Three exhibitions to see in London this weekend – Art Newspaper

J.M.W. Turner's The Fall of Anarchy (?) (around 1833-34) is on show at Tate Britain Courtesy of Tate, Turner Bequest

While Turners Modern World (until 7 March 2021) at Tate Britain is ostensibly about the British painters depictions of the burgeoning modern age, it is also very much about how his painting can be seen hurtling towards later artistic developments in its expressiveness and near abstraction. In The Field of Waterloo (1818), depicting the aftermath of the famous battle, bodies are strewn in the foreground, while a torch is raised skyward in a scene reminiscent of Picassos masterpieceGuernica, both in its depiction of the casualties of war and in its near-Cubist breakdown of bodies. Meanwhile, Rain, Steam and Speed (1844) is a proto-Futurist masterpiece that shows a hurtling locomotive chasing a speck of a hare.

One of the star loans in the show is the almost-abstract Slave Ship (1840) from the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, which depicts the true story of slaves thrown overboard to drown in order to collect insurance money. It was once owned by John Ruskin, who described it as being the one work on which to rest Turner's immortality. Other highlights include two unfinished paintings, The Fall of Anarchy (?) (around 1833-34), showing a skeletal figure reaching out from a ghostly horse, and A Disaster at Sea (around 1835), which is like something from Dantes Inferno, depicting women and children drowning in writhing waves (again, based on a true event). Britain was at war for much of Turner's life, and even his bucolic landscapes are dotted with troops or Martello Towersthis modern age is a wondrous horror to behold.

Installation view of Blue Glass Roll 405/2 (2019), Ann Veronica Janssens at the South London Gallery Photo: Andy Stagg. Courtesy of South London Gallery

As you pedal on a chrome-plated bicycle around the grand Victorian hall at South London Gallery, the Belgian conceptual artist Ann Veronica Janssens asks you to consider several things: how the vaulted ceilings lights bounce off the bicycles wheels; what it feels like to press your fingertips firmly to your eyelids, as depicted in the towering print Phosphnes (1997-2018); how best to manoeuvre your vehicle to avoid collision with the oncoming invigilator.

As put forth in this tight retrospective titled Hot Pink Turquoise (until 29 November), Janssens has been concerned with light throughout her entire career. Mostly in its mutabilitya trio of ribbed glass sheets wondrously shift colours as you move around them. And in its materialityone side of a raw steel beam has been polished so thoroughly it acts as a mirrored surface. But despite borrowing much of her formal language from cold Minimalist sculpture, Janssens constantly necessitates playful interactions via these works, often subverting their less-than approachable exteriors to invite participation from the viewer. In an early sculpture, Le bain de lumire (1995), four stacked spherical glass vases are filled with water and placed atop a window ledge overlooking the main road below. As the viewer steps forward, they are absorbed inside the work. Stood still you can observe your hazy silhouette merging with the passing traffic and pedestrians to form a small, suspended world, passing before your eyes.

Danh Vo's Untitled (2020) The artist. Photo White Cube (Theo Christelis)

A US flag made from wood logs that once stretched from floor to ceiling has nearly been reduced to ash, which means that it is your last chance to catch Chicxulub, Dahn Vo's "pastoral exhibition" at White Cube, Bermondsey (until 2 November). Designed as a countdown to the now-imminent US presidential election, the work has been burned on-site in real stoves throughout the course of the show, filling several of the gallerys usually austere spaces with an uncanny warmth. An emaciated version of its former self, it is one of several pertinent reminders in this three-millenia-spanning, thematically sprawling show, that empires all fall to the push of time.

Created by Vo during a reflective period on his farm in East Germany, the exhibition offers us new ways to look at ancient things. Wood is everywhere. Apple trees have been placed in the front courtyard and inside the gallery; an enormous wall arrangement of gilded ornate carvings from 17th-century Portugal is displayed like excavated bones. Humans are everywhere too. Our lost civilisations commemorated in 1st-century Greco-Roman marble sculptures, our new ones in the Johnny Walker-emblazoned crates they are placed inside of. And in several curious, unassuming works, Vo probes into our futures, as fractured and freakish as they are likely to be. One small sapling grows intertwined with a broken 19th-century sandstone eaglea vision of the strange forms that might populate our planet's next 1,000 years.

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Three exhibitions to see in London this weekend - Art Newspaper

Truth Seekers season 2 release date, cast, plot and everything you need to know – digitalspy.com

Truth Seekers spoilers follow.

The first season of comedy horror Truth Seekers followed Smile broadband installer Gus (Nick Frost) and his new assistant Elton (Samson Kayo) in their company van as they explored paranormal happenings in the English countryside.

Their amateur sleuthing led them to uncover an apocalyptic conspiracy involving mind-controlling (and head-exploding) nanobots, to be used by Dr Peter Toynbee (Julian Barratt) in his attempt to achieve immortality.

Luckily, with the help of Gus's father-in-law Richard (Malcolm McDowell), Elton's sister Helen (Susan Wokoma), ghostly Astrid (Emma D'Arcy) and Gus and Elton's boss Dave (Simon Pegg), they foiled Toynbee's plan but lost Astrid in the process, and the season ended with them all determined to bring her back.

With the final scene revelation that Dave and the mysterious Jojo74 (Kelly Macdonald) may be more than they appear, the door has been left open for a possible second season, featuring more of the Truth Seekers' otherworldly adventures.

Amazon Prime Video has yet to confirm whether a second season will go ahead, but during an exclusive interview with Digital Spy, both Nick Frost (who also co-produced the show) and Samson Kayo confirmed they would be happy to return.

"I'd love to so another season, that would be great," Kayo told us, and Frost agreed, "I'd love to see where it goes and I'd love to have the chance to eat more biscuits in the van with Samson."

While we wait for news on when the Truth Seekers could be back, here's everything you need to know.

With COVID-19 delaying everyone's schedules, it could be quite a while before a second season of Truth Seekers even starts filming, especially as the cast are all busy with other projects at the moment.

Susan Wokoma exclusively told Digital Spy that she is hoping to start working on a second season of Year of the Rabbit soon, which was originally due to begin production in April before being delayed by the pandemic.

And Samson Kayo is busy filming the comedy series Bloods (that he created) that reunites him with Truth Seekers' Julian Barratt.

Watch Now Truth Seekers on Amazon Prime Video

Nick Frost's current project is Joss Whedon's new series The Nevers, the story of a group of supernaturally gifted Victorian women who save the world, and after that he's working on an upcoming comedy horror "set on a remote Swedish island" (as told to iNews). He's also recently signed up for the second season of Why Women Kill alongside Allison Tolman (according to Variety).

Meanwhile, Simon Pegg is in Italy trying to keep up with Tom Cruise's running on the set of Mission: Impossible 7. Assuming his character Benji survives that one, he and the rest of the cast and crew are due to start filming the eighth movie in the series as soon as they wrap part seven.

Don't despair, however. While we are waiting for producers/writers Frost, Pegg, Nat Saunders and James Serafinowicz to get the Truth Seekers gang back together, there is a Truth Seekers virtual escape room available for a limited time for amateur ghost hunters wanting to carry on the show experience.

Running until November 18, the Truth Seekers Remote Adventure is a free, live 45-minute game featuring puzzles connected to the series.

The final episode of season one hints at more ghostly adventures for Gus, Helen and Samson, and secrets to be revealed about Dave and Jojo74, so Nick Frost, Susan Wokoma, Samson Kayo, Simon Pegg and Kelly Macdonald would all need to return to resolve the first season's cliffhangers.

Hopefully Malcolm McDowell would be on board, too. The Leeds-born actor is now based in Los Angeles, but despite being 77 years old he shows no sign of retiring. "I really, probably, should slow down," he said at a group press interview for the series (via Geektown). "I think I've got like a stack of films waiting just to get the go-ahead and then we'll see how it goes."

Here's the main cast line up from the first season:

Nick Frost (Gus Roberts), Samson Kayo (Elton John), Emma D'Arcy (Astrid), Malcolm McDowell (Richard), Susan Wokoma (Helen), Simon Pegg (Dave), Taj Atwal (Elara), Julian Barratt (Peter Toynbee), Kelly Macdonald (Jojo74), Rosalie Craig (Emily).

It's likely many of the crew would return, too, including co-creators Nat Saunders and James Serafinowicz, cinematographer Arthur Mulhern, production designer Julian Nagel, costume designer Wiz Francis and the visual effects team led by Charine Bederar.

Episode eight of the first season leaves lots of loose ends for the Truth Seekers team to tie up in a potential second season, as Samson Kayo confirmed in an interview with The Observer.

"I feel another season could be bigger if it happened. It would be a joy to work with everyone again, and the show has scope to go to a lot of places. You'll see from season one's end that it can build, so I'd be up for it."

With Kayo's character Elton discovering he is a conduit between the living and the dead, he can now help ghosts move on to the afterlife, so a second season could involve him and Gus, along with hilarious double act Helen and Richard, travelling the country in their van as amateur ghostbusters, installing Smile's broadband as they go.

Elton will also be key to tracking down ghost Astrid, who disappeared from the haunted hotel transmitter after she unblocked Smile's signal, freeing all the people who had been controlled with nanobots implanted in their eyes by the devious Toynbee.

The final moment of the series showed that Astrid has now magically morphed into a painting above Dave's desk which means she may be able to see and hear all that goes on in his office, including a visit from Jojo74 who we're thinking is likely to be a major player in future seasons.

It is revealed in the final episode that Dave and Jojo74 may not be quite who they seem, or even of this earth, and while Dave helped foil Toynbee's plans, it appears that Jojo74 was allowing them to go ahead. With Astrid presumably watching, it is Jojo74 who makes a call and orders unseen people to a clean up after Toynbee's failed attempt at immortality, that ended up rather gruesomely with him bleeding to death from a self-inflicted neck wound on the floor of an abandoned factory.

(Don't expect anyone else to attempt immortality and the ascension to Eternis from the same location in future seasons, however, as the derelict Shredded Wheat factory in Welwyn Garden City where the scenes were filmed is due to be redeveloped into a site for more than 200 homes next year).

Having observed but not interfered with Toynbee's scheme, it's clear that Jojo74 has a grander plan. There's no hint as to what it is yet, but since Gus's wife reappeared as a ghost after having her own throat slit, it's very possible that the ghost of Toynbee could appear to carry out Jojo74's plans and make more mischief for our intrepid ghost hunters.

Sadly, with no filming for season two planned as yet, don't expect any new footage for quite some time.

Truth Seekers is available on Amazon Prime Video.

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‘I’m in jail’ – Hot Mess Mums Club host Kelly Pegg on turning 39, coronavirus and how things have changed – Nottinghamshire Live

For more than 6 months now Ive been feeling old. Ive been experiencing this impending feeling of being past my best, looking back at times in my life and remembering that feeling of immortality, when parts of my body didnt ache daily, when anything seemed possible and I felt confident in who I was and where I was going.

Im not sure when or how these feelings have been triggered, it could be due to having a toddler who rarely sleeps and is wide awake at 5am every day without fail.

It could be years of shift work and the pressures of working in the radio industry or it could be coronavirus and the anxiety and loss of freedom its sparked. Im guessing its a mixture of all of these factors and probably a few more things thrown in.

As my 39th birthday loomed I felt a real sense of dread for it, birthdays are no longer what they were when I was in my 20s or early 30s. I feel they are now just a reminder that the clock is ticking, a reminder of the things I havent achieved as yet and a reminder that if I do wish for a third child I really need to get a move on!

Possibilities dont seem endless, freedom doesnt feel so easily accessible and life feels far more fragile than it ever has before.

When I was in my twenties pre-marriage and children my birthdays would last a whole week and would finish with a big night out in Nottingham with about 20 of us dancing until the early hours.

At the time I thought it would always be that way because youth allows us to feel like that, thats one of the beautiful things about being young, you dont think about circumstances changing, you dont sit and ponder what life will be like if and when you fill it with reasonabilities like raising a family, and paying bills.

Before you know it you are there, married with children and balancing the demands of everyone in your unit and yourself. The stresses and tribulations of life creep in as do the grey hairs and planning for the future i.e., writing your will, and before you know it age no longer feels like just a number, it feels a bit like a life sentence that youre counting down to!

We anticipate old age and all its trappings creeping in, because being in the moment, being present and letting go can feel too hard once you get to a certain age and are feeling the weight of other peoples expectations on you like your kids, your partner, the world!

I, of course, had to face my 39th and in all honesty, I had a lovely day with my husband Chris and our kids, simple but memorable for all the right reasons. At one point my husband asked me what I was thinking about and I replied A time when I was young, a little wild (a lot actually but Ill leave that there), when I felt careless and free, and now Im 39 and I feel really ancient and a little like Im in jail.

Now I know this sounds bad when youre reading it but I didnt mean it quite how it came out and yes I know I can be a terrible wife at times!

He looked at me and smiled I met you when I was 39 and thats when my life began

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'I'm in jail' - Hot Mess Mums Club host Kelly Pegg on turning 39, coronavirus and how things have changed - Nottinghamshire Live

‘Over the Moon’ attempts to be five movies instead of a single good one – Perry Newspapers

By MARK VIOLA

Ive often said that one of the great things about watching films and television from other countries is how it can give us a glimpse into cultures with which we have little familiarity. Although the new animated film Over the Moon, which premiered on Netflix last weekend, is a co-production between U.S. and Chinese companies, it is definitely rooted in Chinese culture and folklore.

I appreciated that aspect of the film, as before watching Over the Moon, I knew nothing about the story of Change, a Chinese moon goddness who drank an elixir of immortality that sent her to live on the moon, leaving her to forever mourn her lover back on Earth who died.

Unfortunately, the movie never finds its focus, trying to do too many things and none of them well. By the time it was over, I felt like I had watched four or five short films that were loosely connected rather than a single movie. During its relatively short 90 minutes, Over the Moon tries to be a family drama, a sci-fi adventure and a fantasy tale rooted in mythology, all the while also being a musical.

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Impeachment: Senators, Oaths, And Immortal Souls – Above the Law

(Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

As careful readers may have noticed, I dont like hypocrisy.

But I dislike hypocrisy even more when it will cost people their immortal souls.

All senators took an oath at the start of the impeachment trial:

I solemnly swear [or affirm] that in all things appertaining to the trial of the impeachment of [Donald John Trump], now pending, I will do impartial justice according to the Constitution and laws: so help me God.

Im not too worried here about the senators who chose merely to affirm that they would tell the truth, rather than to swear it. Although there are plenty of reasons, both moral and legal, to tell the truth after making an affirmation, the taking of an oath adds a religious reason.

After taking this oath, senators immediately started thinking and talking about the politics of this. Can the senators ignore the influence that Donald Trump has on the Republican Party? Whats politically expedient for each individual senator? Is it possible to vote to convict and get re-elected? Is it possible to obtain the necessary two-thirds majority to convict?

Please step back and think first about an oath: With God as your witness, and at risk of eternal damnation, do you swear to do impartial judgment according to the Constitution and laws?

Maybe, when I read that oath, I overlooked the bit about ignoring the truth, following your partisan instincts, and casting the vote that might get you re-elected. If so, please point that part out to me. But, if I read correctly, remember: If you cast a dishonest vote, youre making, almost literally, a deal with the devil. Eternity is a long, long time.

In the United States in the late eighteenth century, criminal defendants were actuallyforbidden from testifying in capital cases. This law was meant not to hamper, but to protect, defendants: Faced with the gallows, defendants would be tempted to lie under oath on the witness stand. This would cost defendants their immortal souls. The law was thus constructed to do defendants a favor: It prohibited their testimony, thus increasing the likelihood that they would be hanged, but perhaps saving their souls for the eternity to follow.

In A Man For All Seasons, Thomas More famously refused to swear an oath saying that he supported King Henry VIIIs divorce. More was a religious man and, even though he was about to lose his head on the block, he refused to sacrifice his soul to save his life. In his words, according to the film:

When a man takes an oath, hes holding his own self in his own hands like water, and if he opens his fingers then, he neednt hope to find himself again.

So, senators, youre holding your own selves your souls in your hands like water. If you open your fingers now, what then?

MarkHerrmannspent 17 years as a partner at a leading international law firm and is now deputy general counsel at a large international company. He is the author of The Curmudgeons Guide to Practicing LawandDrug and Device Product Liability Litigation Strategy(affiliate links). You can reach him by email atinhouse@abovethelaw.com.

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Impeachment: Senators, Oaths, And Immortal Souls - Above the Law

‘If I said I’d scripted it that would be a lie’ – Tommo’s words that went viral – Racing Post

Derek Thompson: infamous promo video has had more than 230,000 views on YouTube

Edward Whitaker (racingpost.com/photos)

In 2013, an innocent promotional video designed to attract visitors to a hotel in South Yorkshire went viral when presenter Derek 'Tommo' Thompson put his own spin on it and turned it into an Alan Partridge-style production with elements of Benny Hill mixed in.

Beginning in the bar and dining room, our man toured the hotel before stumbling upon a pair of towel-clad ladies in a bathroomand ending up in a suite. The Partridgesque performance ended up with Tommo somehow sharing a bed with another two women in bathrobes.

The video, of the Crown Hotel at Bawtry, near Doncaster, may have lasted under a minute but it was quickly shared on social media and has hadmore than 230,000 views on YouTube. It was revisited more recently when Radio 1 DJ Greg James came across it in 2019. James particularly liked Tommo's opening line in the bar scene and took the story to a whole new, and much younger, audience.

Derek Thompson,presenter

Simon Mapletoft and his wife Jo asked me to do a promo video for the hotelas it's popular with Doncaster racegoers. There were ladies who worked there posing as guests during the filming, whichbegan when I walked into the bar and uttered the now-immortal words, 'Are you well? I thought you were!'. I don't know where that came from as there was no script and I thought nothing of it until later.

We did the video, which the hotel was pleased with, and I thought no more about it until about two years ago my daughter India shouted to me one morning and said I was on the Greg James show on Radio 1. I didn't even know who he was but listened in and heard him use my line, 'Are you well? I thought you were!' and he later rang me and said he was playing the Centaur after racing at the Cheltenham Festival and would I like to join him on stage.

Greg James: huge Tommo fan who invited him on stage during a Cheltenham Festival gig

I got in there in front of around 5,000 people and he put my line to music, which was unbelievable. Greg then came to Newmarket after the 2,000 Guineas and we did the same thing there. I was stunned when it came out and they were even asking for t-shirts with that line on it. It was mental.

Until it was forced to close for lockdown, people even used to send me videos of themselves going around the Crown Hotel impersonating me. They have had some great publicity out of it and if I don't have a room for life at the venue there is something wrong!

Simon Mapletoft, broadcaster

Basically, the owner of the Crown Hotel, Craig Dowie, is a good friend of ours and I've helped him out with PR over the years. He came up with this idea of a promo video to portray the place as THE racing hotel in Doncaster and thought that Tommo was the ideal man to front it. I produced it but if I said I'd scripted it that would be a lie and Tommo very much put his own spin on it. As soon as he walked into the bar and uttered that immortal line, 'Are you well? I thought you were!', the big fella had stamped his own comedy gold all over it.

Read more from our Magic TV moments series:

The legendary Peter Casey: 'I was aware he could say anything but I never thought he would say that'

Oli Bell: 'The Queen said to me you're the lunatic that ran on the track!'

Jim McGrath: 'It's one of those bizarre occasions I'll never, ever forget'

Luke Harvey: 'The cameraman followed me and I've never found out why!'

'He was a real showman and there was no-one before or since like him'

Rishi Persad: 'The thought in my head was 'holy s***, this is massive'

Derek Thompson: 'I simply assumed it was a woman and still laugh about it now'

Hayley Moore: 'It was a random thing to do. I didn't expect it to go viral'

Luke Harvey: 'It very soon dawned on me that I was part of television gold'

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'If I said I'd scripted it that would be a lie' - Tommo's words that went viral - Racing Post

Contagion and communion in the COVID era – University of Dallas University News

St. Ignatius describes the Eucharist as the medicine of immortality and the antidote against death, so that we might live forever in Jesus Christ. Christians for millennia have revered the Church as a field hospital for sinners, a place of purification and cleansing from the pathogens of our broken world. The celebration of the Mass integrates all parts of our human nature: the mind and the senses. The Eucharist intimately touches and transforms body and soul. How, then, should the Church respond when dangerous physical diseases spread in our communities?

Traditionally, the presence of disease seemed not to phase the faithful. In the Gospels, Jesus encounters countless individuals plagued by contagious ailments. During these encounters, Jesus never hesitates to touch, to heal, to restoreregardless of how vile or repulsive the state of the person. In the spirit of Christian charity and in recognition of Christs healing power, consecrated and lay members of the Church have continued to play crucial roles in caring for victims of pandemics from epidemics in the Roman empire, to the Bubonic Plague and several others.

This courage stretches across doctrinal divides as well. Martin Luther remained in Wittenberg while the Bubonic Plague raged in 1527 and wrote a striking appeal to his followers to not flee the disease, to utilize their best preventative techniques and ultimately to value their neighbors life above their own through practicing the corporal works of mercy.

It is clear that the risks of working with diseased individuals was recognized, yet love for neighbor triumphed. Even in the modern day, Catholics hospitals serve as the largest coalition of nonprofit healthcare providers, serving over 1 in 7 patients in the U.S.

With the emergence of COVID-19, however, nearly all Churches shuttered their doors for several months to discourage large gatherings. Sacramental life at many parishes still remains amended or reduced. Significant alterations to the Mass are nearly universal. At our own Church of the Incarnation, social distancing, masks and hand sanitizer are required.

The bishop of Dallas has strongly recommended distribution of the Eucharist on the hands, but this is not a mandatory requirement in the diocese. It does seem practical to discourage the transmission of saliva in the midst of a pandemic. As an extraordinary minister, I can vouch for the frequency of this occurrence. But is this valid?

Theologically, the Church does not proclaim dogma on this issue. Various authorities dispute the question.

Aquinas writes in the Summa Theologica that it is not lawful for anyone else to touch it except from necessity, for instance, if it were to fall upon the ground, or else in some other case of urgency. The gravity and piety with which we treat the host is of utmost importance here.

Pope John Paul II wrote in his final encyclical (Ecclesia de Eucharistia), There can be no danger ofexcess in our care for this mystery, for in this sacrament is recapitulated the whole mystery of our salvation.

However, not all spiritual authorities agree.

Junior Josh Berkovsky reminds us of a moment from the Diary of St. Faustina. Berkovsky said, During quarantine I stumbled upon the diary of St. Faustina and began to explore reading it. During one of her apparitions, Jesus appeared to her while she was receiving communion and said to her in the most loving way, I desire to be received into your hands. Theres something intimate and personal about having the Bread of Life being placed directly into your hands, just to stare at Him momentarily before uniting ourselves further to Him.

Senior Emma Kate Callahan, who has helped with ushering at the Church of the Incarnation this semester, said, My preference is to receive on the tongue because I feel like its more reverent, and if youre able to, it makes sense. But when Covid happened, for me it was like, Im being asked to do this, and its not a barrier at all for me because most of my childhood was spent doing that.

Does this plague offer the necessity or urgency, as Aquinas describes, to encourage (or at some parishes, require) reception on the hand? It is certainly difficult to measure what sort of circumstances justify this mandate, especially because credible claims about the nature of the coronavirus are still evolving.

But when it comes to hard science, the Church is no stranger to medical anomaly. The National Center for Biotechnology Information compiled a summary of Holy Communion and Infection Transmission. In the report, the authors recount historical examples of what was likely miraculous preservation from contagion in the distribution of the Eucharist. For example, monks shared in the Eucharist with lepers in Crete for decades without infection. Cases like this certainly increase our trust in the grace that God gives to those who care for others, whether bodily or spiritually. Yet while fascinating, this sort of information must be taken with a healthy dose of prudence.

Many of the restrictions put in place stand to protect the health of our community, but also to protect the Church herself. The Church is often attacked for her radical stance on moral and social matters. And in recent years, the Church has come under fire for scandal as well. Preventing outbreaks tied to our worship is important in defending the Churchs good name in an already hostile environment. Thus, parishes ought to carefully consider how they proceed in light of the pandemic.

Piety, prudence and prayer ought to shape our response to plagues. Ultimately, the faithful must strive to both bestow due reverence to the Eucharist and act in good faith (which could perhaps include receiving on the hand in dire circumstances) toward the community through preventing disease and ministering to those experiencing sickness.

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Contagion and communion in the COVID era - University of Dallas University News

Cyberpunk 2077’s Development Was Shorter Than Anyone Realized – CBR – Comic Book Resources

Announced in 2012, active development on CD Projekt Red's controversial Cyberpunk 2077 didn't actually begin until several years later.

Although CD Projekt Red'sCyberpunk 2077 was announced in 2012, active development on the controversial game didn't begin until much later.

According toBloomberg, CD Projekt Red employeesclaimed development didn't start until late 2016. At that time,Adam Badowski took over as director and the game underwent a massive overhaul.

RELATED:Cyberpunk 2077: Wood Hawker's Billy Joel Parody SLAMS CD Projekt Red

Cyberpunk 2077 has been marred with controversy. Even before its release, which was delayed on three separate occasions, CD Projekt Red made headlines for forcing employees to work overtime (aka crunch). Despite this, the final product was -- by CD Projekt Red's own admission -- not refined for last-gen consoles. Furthermore, players have reported that the game can cause epileptic seizures, with many requesting a warning, as well as a long-term fix for this issue. As such, Sony and Microsoft are now issuing full refunds to those who request them, while PlayStation even pulled the game from the PlayStation Store altogether.

"After 3 delays, we as the Management Board were too focused on releasing the game," CD Projekt Red Co-CEO Adam Kiciski explained. "We underestimated the scale and complexity of the issues, we ignored the signals about the need for additional time to refine the game on the base last-gen consoles. It was the wrong approach and against our business philosophy. On top of that, during the campaign, we showed the game mostly on PCs."

RELATED: Cyberpunk 2077 Modders Have Restored the Game's BIGGEST Cut Feature

CD Projekt Red has issued several apologies since the game's Dec. 10, 2020 release, with the most recent arrivingon Jan. 13. "We are committed to fixing bugs and crashes and will continue to work and improve the game via future updates to make sure you are enjoying the game regardless of the platform," thecompany wrote. "We will use this space to inform you about the progress being made on Cyberpunk 2077s further development, including information about updates and improvements, free DLCs and more."

Cyberpunk 2077 is an open-world, action-adventure story set in Night City, a megalopolis obsessed with power, glamour and body modification. You play as V, a mercenary outlaw going after a one-of-a-kind implant that is the key to immortality. You can customize your characters cyberware, skillset and playstyle, and explore a vast city where the choices you make shape the story and the world around you.

Developed by CD Projekt Red, Cyberpunk 2077 is available now on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Google Stadia and PC.

KEEP READING:Cyberpunk 2077: CD Projekt Red Head Disputes Fake Demo Report

Source:Bloomberg

Assassins Creed: Eivor Is the BEST Assassin in the Franchise So Far

Jon Arvedon is CBR's lead news editor and began working for the site in 2017. Hes been an avid superhero fan since he was a young child, though it wasnt until much later in life that he finally began venturing into the actual comic books that made those characters so popular in the first place. Nevertheless, he immediately developed a strong passion for the medium and began aggressively expanding his knowledge, using any and all downtime at his old office job to scour the depths of Marvel Unlimited, comiXology and the occasional wiki page to help fill in the gaps. His love of comics is rivaled only by that of his love for Star Wars. If you're so inclined, you can follow Jon on Twitter at @JonArvedon.

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Cyberpunk 2077's Development Was Shorter Than Anyone Realized - CBR - Comic Book Resources

Immortal people as per hindu mythology | People who will never die – Tentaran

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Immortal people as per hindu mythology? Yes, thats right. There are some people considered to be immortal or Chiranjeevi as perhindu mythology. Lets find out about these immortal people as per hindu mythology.

Ashwathama

Ashwatthama was the son of Dronacharya, the guru (teacher) of Pandavas and Kauravas. He was also a friend of Duryodhana. Ashwathama was born with a gem on his forehead that protected him from diseases, weapons, and any other harm that may come his way. During the Mahabharat war, Ashwatthama killed five sons of Pandavas while they were asleep considering them to be the Pandavas. Later, he diverted one of the deadliest astras on earth towards the unborn child of Abhimanyu. Krishna got very angry at this and took his gem embedded on his forehead which left a wound there. Krishna then cursed him with immortality saying that his wound would never heal and he will wander in the world and suffer.

Parashurama

Parashurama was the sixth avatar of Lord Vishnu. He was born to rid the earth of immoral rulers. He was blessed with an axe from Lord Shiva after rigorous penance. It is believed that he would appear at the end of Kali Yug to be the Guru of Kalki, Vishnus last avatar.

Hanuman

Hanuman, the Vayuputhr sone of vayu (wind) is the dispeller of evil. Lord Hanuman is the symbol of innocence, strength, care, devotion, and knowledge. When Lord Rama decided to return to Vaikunta after killing Ravana, instead of going for Moksha, Hanuman chose to stay on earth to protect the devotees of Rama and be present wherever Ramas name is recited. Hence, Lord Hanuman is considered to be still alive and counted among 8 immortals Chiranjeevis in Hindu Mythology.

Immortal people as per hindu mythology

Vibhishana

Vibhishan, who was the younger brother of Demon-King Ravanan fought on the side of Lord Rama. He was blessed as a Chiranjeevi to sustain goodness and virtue in Lanka and to lead people on the path of Dharma.

Do read: Story of Goddess Lakshmi and Padmavati

Kripacharya

Kripacharya was the Kul Guru (teacher) of the Kurus. He was blessed to be a Chiranjeevi (immortality) because of his impartiality towards all of his students. He is often admired as the ideal Guru.

King Mahabali

Mahabali, also known as Bali was a Daitya king. King Mahabali is popularly known as Maveli and Onathappan. Because of his humbleness, Lord Vishnu got pleased with him and blessed him with immortality and allowed him to return to the earth once every year to visit his people. Hence, it is said that the day of Onam is the day of the visit of King Mahabali to Kerala.

Vyasa

Veda Vyasa is the author and a character in one of the greatest epic of Hindus, Mahabharata. The epic represents intelligence, vision, and wisdom. He is also credited as the writer of other important works including the Puranas.

Markandeya

Markandeya is an ancient rishi. The meaning of his name Markandeya is the one who conquers over death. He was a devotee of both Lord Shiva and Vishnu. Shiva protected Markandeya from the clutches of death and since then he is considered Chiranjeevi.

Must read: Find out where some of the Hindu Gods were born

The above names and information is based on hearsay and what is available in the public domain. We do not claim this to be 100% correct and proven.

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Immortal people as per hindu mythology | People who will never die - Tentaran

Holocaust Memorial Center hosts ‘Soap Myth’ online reading and discussion – The Detroit News

Award-winning playwright Jeff Cohen is heralding the importance of listening to Holocaust survivors while they're still living.

Actor Ed Asner stars in "The Soap Myth."(Photo: Burke-Cohen Entertainment)

Well-known stage and screen actors Ed Asner and Tovah Feldshuh star in a PBS concert reading of his play, "The Soap Myth," hosted by theHolocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus. It was filmed last January in New York and is viewable online now.

This Sunday, watch a Zoom conversation between playwright Jeff Cohen and Detroit News film critic Adam Graham.

"The Soap Myth" is set 50 years after the end of World War II and tells the story of an elderly Holocaust survivor,Milton Saltzman, who believes the Nazis turned the fat of murdered Jewish people into soap.

He teams up with a young investigative journalist in hopes that historians and museums recognize his eyewitness account. The play also delves into the evils of antisemitism and Holocaust denial in present day.

"The Soap Myth" reading at B'nai Jeshurun, New York in January 2019, starring Ed Asner and Tovah Feldshuh.(Photo: Burke-Cohen Entertainment)

"In the power of live theater lives a certain immortality," said Cohen in a press release about the virtual performance. "Five years from now, 50 years from now, 150 years from now when an actor portrays Milton Saltzman, Milton is alive. For those 90 minutes, Milton lives in all his rage and all his sorrow and all his stubborn refusal to be silenced. And when Milton lives, rest assured, he will not let the audience forget the Holocaust."

The play's reading is viewable to watch online now atbit.ly/TheSoapMyth-play-on-PBS.

Register in advance for the 2 p.m. Sunday Zoom webinar with Cohen and Graham atbit.ly/TheSoapMyth-HMC-event.Those with questions for Cohen or Graham can submit them by noon Tuesday atholocaustcenter.org/questions.

mbaetens@detroitnews.com

Twitter: @melodybaetens

'The Soap Myth'

Online discussion with playwright Jeff Cohen and Detroit News film critic Adam Graham

2 p.m. Sunday

Register in advance:bit.ly/TheSoapMyth-HMC-event

Concert reading of the play online now:bit.ly/TheSoapMyth-play-on-PBS

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’30 Days of Night’: Revisiting the Dark Thrills of the Bloody Vampire Horror Movie – Bloody Disgusting

While we know them as distinct monsters nowadays, most tales of bogeymen tend to converge the further back you go. Vampires, werewolves and undead ghouls may have developed their own individual nuances and mythologies, but theyre really just variations of the same primitive human fears adjusted for different cultural climates. However, even among these infinite variations, if you go back far enough, one thing is certain: bad things come under cover of darkness.

Its this primal fear of the dark that makes Steve Niles and Ben Templesmiths 30 Days of Night such an effective graphic novel, with the story wasting no time in getting to its bloodthirsty premise. This also extends to David Slades highly underrated 2007 adaptation of the story, a faithful translation of the source material that still manages to dive even deeper into its single long night of vampiric carnage. Boasting a deceptively simple setup and chilling visuals, the film has become one of my favorite pieces of wintertime horror fiction, and I believe its still worth revisiting in 2021.

For those unfamiliar with 30 Days of Night, the story takes place in the quiet town of Barrow, Alaska as it prepares to undergo its yearly period of polar night, when the sun sets and the area is shrouded in darkness for a full month. This time, however, a group of vampires have caught wind of the phenomena and are planning a month-long invasion where they can feast on the locals without fear of the sun. Once the inevitable massacre begins, its up to Sheriff Eben and his wife Stella to protect the survivors as they endure the titular night.

The comic presents itself as a short and sweet horror yarn, borrowing elements from zombie flicks and even classic westerns (with the small town sheriff standing up against an overwhelming force and eventually settling things with a climactic duel), but the movie expands on the mythology and characters thanks to the added length. Niles himself returned to pen the first draft of the screenplay, having already pitched this story to producers before turning it into a comic, but the studio would go on to request rewrites by Stuart Beattie and, later on, Brian Nelson.

It would have been a crime to not turn this into a movie.

David Slade was appointed as the pictures director, and while hes mostly known for 2005s Hard Candy and Netflixs interactive Black Mirror special Bandersnatch, he was also responsible for some of the best and most stylish episodes of Hannibal and American Gods. Under his guidance, 30 Days of Night went on to successfully translate this highly atmospheric tale to the big screen, making one of those rare winter-time horror movies that actually look and feel cold. The movie was also a box-office hit, with impressive home-video sales to boot, though a lot of critics didnt quite warm up to it.

In a way, the film is actually structured more like a George Romero zombie movie than a traditional vampire narrative, presenting us with a small town under siege by undead invaders, though these creatures are more than brainless monsters. They may lack the elegance and romantic qualities of classic gothic vampires, but the antagonists of 30 Days of Night are still intelligent foes in their own primal way, hunting down humans with a ferocity that even the running zombies of Zack Snyders Dawn of the Dead remake cant compare to. This may not have been the first time that we saw a modern take on vampires, but the nosferatu of this adaptation are certainly a lot scarier and more grounded than what the genre usually has to offer.

A lot of that is accomplished by their unique designs, as the art department went to great lengths in order to reproduce Templesmiths eerie art style in the real world. This resulted in gorgeous make-up effects that make the vampires look like ancient, otherworldly entities. Their shark-like teeth may harken back to Tom Hollands Fright Night and their resistance to religious iconography may remind you of Anne Rices bloodsuckers, but the vampires of 30 Days of Night are distinct in their savagery.

Even with the terrifying visuals, what really cements these vampires as fearsome predators is the commanding presence of Danny Huston, who turns in a genuinely iconic performance as Marlow, leader of this immortal clan. His calculating demeanor and eldritch accent make this one of the most memorable vampire performances on record, and its hard to not get chills whenever hes onscreen. His interactions with the rest of the tribe are also our window into the mythology of this world, revealing much about the terrible consequences of immortality while also implying a lot of backstory and world-building without resorting to full-on exposition.

You dont need to turn into a bat to be scary!

The rest of the cast is also great, with Josh Hartnett and Melissa George (an underrated Scream Queen) making for a compelling lead couple, though its really unfortunate that the originally Inuit protagonist was made Caucasian in the movie. The town of Barrow itself is also a major character in the story, with this atmospheric locale slowly decaying as the cold sets in. Theres an undeniable tragic feeling when you watch this isolated community burn under a dark sky once the vampires decide that theyve had their fun, even if its obviously just a Hollywood set.

Thankfully, the real-life Barrow is a lot less dreary, more akin to a pleasant collection of seaside suburban housing than the gloomy settlement that we see in the film. Its also no longer known as Barrow, having reverted back to its original Iupiat name Utqiagvik in 2016. Regardless, its clear that the production design was going for an emulation of Templesmiths dreamy silhouettes and hazy architecture rather than authenticity. In fact, most of the films snow was actually fake, with the filmmakers prioritizing these exaggerated aesthetic qualities instead of real-world accuracy. I guess thats appropriate when you consider that this is a comic-book adaptation, but the movie still manages to feel absolutely frigid even though a large portion of it was shot in a New Zealand studio.

This stylization also extends to the films brutal effects, with more gore than you can shake a sharpened stake at. Not even the children are spared during the month-long invasion of Barrow, with some absolutely bombastic kills and copious amounts of (presumably) fake blood. The production value here is admittedly impressive, though the final showdown feels a bit less convincing than the rest of the film.

The movie has some other flaws as well, such as a weird time-skip in the middle of the story that worked better in the original comic, but its ultimately a satisfying horror yarn that makes the most of its premise. Oddly enough, I find that theres something comforting about watching these characters struggle to survive in this icy setting while youre still snug within the comforts of your own home. Thats why I tend to re-watch this one whenever the days start getting shorter and the temperatures start dropping (which, ironically, only happens around June here in Brazil).

In any case, 30 Days of Night is proof that the simplest stories are sometimes the most effective, and I think its a lot better than most folks give it credit for. From losing your loved ones to facing the existential terrors of immortality, the movie does a lot with what began as a simple fear of the dark. At the end of the day, theres a reason why so many horror stories begin with it was a dark and stormy night, and I think more productions should strive to make the most of a straightforward setup.

So, while you hunker down in your own homes this winter, be it because of ravenous vampires, the freezing cold or a certain respiratory virus, why not revisit the chills and thrills of 30 Days of Night? Just make sure to keep a light on, just in case

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'30 Days of Night': Revisiting the Dark Thrills of the Bloody Vampire Horror Movie - Bloody Disgusting

What is Illinois known for? Here are 9 things good, bad and in-between – Journal Gazette and Times-Courier

For all the talk about Illinois being a center of manufacturing and industry, agriculture is a major player.

No other state produces as much in soybeans as Illinois. According to the state soybean association, Illinois produced 532 million bushels of the crop in 2019. Iowa was second, at 503 million bushels.

Illinois also is the country's second-leading producer of corn, according to World Population Review. In 2018, Illinois farmers grew 2.3 billion bushels of corn. Only Iowa (2.5 billion bushels) produced more.

A crop in which Illinois is the far-and-away leader nationally is one that doesn't seem to get much notice, except around Halloween and the ensuing holidays.

Between 90 and 95% of the processed pumpkins in the U.S. are grown in Illinois, according to the University of Illinois Extension. The Tazewell County village of Morton claims to be the pumpkin capital of the world.

A Nestle USA plant in Morton produces Libby's canned pumpkin. That accounts for about 80% of such pumpkin sold worldwide, according to the company.

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What is Illinois known for? Here are 9 things good, bad and in-between - Journal Gazette and Times-Courier

Recognizing Hall of Famer Paul Westphal – Suns.com

Hey, now youre immortal, Paul Westphal said in relating what someone told him when they learned he was going to be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame.

No, Westphal said during his induction speech in September 2019, responding to the well-wisher, immortality doesnt come from basketball.

As we pause to remember Westphal, and share how saddened we are at his passing, we recognize how prophetically spot-on he was.

Westy will not be immortalized for just playing basketball. He will be remembered for how he lived his life, and how he treated others.

The Phoenix Suns organization shares its thoughts and prayers with the Westphal family through this difficult time.

Westy will forever be remembered as a prominent Valley sports legend both on and off the court, said Suns Managing Partner Robert Sarver. He built an illustrious career as both a player and a coach. His legacy ranks among the most quintessential basketball icons of all time.

Westphal left an indelible signature on the Phoenix Suns franchise with his All-NBA talent, his brilliant mind and his elite character. From guiding the team on the court in the 1976 NBA Finals to leading them from the sidelines in the 1993 NBA Finals, Westphals legacy in Phoenix crossed decades and his overall impact on the organization is virtually unmatched.

Throughout the past 40 years, Westy has remained a great friend of the organization and as a trusted sounding board and confidant for me, Sarver continued. His number 44 will forever hold its place in our Ring of Honor, enshrined as one of the utmost deserving members.

Born on November 30, 1950, Westphal was a native of Torrance, CA, and spent 14 seasons with the Suns as a player and a coach.

The eventual Basketball Hall of Famer known as Westy was acquired by the Suns in a trade with the Boston Celtics in 1975 and spent six seasons as a player with Phoenix. He ultimately found his way back in the Valley a few years later on the Suns coaching staff from 1988-95. Due to his astounding career and impact across the NBA, Westphal was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on September 6, 2019.

There may be just a handful of people who have as much influence and significance on the history of the Phoenix Suns, Jerry Colangelo said. All he accomplished as a player and as a coach. Off the court, he was a gentleman, a family man, great moral character. He represented the Suns the way you want every player to represent your franchise.

Known for his high basketball IQ, Westphal was instrumental in leading the Suns to their first NBA Finals appearance in 1976 against the Celtics. This series featured The Greatest Game Ever Played a triple-overtime thriller during which Westphals quick thinking helped put the Suns in position to extend the game behind Garfield Heards famous Shot Heard Round the World.

He was cerebral in his game, Colangelo said. He was always thinking one step ahead. Even the infamous triple-overtime game in Boston during the Final series, when he was the one who said, 'Call the timeout.' which forced a free throw, but gave us the ball at halfcourt and set up the opportunity to tie the game, which we did. That's thinking right on the spot at the moment.

Westphal became a five-time All-Star (four with the Suns) and garnered All-NBA recognition for four consecutive seasons, including three selections to the First Team. He sits as the eighth-leading scorer in Suns history, totaling 9,564 points and averaging 20.6 points per game, and was inducted into the Suns Ring of Honor on April 15, 1989.

Westphal joined the coaching ranks upon retirement and came back to the Suns as an assistant in 1988. Once back with the organization, Westphal learned under fellow Suns Ring of Honor member Cotton Fitzsimmons as he brought his basketball intelligence to the sidelines. Even as an assistant coach, Westphal proved his worth and garnered credit for his player relationships and development skills, including that of 1989 Sixth Man of the Year Eddie Johnson.

He led by example, Johnson said. He didn't change off of the court. It's just a positive atmosphere that he exudes when he's around. He always greets you with a pleasant smile. You always feel like you are a part of his clique. He's somebody we can put on a pedestal.

Westphal spent four seasons in this role under Fitzsimmons before taking over as head coach for the 1992-93 season. His success came early and often, leading the Suns to the best record in the league and a trip back to the NBA Finals in his first season at the helm. During his time as head coach in Phoenix, Westphal amassed a record of 191-88, which ranks as the fourth-most wins of any head coach in team history while his .685 winning percentage is best in Suns coaching history.

We had a personal relationship that spans decades, Colangelo said. He played for me. He coached for me. I always had great respect for Paul and he added to the quality of my life just with his presence. I'm very thankful that I had the opportunity to be associated with him."

Westphal left an everlasting legacy on the Suns franchise and within the city of Phoenix. While his greatest accomplishments may have come in the Valley of the Sun, his ultimate impact on basketball stretches from a young high school star in Southern California through a storied career as player, coach and broadcaster.

Westphal attended Aviation High School in Redondo Beach, Calif., where he was named the 1968 California Interscholastic Federation Player of the Year as a senior. He attended USC and earned All-Pac 8 honors in all three seasons with the Trojans. USC retired Westphals number 25 jersey and he was inducted into their Athletic Hall of Fame in 1997.

Westphal was drafted 10th overall in the 1972 NBA Draft by the Boston Celtics where he spent the first three years of his career, including the Celtics 1974 championship season. He was traded to Phoenix for future Basketball Hall of Famer Charlie Scott on May 23, 1975. He also first left the Suns in exchange for a future Basketball Hall of Famer, Dennis Johnson, on June 4, 1980.

He played one season with the Seattle SuperSonics and two seasons with the New York Knicks, winning Comeback Player of the Year for the Knicks in 1982-83. He returned to Phoenix for the final season of his 12-year playing career in 1983-84.

Westphal began his coaching career in 1985 with Southwestern Baptist Bible College (now Arizona Christian University). After finishing the season 3-20 the year before, he guided them to a 21-9 record in his lone season. He was then hired as the head coach of Grand Canyon University, leading them to a 63-18 record over his two seasons, including a NAIA National Championship in 1988.

In addition to four season as Head Coach of the Suns, Westphal spent three seasons as head coach of the Seattle SuperSonics, five seasons as head coach of Pepperdine University, one season as an assistant coach for the Dallas Mavericks, three seasons as head coach of the Sacramento Kings, and finished his coaching career with two seasons as an assistant coach for the Brooklyn Nets.

Westphal is survived by his wife Cindy, and his son Michael and daughter Victoria.

Thank you, Paul. Rest in Peace.

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NASCAR Drivers Who Might Retire at the End of the 2021 Season – EssentiallySports

For obvious reasons, nobody can expect their favorite sports stars to play the game forever. Until someone discovers the secret to immortality and eternal youth, every great athlete has to retire at some point. The same holds true for NASCAR drivers, especially since quite a few of them are in their late 30s and early 40s.

At the end of the 2020 season, Jimmie Johnson, Matt Kenseth, and Clint Bowyer retired from the sport. Now, with one more year passing, there is a chance that others could hang up their boots.

The likes of Ryan Newman and Kurt Busch are already in their 40s, with Newman being 43 years old, and Busch, 42. Even a driver like Martin Truex Jr is in his 40s, though he seems to be in a good run of form.

Additionally, Buschs contract at Chip Ganassi Racing is expected to last only until the 2021 season.

There is also a very slim possibility of 45-year-old Kevin Harvick becoming a surprise retiree. In 2020, he stormed to nine wins in a single season, but he could not go the final step and win the title.

If he can carry on that red hot form in 2021, he will definitely try and give it his all for possibly one last hurrah and another title before retiring on a high.

Moving away from the Cup Series, there are a number of Truck and Xfinity drivers who are arguably over the hill.

Drivers like Caesar Bacarella, Jennifer Jo Cobb, Tim Viens, Johnny Sauter, Matt Crafton, and Ray Ciccarelli are well into their 40s and 50s. In fact, Cicarelli is 50 years old and could retire soon.

Initially, he announced his retirement in June, set for the end of the 2020 season. However, he quickly backtracked and affirmed that he would stick around in 2021. Since he will be 51 next year, one has to wonder how much he has left in the tank.

One thing is for sure, none of these drivers will race forever. In fact, there are a good number of drivers in their mid-30s, who could potentially call time on their careers.

READ MORE From Jimmie Johnson to Clint Bowyer: Key NASCAR Figures That Retired After the 2020 Season

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NASCAR Drivers Who Might Retire at the End of the 2021 Season - EssentiallySports

Justice League Reveals the Viking Prince DIED to Stop the Endless Winter – CBR – Comic Book Resources

In Justice League Dark #29, the Endless Winter continues by revealing a great hero sacrificed his life to defeat the Frost King in the 10th century.

WARNING: The following contains spoilers for Justice League Dark #29 by Andy Lanning, Ron Marz, Amancay Nahuelpan, June Chung, Rob Leigh, Marco Santucci, Arif Prianto, and ALW's Troy Peteri, on sale now.

The "Endless Winter" crossover has unleashed the Frost King on the DC Universe. The villain has covered the world in a giant blizzard, and his army of ice monsters has scattered the Justice League. The superheroes are stretched thin as it is and so far, it looks like the Frost King is simply too powerful to be stopped. But he wasdefeated once before -- back in the 10th century.

Indeed, over the course of the event, flashback segments have chronicled the Frost King's first attack in the 900s, and the efforts of the Justice League Vikingto stop him. Now, in Justice League Dark #29, we finally learn how DC's first superhero team was able to defeat the villain: their victory came at the cost of the Viking Prince's life.

RELATED: Justice League Viking: Endless Winter Introduces DCs Ancient Avengers

The Justice League Viking was a team originally put together in the 10th century by Swamp Thing. After the Frost King first attacked, his blizzard began to affect the Green, which prompted the elemental creature to seek out powerful heroes to help in his quest to defeat the villain. Swamp Thing recruited the Queen of the Amazons, Hippolyta, the ancient hero known as the Viking Prince, and the former champion of the wizard Shazam, Black Adam.

These four heroes took on the Frost King and his army of ice monsters, and they too found that the villain was incredibly powerful. In fact, his abilities were so dangerous that he was even successful in killing Swamp Thing during their fight.

Thankfully, there was one hero who laid his life on the line to stop the villain: the Viking Prince.

RELATED: Justice League Gives DC's WEIRDEST Villains A New Team

In Justice League Dark #29, the flashback segment of the "Endless Winter" crossover shows how the fight between the Frost King and the Justice League Viking finally came to an end. On top of a crumbling glacier, the superheroes face the villain and his army. While Black Adam and Hippolyta deal with the ice monsters, the Viking Prince engages the Frost King in battle. The two fight with their swords and the villain eventually gains the upper hand: he stabs the Viking Prince through the chest -- but the hero valiantly keeps fighting.

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Justice League Reveals the Viking Prince DIED to Stop the Endless Winter - CBR - Comic Book Resources

What to expect from the new Obi-Wan Kenobi series on Disney+ – Winter is Coming

Obi-Wan Kenobi is one of the most iconic characters in the Star Wars saga. The legendary Alec Guinness first introduced us to the wise old Ben Kenobi in A New Hope, where hetrains Luke Skywalker in the ways of the Force before being struck down by Darth Vader and becoming more powerful than you could possibly imagine. While fans are divided on the prequel trilogy, most agree that Ewan McGregor is delightful as a younger Obi-Wan. Through him, we feel the full weight of Anakin Skywalkers fall to the Dark Side and the ultimate demise of the Jedi order.

McGregor loved his time as Obi-Wan, and fans have been longing to see him again since his final appearance in Revenge of the Sith. Fans got their wish in August 2019, when Disney announced that McGregor would be returning to the part in a new Disney+ series. We got more information at Disneys 2020 Investors Day conference, learning that the show place around 10 years after Revenge of the Sithand that Hayden Christensen will return as Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader.

Fans have many questions about whats in store for their favorite outcast Jedi. Im personally excited to watch McGregors spry Obi-Wan transition into Guinness grey old man. Lets take a look at the different plot points and characters we might see, based on rumors, speculation, hopes and dreams.

Photo: Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace (1999).. Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Rights Reserved.

Give me more Liam Neeson! Please!

Qui-Gon Jinn might be my favorite Jedi of all time. He was denied acceptance onto the Jedi council because of his recklessness, he trains Obi-Wan, insists on training Anakin (leading to the fall of the Jedi order), and often goes against the wishes of the council to do what he believes is right.

Fans may remember that, at the end of Revenge of the Sith, Yoda gives Obi-Wan a very important task: the Jedi order has fallen, Padm has given birth to Luke and Leia, the Republic has been reformed into the Galactic Empire, and the remaining Jedi have decided to go into hiding. Before parting ways, Yoda tells Obi-Wan: In your solitude on Tatooine, training I have for youAn old friend has learned the path to immortality. One who has returned from the netherworld of the Force to train meYour old master Qui-Gon Jinn. The secret order of the Whills, he studied. How to commune with him. I will teach you.

I believe this training will be one of the central plot points of the series. If it is, we can expect a visual journey that will most likely feel, for lack of a better word, trippy. Fans of Star Wars:The Clone Wars will remember that, in the final episodes of season 6, Yoda travels to the heart of the galaxy and makes contact with the ancient Whills, communes with Qui-Gon, and receives dark premonitions of the upcoming slaughter of the Jedi. The episode is a spectacle of creepy faces and intense dream-like sequences. It puts on display of the mental and spiritual aspects of the Force that we dont often see on screen.

We know that Obi-Wan doeseventually learn how to project his spirit through the Force after death. Yoda does the same, and Luke takes it even further in The Last Jedi. Weve seen this power used, but weve never witnessed a Jedi actually learning it. It will be interesting to see how Obi-Wan, stranded on Tatooine, manages to master this ability and what the process does to change him. Perhaps he becomes aware that he must die in order to help Luke become the Jedi he must become.

More importantly, this gives me hope that we will get to see Liam Neeson in Jedi robes again! He may well return as a Force ghost to help Obi-Wan with his training, and I will be thrilled.

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The dark part about Altered Carbon everyone ignores – Looper

To some fans, Altered Carbon's plotline revolving around violence against women may seem gratuitous or unneeded, but in reality, the show's portrayal of this is a huge part of Altered Carbon's feminist perspective. Past, present, or future, sexual violence has sadly always been a central part of society. For Kalogridis and Altered Carbon's cast, this was an important subject to explore, as long as it was done with women at the helm and great care.

In a 2018 interview with Indiewire, James Purefoy, who plays Laurens Bancroft, explained that in Altered Carbon's universe, "violence against women has not ceased just because 350 years have passed." The series is unafraid to show the horrors of the future, both in the twisted uses of technology, and how issues like sexism have changed within the new environment. For Bancroft,a major perpetrator of this, the only line he can't cross is murder, but that doesn't mean he won't hurt women for his own pleasure. He can always buy them a newer and better body, so he sees nothing wrong with it.

But along with showing the worsts of this world, especially through the storyline of Lizzie Elliot (Hayley Law), driven crazy from her experience at the hands of Bancroft and his wife (Kristin Lehman), Kalogridis crafted a story that presents women adapting and overcoming these horrific situations, like with Lizzie's brutal yet cathartic rampage for revenge. Turns out stack technology has a few benefits.

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The dark part about Altered Carbon everyone ignores - Looper

How to add gorgeous greenery to your home this Christmas – The Irish Times

In early December of 2019, Laurie Pressman, vice-president of the world-famous, trend-setting Pantone Colour Institute, proudly declared to the world that classic blue would be its 2020 colour of the year.

Hindsight, of course, is a wonderful thing. Who ever could have guessed that there was a global pandemic on its way or that when we look back on this very odd, challenging and in many strange ways transformative year, it wont be the colour blue that best embodies it (except perhaps as an indicator of the nations mood) but instead the colour green.

The freshly hatched, miraculous baby green of a tray of newborn seedlings back in lockdown #1, for example, when it felt the world as we knew it might be about to end.

Or the soft, apple-green of Irish gardens bursting into new leaf in what turned out to be the loveliest, if eeriest, of springs. The box-fresh green of early summers freshly mown lawns when together we took a collective deep breath and tentatively emerged from our homes. Or the late-summer, burnished golden-green of the wild grasses that flourished in cracks in city pavements and along our roads and motorways, their growth for once unhindered.

Green, of course, represents life and hope, regeneration and rebirth. Its why so many of us have been strongly drawn to our gardens and the outdoors throughout this pandemic and why we also traditionally decorate our homes with fresh greenery at this time of year when days are at their shortest and natures pulse is at its slowest.

Examples of traditional Christmas evergreens include Irelands own native ivy (Hedera hibernica), which has long been symbolic of immortality, fidelity and tenacity (if youve ever tried removing it from an old wall or building, then youll know too well how stubbornly it clings).

Likewise holly, another native evergreen, was traditionally believed to have protective powers and to ward away evil, the reason why it was often planted close to peoples homes or farm buildings.

Other examples include the non-native semi-parasitic plant known as mistletoe (Viscum album or drualas, to give it its Irish name), which has long been seen as a symbol of fertility, immortality and healing. Similarly the pine tree traditionally used for Christmas trees as well as for Christmas or Yule logs was believed to ward away evil and ill health while the native yew is considered a symbol of eternity and good luck.

These traditional Christmas evergreens aside, theres a wealth of other evergreen plants often found growing in Irish gardens that can be used to decorate the home at this festive time of year. Examples include eucalyptus, pittosporum, ozothamnus, Scots pine, rosemary, bay laurel, fir, heather, sarcococca, juniper and ruscus, many of which are also highly aromatic.

A simple garland, swag or wreath made from any of the above is one of the loveliest, most sustainable and most meaningful of ways to mark the season. Alternatively, to add a contemporary twist, consider creating a hanging/suspended Christmas-themed evergreen installation using any/a mix of the above attached by wire or string to a garland of rope (great for a stairway) or a length of flexible piping such as oil line or insulated copper pipe. The latter, widely available from good hardware shops, has the advantage of being easily bent into any rigid shape you might want. Wrapped in a soft layer of moss, it can then be used as the concealed scaffolding for larger-scale seasonal arrangements that require some form of rigid support. Its also re-usable; simply strip away the faded foliage at the end of Christmas and store it away somewhere safe for the following year.

To give a little more textural or sculptural interest to your seasonal, evergreen Christmas arrangements, you could add dried flowers (for reasons of sustainability, try to source Irish-grown or use your own, good choices include honesty (Lunaria), strawflowers (Helichrysum bracteatum), hydrangeas and the silver plumes of pampas grass (Cortaderia selloana), as well as ornamental seedheads (examples include nigella, opium poppy and teasels), berries, pine cones and the elegantly twiggy branches of deciduous trees such as larch, contorted willow and contorted hazel. For a little extra Christmas bling, add some battery-powered fairy lights.

Alternatively, you could use one or two of those same bare twiggy branches (or some very large stems of dried lunaria) as a simple but very ornamental scaffold/ rigid support from which to suspend a variety of individual dried flowers, seedheads and cones. For best results, use the very fine-gauge floristry wire known as bullion wire, which is available in a range of colours from good floristry suppliers and some hardware stores, to do this. Placed at a height above the Christmas table or in a hallway (make sure that its safely out of reach of any candle flames), it will make an enduringly beautiful seasonal arrangement for the weeks ahead.

Which brings me to my last few words of advice: dont be at all surprised to find yourself falling so in love with your hand-fashioned seasonal Christmas decorations that youll be loathe to ever take them down. You have been warned

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How to add gorgeous greenery to your home this Christmas - The Irish Times

A Wedding and a Spider Bite Cost Kurt Warner a Chance to Star for the Chicago Bears – Sportscasting

Pro Football Hall of Famequarterback Kurt Warners journeyto Canton, Ohio, is a legendary one.

Before he became a star gunslinger for theSt. Louis Ramsand Arizona Cardinals, Warner had to prove himself in the Arena Football League. After failing to win a job backing up Brett Favre on the Green Bay Packers, Warner constantly tried getting back into the NFL.

Instead of joining NFL immortality, Warner could have starred for the Chicago Bears. That is, if not for a wedding and a spider.

RELATED: Kurt Warner Sent a Message of Support To His NFL Colleague

After going undrafted in 1994, Kurt Warner spent that years preseason with the Green Bay Packers.

With Brett Favre already starting at quarterback, Warner had to beat out Mark Brunell and former Heisman Trophy winner Ty Detmer for a backup job. However, Green Bay cut Warner before the regular season began, and he went to Cedar Falls, Iowa, to stock shelves at a grocery store for $5.50 an hour.

Warner signed with the Iowa Barnstormers, an Arena Football League team, in 1995. He quickly became a star quarterback there and earned first-team All-Arena honors in 1996 and 1997.

The St. Louis Rams signed Warner to a futures contract after his brilliant 1997 season.

RELATED:You Wont Believe How Many ChildrenKurt WarnerHas Fathered

All Kurt Warner needed was an opportunity, and he more than took advantage.

Warner spent the 1998 season backing up Tony Banks on the St. Louis Rams. When new starter Trent Green suffered an injury in the 1999 preseason, Rams coach Dick Vermeil stuck with Warner and named him the starter.

Football fans can recite the rest of the story by heart. Warner won the NFL MVP Award and led the Rams to a Super Bowl victory over Steve McNair and the Tennessee Titans a few months later.

Warner held onto the starting job until he and the Rams parted ways following the 2003 season. From 1999-2001, Warner completed 67.2% of his passes for 12,612 yards, 98 touchdowns, and 53 interceptions in a Rams uniform.

Warner earned first-team All-Pro honors in 1999 and 2001, two seasons, which won him the MVP Award. Warner also nearly led the Rams to a second Super Bowl victory in February 2002.

Tom Brady and the Patriots famously began their first dynasty with a game-winning field goal to knock off Warner and the Rams.

RELATED: Antonio Brown Will Never Touch His FathersFootballRecord

In an alternate universe, Kurt Warner became an NFL legend in the Windy City rather than the Gateway to the West.

In a 2018 appearance on Undeniable with Joe Buck, Warner explained how he landed an opportunity with the Chicago Bears in 1997. Azcentral.com transcribed Warners comments.

I ran and told my wife that next Friday Im going to Chicago for a tryout with the Bears. She kind of looked at me funny and I asked her why arent you excited for me. She goes, Well, cause were getting married on Saturday, youre not going to Chicago the day before our wedding. When the Bears called, I forgot all about it!

If Warner had any hopes of meeting with the Bears after the ceremony, nature went and interfered. A spider bit Warner on his throwing elbow that weekend, and he couldnt throw at a tryout.

Warner later tried rescheduling with the Bears, but he never heard back. Less than a year later, Warner joined the St. Louis Rams, and the rest is history.

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A Wedding and a Spider Bite Cost Kurt Warner a Chance to Star for the Chicago Bears - Sportscasting

The Hall of Fame Outsiders: No. 23, Fred McGriff – The Athletic

This offseason, leading right up to the 2021 Baseball Hall of Fame announcement, were counting down the 100 greatest eligible players not in the Hall of Fame and ranking them in the order in which I would vote them in. Each player will receive a Hall of Fame plaque based on the pithy ones that the Hall used to use back at the start. We continue our essay series with No. 23, Fred McGriff.

Frederick Stanley (Fred) McGriffTorontoSan DiegoAtlantaTampa BayChicago CubsLos Angeles Dodgers, 1986-2004

The Crime Dog is one of the most consistent power hitters in baseball history. He hit between 30 and 37 home runs 10 times in his career and knocked in between 102 and 107 RBIs eight times. Beloved player with a whirly-bird follow through, he also gained fame as the pitch man for the Tom Emanski baseball instruction videos.

Lets talk for a minute about Harold Baines. He has been hovering over this entire series...

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The Hall of Fame Outsiders: No. 23, Fred McGriff - The Athletic