavior.

Ive addressed this topic on many occasions. Why were here, and where do we go? You can spend an entire life contemplating your demise, or question the reasons why. The low spark, the brief respite, single bright moments. A day in the sun, or perpetual darkness of the soul. Have a sense of humor about it. Its all in jest, the joker of undoing, a lifetime, a single day, the little nothings taken for granted. Its a raw deal, this crazy life. Just when you get the hang of it, poof, thanks for the memories.

Thats okay, I get the absurdity. I understand never knowing for certain. The plans, the meanings, the nature of change, whats left, or long gone. This life, time and place, will be the death of us. Thats plenty for satire. Its a narrow theme with a broad audience. Like a fence around a cemetery, to keep you in or out. You can live forever, on layaway. Immortality is highly overrated, but people die, trying to live forever. The best way to cheat death, go out laughing. The last one-liner youll never hear. I thought there would be cake.

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One-Liners In a World Without End - Splice Today

Why Eternals Have To Kill The X-Men (Free Comic Book Day Spoilers) – Bleeding Cool News

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The upcoming Judgement Day event from Marvel Comics puts Eternal against X-Men against Avenger for reasons. Mutants have been declared Deviants, and we know what Eternals do with Deviants.

But the Free Comic Book Day looks at why that changed and why the Eternals have no choice to do what they do. And never did.

Eternals were born that way. Created by the Eternals to remove the demonic Deviants from their influence on Earth. That's how Jack Kirby created it though the justification has been morally compromised over the years from a variety of creators and most notably the recent Marvel Studios movie. They see what is Deviancy and they exterminate it. And have done for millions of years. Including during the time of the Avengers 1,000,000 BC when Odin led the team.

Poor telepathic monkeys of a million years ago. Declared Deviants by the Eternals and then wiped out. That's genocide. And all because they were developing the same kind of Uni-Mind that the Eternals enjoy.

Of course humanity has evolved through that time with many deviancies. What makes a deviant and what does not? Given the many mutants on the Marvel Earth, why have they not been declared Deviant before now?

It's the grand Krakoan experiment, that has given mutants the gift of resurrection. Effective immortality, as long as Krakoa exists, the Cerebro network works and The Five are able to keep things going. And everyone gets to keep seeing Cyclops naked. But just as the Eternals are immortal, the mutants cannot be allowed to be.

And so if that is defined as Deviation by the Eternals, their genetic imperatives will be to wipe out mutants. They will have no choice. Or will they? This is AXE: Judgment Day from Kieron Gillen and Valerio Schiti, and an FCBD teaser drawn by Dustin Weaver. And you can find other FCBD spoilers with this handy dandy tag.

FCBD 2022 AVENGERS X-MEN #1 (NET)MARVEL COMICSJAN220029(W) Kieron Gillen, Gerry Duggan, Danny Lore (A) Dustin Weaver, Matteo Lolli, Karen Darboe (CA) Valerio SchitiFeaturing stories by an all-star lineup of creators including writers Kieron Gillen and Gerry Duggan and artist Dustin Weaver, FREE COMIC BOOK DAY: AVENGERS/X-MEN #1 will lay the groundwork for an event that will erupt across the Marvel Universe in 2022 and drastically alter the relationship between Earth's Mightiest Heroes and mutantkind.In Shops: Apr 20, 2022

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Anti-aging isn’t a scam, but immortality almost certainly …

Aging is a particularly troublesome affair, and until recently it was considered to be an inescapable fact of life. Over the past few decades, however, scientists have discovered that aging follows a predictable path. Unsurprisingly, there is great interest in avoiding that path.

As we age, we experience a gradual decline of physiological function. Over time, our cells accumulate damage and their performance suffers. When the damage reaches a threshold, cells die. Fortunately, there is a system for replacing the dying cells stem cells. Unfortunately, stem cells also age. Consequently, their performance suffers, and they lose their capacity to create healthy new cells.

The new biotechnology firm Altos Labs has recently announced it was taking on aging. At first glance, it is hard to get excited about this. After all, a half-dozen biotech firms have made similar statements over the past decade or so. Altos Labs, which has already secured $3 billion in funding, hasnt released much information about their strategy, only that they are focused on cellular rejuvenation programming to restore cell health and resilience, with the goal of reversing disease to transform medicine. Catchy sales pitch, but not a lot of substance.

Altos Labs has, however, released a lot of information about the scientists theyve recruited, and it is an impressive list, comprising some of the superstars in aging-related disorder research. These scientists backgrounds would suggest Altos Labs has a two-pronged research strategy: 1) reverse the damage that occurs as we age and 2) rejuvenate stem cells capacity to create healthy new cells. A spa day and a cocktail, basically.

Stress ages us. Thus, one of the keys to living a long and healthy life is to relax. We cant escape stress, but if we relax after a stressful event, we can escape many of the consequences of stress.

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Stress also ages our cells. Admittedly, they arent dealing with psychological stress from poverty or global pandemics, but they have their own problems, such as nutrient deprivation and viral infection. These cellular stressors can damage a cells proteins, and if there is a lot of damaged protein, a cell cant function well. Cells cannot escape stress. They may not become infected, but they will suffer some form of stress eventually. Luckily, cells have a mechanism for escaping the consequences of stress: the integrated stress-response (ISR) pathway.

When cellular stressors are detected, the ISR initiates spa mode. However, instead of relaxing while a masseuse rubs away muscle knots, cellular spa mode involves shutting down non-essential cellular operations and cleansing the cell of damaged proteins. If the cleansing is successful, the cell is rejuvenated. If not, then ISR presses the termination button. The cell dies, but ideally, a stem cell quickly creates a healthy new cell to replace it.

ISR is more active as we get older, which means cells spend more time in spa mode. A comparison of adult and older male mice demonstrated an increase of ISR activity levels in all tested tissues, including kidney, liver, colon, brain, testes, pancreas, lung, and heart.

However, it is not clear if the increase in ISR activity is a good thing. On one hand, it might promote health in old animals by rejuvenating cells. On the other hand, it might instead contribute to destroying cells unnecessarily.

Destroying a damaged cell can be a good thing, as long as it is quickly replaced with a healthy new cell. However, adult stem cells appear to age with the person. As stem cells age, their ability to create healthy new cells deteriorates. Consequently, a cell might die because ISR has determined it was too damaged, only to be replaced with a cell that is almost equally as damaged.

Essentially, this is like terminating an overstressed employee whose performance has dropped. Then, you wait six months to hire a new employee who is slightly less stressed. A couple months later, you lay off the new employee. During that six-month period, other employees will have to shoulder extra responsibility. Their stress will grow, their performance will drop, and next thing you know, youve laid off the whole department. Catastrophic organ failure is the main cause of age-related disorders.

It is tempting to speculate that inhibiting ISR in adults could solve a lot of problems. Sure, thered be no more spa day, but thered also be no more mass layoffs. But its not that simple. ISR inhibition does enhance memory and lifespan. However, ISR activation reduces the severity of Huntingtons disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and multiple sclerosis. Thus, the ISR appears to play a beneficial and detrimental role in health depending on the context. Altos Labs scientists will have to gain a better understanding of ISRs context-dependent effects before they can create new anti-aging therapeutics.

No matter how efficient the body is at rejuvenating cells, cells will die and need to be replaced. As we age, however, replacing cells takes more time. For example, healing of a fractured bone takes much longer in older individuals than in younger individuals.

Stem cells are responsible for replacing damaged cells. Like any other cell, stem cells are vulnerable to cellular stressors. This likely contributes to their own aging, but there is also evidence that stem cells DNA changes as during physiological aging. More specifically, the DNAs structure is changed (called an epigenetic change), but not the DNAs sequence. In other words, regardless of their age, stem cells keep the same genes; however, as stem cells age, some genes are tightly packaged up and no longer accessible.

Epigenetic changes are often helpful. For example, a liver-replenishing stem cell will package up all of its neuron genes. When that stem cell creates a new liver cell, the new cell cant accidentally express those neuron genes.

But in the case of aging, the epigenetic changes can be harmful. For example, in addition to packaging the neuron genes, an old liver-replenishing stem cell might package up two other genes:

When a new liver cell is created, it wont be able to access the cleansing gene. As a result, that cell will have a harder time cleansing itself of damaged proteins. Thus, it will die more quickly and need to be replaced again. Unfortunately, that replacement will be slow to arrive because the stem cell cant access the replication gene.

It is unclear why a stem cell would gradually package up helpful and important genes. One hypothesis is that this process ensures we will die. When old organisms die, it frees up resources for young, sexually reproductive organisms. Thus, there is an evolutionary advantage to death.

Regardless of why stem cells do this, it would be helpful to discover a way to liberate some of the genes packaged during aging. Scientists have suspected that this could reverse a stem cells aging-associated functional decline. In 2006, Shinya Yamanaka discovered the tools necessary to do this.

Yamanaka and his team showed that activating four gene regulators (now referred to as the Yamanaka factors) can reset a stem cells epigenetic changes, essentially turning it into a young stem cell. (Yamanaka won the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for this discovery, and he is a consultant for Altos Labs.)

However, its not as simple as giving a stem cell an endless supply of Yamanaka factor cocktails. When a stem cell is stimulated with all the Yamanaka factors at once, all the genes are unpackaged, resulting in an unspecialized stem cell. This is analogous to resetting your brain to what it was as a baby; your potential would be incredible, but you would need guidance to harness that potential. In the same way, unspecialized stem cells have the potential to become any type of cell, but they will need lots of guidance. And scientists have only begun to scratch the surface on how to guide cells in their development.

However, they might not need to know how to guide development if they want to treat age-related diseases. Researchers recently discovered that moderation is the key to avoiding the problem of unspecialization.

Essentially, stimulating cells with just the right Yamanaka factors at just the right time partially resets the stem cells. These partially reset cells retain their ability to create new cells without extra guidance. Experiments on mice have shown how a partial reset can stop the progression of progeria (a mutation-induced syndrome that mimics rapid aging), can promote the healing of injured muscles, and can protect the liver against medication-mediated damage.

Age-related disorders dementia, arthritis, cancers dont significantly shorten our life span. They are often more cruel than that. Instead, they shorten our health span. They steal our memories, our independence, and our tranquility. From what I can tell, Altos Labs isnt looking for the secret to immortality or even the secret to increasing the human lifespan. They (and all the other anti-aging biotech firms) seem to be searching for a way to make aging less cruel.

So, dont expect an elixir of life that grants immortality anytime soon. Perhaps in a few decades, well know enough about aging to entertain a discussion about extending the human lifespan. But until then, I suspect spas and moderate cocktails are the best path for aging gracefully.

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Anti-aging isn't a scam, but immortality almost certainly ...