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Daily Archives: May 6, 2020
Trump says reopening may result in more deaths, but we cant sit in the house for the next three years – MarketWatch
Posted: May 6, 2020 at 6:51 am
By Mike Murphy
Published: May 5, 2020 7:45 pm ET
President Donald Trump tours a Honeywell plant that manufactures personal protective equipment in Phoenix on Tuesday.
President Donald Trump on Tuesday admitted its possible that reopening the country for business will result in additional coronavirus deaths, but said that the economy has to get going again.
President Donald Trump
Its possible there will be some [deaths] because you wont be locked into an apartment or house or whatever it is, Trump told anchor David Muir in an ABC News interview aired Tuesday night. But at the same time, were going to practice social distancing, were going to be washing hands, were going to be doing a lot of the things that weve learned to do over the last period of time.
Trump suggested stay-at-home orders and the economic shutdown were causing deaths anyway, in the form of overdoses and suicides.
We have to get our country back, you know, people are dying the other way, too, Trump continued. When you look at whats happened with drugs, it goes up. When you look at suicides, I mean, take a look at whats going on. People are losing their jobs. We have to bring it back and thats what were doing.
While some researchers have said the number of overdose deaths and suicides is likely to increase, there is no indication that those numbers are anywhere near the death toll from the coronavirus.
There are about 1.2 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins data, with more than 70,000 Americans already dead. On Monday, the New York Times reported that a new White House projection shows a likely steady rise in the number of cases in May, and up to 3,000 deaths a day by June 1, about twice the current level.
More than 30 million people have lost their jobs, at least temporarily, and economic output has ground to a halt due to shutdowns to prevent the spread of the disease. But states are starting to reopen, despite the risks of a second wave of infections.
Therell be more death, that the virus will pass, with or without a vaccine, the president told ABC News. And I think were doing very well on the vaccines, but with or without a vaccine, its going to pass, and were going to be back to normal. But its been a rough process. There is no question about it.
Speaking Monday night on CNN, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nations top expert in infections disease, said the bottom line when it comes to reopening is: How many deaths and how much suffering are you willing to accept to get back to what you want to be some form of normality sooner rather than later?
Trumps interview remarks echoed comments he made earlier in the day, speaking to reporters in Arizona.
The people of our country are warriors, Trump said. Im not saying anything is perfect. Will some people be affected? Yes. Will some people be affected badly? Yes. But we have to get our country opened and we have to get it open soon.
Trump toured a Honeywell HON-0.24% face-mask factory in Phoenix on Tuesday afternoon, where he wore goggles but not a face mask. White House officials told the press that face masks were not required, although signs were spotted inside the factory indicating face masks were mandatory.
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What does Donald Trump think of LSU Coach Ed Orgeron? Nothing but great things. – The Advocate
Posted: at 6:51 am
Just like the rest of Louisiana and LSU fans, President Donald Trump had a couple of "great" things to say about football coach Ed Orgeron while being interviewed by a Lafayette-based conservative radio host last Thursday.
Trump joined the Moon Griffon Show a day after his visit with Gov. John Bel Edwards to discuss the coronavirus response, the return of sports and his total admiration for Coach O.
"I've become very friendly with him," Trump said to Griffon. "He's just a great coach. He's a great guy and a great coach."
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards on Wednesday discussed the states coronavirus response with President Donald Trump, calling a recent commitme
Trump told Griffon that he and Edwards called Orgeron during the president and governor's meeting on coronavirus in Louisiana. During last Wednesday's meeting, Edwards praised Trump for making 200,000 COVID-19 test kits a month available to the state, which the governor said sets up a possibility for Louisiana to reopen in mid-May.
The President followed his gushing over LSU's coach with recollections of the crowded Alabama-LSU game in Tuscaloosa, when the Tigers came out victorious against the Crimson Tide 46-41, a feat that hadn't been observed since 2011. In the packed stadium among hundreds of thousands of college football fans was none other than Trump and First Lady Melania Trump.
He told Griffon that's the size of an audience he wants to see when sports return post-coronavirus.
"I want it to be like what it used to be, and it will be there," Trump said. "It may take a little time, but it's going to be there sooner rather than later. We're going to make sure."
As a group, college athletic directors are not first responders or COVID-19 healthcare workers or grocery store employees bravely facing a con
He did not specify what that timeline would look like. Some leaders have said that in order for sports fans to enjoy the activity from an arena in 2020, it may require testing every person at the door and requiring social distancing when seating people.
Others have suggested audience-less arenas may be the best idea until next year.
You can listen to the full interview with Trump and Griffon here.
Ed Orgeron says he's "done with the television."
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Donald Trump took credit for US oil independence. How will coronavirus change that? – ABC News
Posted: at 6:51 am
"Make America Great Again".
It was the slogan, slapped across T-shirts and baseball caps, that propelled Donald Trump to the White House.
A protectionist platform promising to rip up global trade pacts, reduce the country's dependence on foreign powers and, in the process, create hundreds of thousands of American jobs.
Among his campaign pledges was the promise to eliminate the nation's reliance on overseas oil cartels by transforming the nation into an energy-producing powerhouse.
Not only would this satisfy his put "America First" strategy, it would also appease voters in oil-rich Republican states, crucial to his election in 2016.
In September, the US cracked a major milestone -- it exported more petroleum than it imported for the first time since records began.
It was no small feat for a country that has strived for energy security for more than 40 years since the Arab oil embargo crippled Americans at the fuel bowser.
Former President Richard Nixon promised to make America energy independent within a decade. It took much longer than that and certainly wasn't all the doing of Trump, although he's taken the credit.
Technology breakthroughs a decade ago unlocked vast onshore deposits triggering the shale oil revolution, allowing America to squash its dependency on foreign powers and reshape the global market.
But the energy independent mantel brings inherent risks.
America's risk profile flipped. No longer was it at the peril of offshore producers but it is now heavily exposed to global shocks as a major producer of oil.
The investment flooded the world market with high-cost oil, funded by debt a rapid expansion that Trump has continued to back while abandoning other forms of power, like renewable energy.
There's no doubt the nation's energy supply is now far more secure than it once was, but the term "independent" is rubbery, at best.
America still needs to import some grades of oil that it doesn't have.
Secondly and crucially, the oil market is worldwide, which means producers and consumers remain at the whims of global price volatility caused by supply shocks, like a global pandemic.
During the single, largest synchronised global shutdown in modern history triggered by COVID-19, Russia and Saudi Arabia started a price-war, after talks to cut production broke down.
Breaking down the latest news and research to understand how the world is living through an epidemic, this is the ABC's Coronacast podcast.
The feud started hurting electorally important states for Trump, like Texas and Louisiana, prompting him to urge an end to the spat. But the deal was unable to overcome the global shutdown impact.
The industry got caught in a perfect storm of circumstances out of its control, but let's be clear shale oil's financial problems predate the current crises.
The two events simply laid bare the flaws in America's energy strategy and the fragility of the industry that has made it what it is today.
"The fundamental misstep was to only focus on the commodity of oil and not diversify our production," Paul Bledsoe, former energy advisor in the Clinton and Obama Administrations, told the ABC.
"Even George W Bush pursued a strategy of diversification. There's been a bipartisan tradition to reduce our oil vulnerability, which Trump reversed."
US shale producers, which have far higher costs than their Arab and Russian rivals, are collapsing, reversing a decade-long march towards energy independence.
The very industry whose growth allowed Trump to boast of cutting US dependence on Middle Eastern oil, and freed his hand to sanction energy exporters from Iran and Russia, is now on its knees.
The defining moment arrived when oil prices plunged below zero for the first time. While it's since bounced back into the green, it's well below the level needed for American producers to break even.
Hundreds of thousands of jobs are at stake.
Norwegian-based energy consultancy, Rystad, expects hundreds of US explorers and producers to go bankrupt by the end of next year.
The process used to extract the shale oil has seen its biggest monthly decline in history, offering an indication of what's to come.
Here's the punchline: the coming decimation of American shale oil firms will most likely lead to a renewed dependence on Saudi oil.
The industry has weathered previous economic storms, propped up by government striving for energy security and a Wall Street eager to find new investment after the Global Financial Crisis.
But the unprecedented confluence of events could prove to be the final nail in the coffin.
It's an important lesson in economics: never put all your eggs in one basket.
Producers are now pleading with Washington to ease the pain by cutting foreign oil imports or including them in bailouts to stave off bankruptcy and job losses.
Strategic reserves across the country will fill up soon, and dozens of oil tankers are stationed off the coast, acting as pseudo storage facilities.
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Further complicating the problem is a fleet of Saudi vessels laden with oil heading to ports in Texas and Louisiana.
It's prompted an angry backlash from senators in oil states, which have pressured the president to impose tariffs or prevent them from unloading.
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Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, a Trump ally, has urged the President to extend federal credit for failing companies, warning it could be the difference between maintaining domestic security and a return to foreign oil dependency.
Trailing in the polls and under fire for his response to the pandemic, Trump can't afford to lose the support of Republican states as he seeks re-election in November.
Support of some kind looks inevitable.
Trump has directed his treasury secretary to come up with a plan to channel funds into the industry.
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Government loans would be an extreme and politically dangerous measure to blunt further economic pain for an industry already under significant pressure and drowning in debt.
"I think that's a big moral hazard because it's not an essential service," Bell Potter Securities broker, Giuliano Sala Tenna, said.
"We're talking about government getting involved in private business interests.
"It makes no sense from a policy perspective to hold onto this mantle as being an energy independent nation when they're doing it at a great cost to taxpayers it's completely uneconomic."
Whatever form it takes, it looks like the retreat of the US oil sector could be every bit as stunning as its rise.
The Energy Information Administration (EIA), has forecast the United States will return to a "net importer of crude oil and petroleum products" in the third quarter of 2020.
It's a crushing blow but the bigger implication is what it means for the tens of thousands of workers the multi-billion-dollar sector now employs.
The price collapse is being felt in several red states, but the pain is most profound in Texas, which produces 40 per cent of the nation's crude and much of its shale oil.
How the Trump administration responds to the crisis and the efficacy of its measures will be vital litmus tests leading up to November's general election.
If a financial bailout proves too politically damaging and the worst of the crisis can't be averted, the fallout could hurt the president's chances in the state, which is already turning blue.
The 2018 mid-term elections revealed how Texas's electorate is becoming younger and more racially diverse than ever, propelling the Democrats to flip several congressional and statehouse seats.
While many observers say this triggered the shake-out the market had to have, others believe it presents a pathway to diversify away from the black gold.
"My view is this is an opportunity for us to begin to make bigger investments to make us less vulnerable to oil price shocks," Mr Bledsoe said
"I am advocating very robust investment in, for example, electric vehicles and electric vehicle-charging stations."
It's still six months until election day, effectively a lifetime in modern-day oil markets.
But with little sign the global economy is on the cusp of reopening, and a market now awash with oil, the price is bound to remain in the trenches for months.
The US economy is already reeling with 30 million Americans out of work while the pandemic confines vast swathes of the population to their homes.
The nation's newfound exposure to oil markets will only make matters worse.
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China Takes Lead At FIDE Chess.com Online Nations Cup – Chess.com
Posted: at 6:49 am
China took an early lead at the FIDE Chess.com Online Nations Cup as the only team to win both matches on the first day. The top seeds defeated both team Rest of the World and team Europe.
The USA is in sole second place after beating Russia in the second round and a tie with India in the first. Team Rest of the World is on two match points, while India, Russia, and Europe share fourth place with one match point.
The Chess.com Day 1 Live Broadcast for replay.
It was Europe who drew lot number one during the opening ceremony, and therefore it got to play a "home" match twice, which means playing the white pieces on boards one and three. Just like in the first half of the Candidates, GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave played GM Ian Nepomniachtchi with the white pieces and this time, playing the Najdorf instead of the French, Nepo held the draw.
GMs Anna Muzychuk and Aleksandra Goryachkina also drew their game on the "female" board four, but the teams traded wins on boards two and three with GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda scoring for Europe. However, it was GM Vladislav Artemiev who stole the show with what was the Game of the Day thanks to a stunning rook sac in the middle of the board:
GM Simon Williams also went through the game in this video.
China had a most convincing first day at the office, with two 3-1 wins and remaining undefeated on all boards. In the first round, women's world number one GM Hou Yifan contributed to the victory with a win against another former women's world champion, GM Mariya Muzychuk of Ukraine.
China was already leading the event after the first round because the third match also ended in a tie. GM Humpy Koneru scored a good win against IM Anna Zatonskih but we'll look at the board-two encounter.
GM Fabiano Caruanaplayed a long game that eventually reached the notorious endgame BB vs N. He won it smoothly, to score his second win of the day.
The last time we saw the endgame was at the FIDE World Cup last year:
In the post-game interviewed Caruana revealed not only that he had never studied this ending, but also that he kind of needed to use the restroom for most of the game!
Players are not allowed to leave their room and have to remain visible before their webcam, except when there's a doctor's note.
GM Vidit Gujrathi did manage to get his knight on one of the four preferred squares (b2, b7, g2 or g7) but in this particular case that didn't help him much:
Russia isn't playing with its strongest possible team and that cost them today. With Caruana scoring a fine, technical win against Artemiev and two draws, Nepomniachtchi needed to win against GM Hikaru Nakamura. The only problem was that the double knight endgame was just equal.
Because of the match situation, the Russian GM played for a win too long and suddenly it was Nakamura who was calling the shots:
This match was decided on board three, with two players who had both not played in the first round. It was the Peruvian GM Jorge Cori, who has quite a bit of experience with playing on our site as a member of the Chicago Wind team in the PRO Chess League, who defeated GM Baskaran Adhiban in a sharp endgame:
China's scored its second convincing win against Europe with GM Ding Liren taking board one this time, and reigning women's world champion GM Ju Wenjun playing board fourand winning. Somehow, GM Nana Dzagnidze's opening went completely wrong and in no time her knight on b4 got trapped.
In the post-game interview, Ju said: "I hope we can continue this good performance. I think every team is very strong and before the tournament, it was very difficult to say who is the favorite."
After the second round, Caruana was kind enough to give a lengthy and quite informative interview (begins at the 04:05:09 mark in the embedded live broadcast at the top of this article). He mentioned that he had a hard time not playing too fast and that the time control 25+10 "feels like an eternity" to him in online chess:
"It might just be a habit. I grew up as a kid playing one-minute chess online. It was rare to even play a game that was longer than three minutes without an increment. And there you're just basically blitzing the entire game or you get flagged. I feel I'm still in that blitz mode!"
FIDE Chess.com Online Nations Cup | Round 2 Standings
The FIDE Chess.com Online Nations Cup is a team competition held from May 5-10, 2020 on Chess.com featuring Russia, USA, Europe, China, India, plus a team representing the "Rest of the World." The total prize fund is $180,000, sponsored by Chess.com.
The first stage consists of a double round-robin, with each team playing each other twice. The top two teams after 10 rounds qualify for a "Superfinal" match.
All matches are played on four boards: three with male players and one with female players. The time control for all games is25 minutes + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move one.
Games day 1
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Nations Cup online chess: India lose to Rest of the World – Times of India
Posted: at 6:49 am
CHENNAI: Rest of the World (RoW) beat India 2.5-1.5 in the second round of the online Nations Cup team event on Tuesday. While former world champion Viswanathan Anand, P Harikrishna and Koneru Humpy drew their games against Teimour Radjabov, Alireza Firouzja and Mariya Muychuk respectively, B Adhiban had an off day as he went down to Jorge Cori.Earlier, India began their campaign with a 2-2 draw against USA. The FIDE-rated event saw five-time former world champion Anand draw with Hikaru Nakamura in 41 moves on board 1 of the event. India went ahead when current world rapid champion Koneru Humpy defeated Anna Zatonskih in 42 moves. '; var randomNumber = Math.random(); var isIndia = (window.geoinfo && window.geoinfo.CountryCode === 'IN') && (window.location.href.indexOf('outsideindia') === -1 ); //console.log(isIndia && randomNumber USA were on the verge of defeat against India, but a victory by Fabiano Caruana over Vidit Gujrathi put a tie on the scoreboard and saved the match for them. The Caruana-Vidit clash went down to the wire as it lasted 119 moves. On the strong show, Caruana said, "It was a 50-50 for most of the match. Playing chess online for about 25 minutes is very tough indeed." As far as his team's chances in the event was concerned, Caruana said, "We might be slight underdogs and I feel China is a well-rounded and a solid team. I really hope that we go all the way."After the conclusion of the opening day, China was topping the points table with 4 points followed by USA and RoW on 3 and 2 respectively. India were placed 4th along with Russia and Europe with 1 point to their name.
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May Cover Stories with Chess Life: GM Francesco Rambaldi – uschess.org
Posted: at 6:49 am
The May edition of Cover Stories with Chess Life is now live! This monthly podcast, hosted by Senior Director of Strategic Communication Daniel Lucas, goes in depth and behind the scenes of each months Chess Life cover story. This months guest is GM Francesco Rambaldi, who contributed annotations to our May Chess Life cover story on the Cairns Cup. We talk to him about the Cairns Cup, growing up playing chess in France and Italy, his current status as a member of the Saint Louis University chess team, and his new book, The Caro-Kann Revisited A Dynamic Repertoire for Black.
Image Credit: GFHund via wikimedia
Dont miss your chance at winning a $50 gift certificate to USCFSales.com! Send in your question to [emailprotected], and if your question is selected as the Best Question, you will win the gift certificate. Send in your questions now about anything involving Chess Life that strikes your fancy.
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Vast Majority of Hungarians in Favour of Hungary Hosting Chess Olympiad – Hungary Today
Posted: at 6:49 am
Fully 83.7 percent of Hungarians are in favour of Hungary organising the Chess Olympiad in 2024, according to a fresh survey by the Szzadvg Foundation.
Overall, 38.1 percent of the surveys respondents said Hungary hosting the event would primarily help boost tourism, head researcher Zita Boknyi said in a video conference. A total of 36.8 percent said it would mainly help the sport, 31.8 percent said it would boost Hungarys image and 15.3 percent said it would also help the economy.
The survey commissioned by the Hungarian Chess Federation found that more than half of all Hungarian households have chess boards and nearly three-quarters of men and more than a third of women know how to play. About one-quarter of respondents said their children were also learning to play chess.
The survey was carried out with a sample of 1,000 adults.
Featured photo illustration via pixabay.com
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#GameOfTwoHalves Podcast: Can Singapore be the best in chess? – The Straits Times
Posted: at 6:49 am
#GameOfTwoHalves Ep 83: Can Singapore be the best in chess; solving incomplete football leagues
12:42 mins
Synopsis: #GameofTwoHalves is The Straits Times' weekly sports podcast that is out every Tuesday.
Money FM's Rachel Kelly calls up ST sports correspondents Sazali Abdul Aziz and David Lee.
They discuss the following topics:
1. That unassuming young kid in your neighbourhood could be a chess whiz, as some pre-teens here already have international acclaim. But what separatesthem from that elusive Grandmaster status?
2. Several European football leagues have ended their campaigns with various debatable approaches, including the point-per-game method in the French Ligue. When will Asean leagues resume, if at all, and what are the repercussions on the respective national teams?
Produced by: ST Sports Desk
Edited by: Aw Yao Feng, Nadiah Koh & Penelope Lee
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Active Tectonic System Spotted on Moon’s Nearside | Planetary Science, Space Exploration – Sci-News.com
Posted: at 6:48 am
A system of wrinkle ridges on the nearside maria of the Moon is evidence of seismic activity set in motion 4.3 billion years ago that could be ongoing today, according to new research.
Global map of the albedo from the 750 nm filter of the UV-VIS camera onboard NASAs Clementine spacecraft. The image shows the near side and far side of the Moon in Lambert, equal-area projection. Image credit: NASA.
Most of the Moons surface is covered by regolith, a powdery blanket of ground-up rock created by the constant bombardment of tiny meteorites and other impactors.
Areas free of regolith where the lunar bedrock is exposed are vanishingly rare.
But University of Bern researcher Adomas Valantinas and Brown Universitys Professor Peter Schultz used data from NASAs Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter to spot strange bare spots within and surrounding the lunar maria.
Exposed blocks on the surface have a relatively short lifetime because the regolith buildup is happening constantly, Professor Schultz said.
So when we see them, there needs to be some explanation for how and why they were exposed in certain locations.
For the study, the scientists used the Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment (DLRE), an instrument aboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter that measures the temperature of the lunar surface.
Just as concrete-covered cities on Earth retain more heat than the countryside, exposed bedrock and blocky surfaces on the Moon stays warmer through the lunar night than regolith-covered surfaces.
Using nighttime observations from DLRE, the team turned up more than 500 patches of exposed bedrock on narrow ridges following a pattern across the lunar nearside maria.
A few ridges topped with exposed bedrock had been seen before. But those ridges were on the edges of ancient lava-filled impact basins and could be explained by continued sagging in response to weight caused by the lava fill, Professor Schultz said.
But this new study discovered that the most active ridges are related to a mysterious system of tectonic features (ridges and faults) on the lunar nearside, unrelated to both lava-filled basins and other young faults that crisscross the highlands.
The distribution that we found here begs for a different explanation.
Infrared (upper left) and other images from NASAs Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter revealed strange bare spots where the Moons ubiquitous dust is missing. Image credit: Valantinas & Schultz, doi: 10.1130/G47202.1.
Valantinas and Professor Schultz mapped out all of the exposures revealed in the DLRE data and found an interesting correlation.
In 2014, NASAs Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission found a network of ancient cracks in the Moons crust. Those cracks became channels through which magma flowed to the lunar surface to form deep intrusions.
The study authors showed that the blocky ridges seemed to line up just about perfectly with the deep intrusions revealed by GRAIL.
Its almost a one-to-one correlation. That makes us think that what were seeing is an ongoing process driven by things happening in the Moons interior, Professor Schultz said.
The researchers suggest that the ridges above these ancient intrusions are still heaving upward.
The upward movement breaks the surface and enables regolith to drain into cracks and voids, leaving the blocks exposed.
Because bare spots on the Moon get covered over fairly quickly, this cracking must be quite recent, possibly even ongoing today.
They refer to what theyve found as the Active Nearside Tectonic System (ANTS).
They believe that the ANTS was actually set in motion billions of years ago with a giant impact on the Moons farside.
In previous studies, they proposed this impact, which formed the South Pole Aitken Basin, shattered the interior on the opposite side, the nearside facing the Earth.
Magma then filled these cracks and controlled the pattern of dikes detected in the GRAIL mission.
The blocky ridges comprising the ANTS now trace the continuing adjustments along these ancient weaknesses.
This looks like the ridges responded to something that happened 4.3 billion years ago, Professor Schultz said.
Giant impacts have long lasting effects. The Moon has a long memory. What were seeing on the surface today is testimony to its long memory and secrets it still holds.
The study was published in the journal Geology.
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A. Valantinas & P.H. Schultz. The origin of neotectonics on the lunar nearside. Geology, published online April 13, 2020; doi: 10.1130/G47202.1
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Steve Carell’s ‘Space Force’ farce will launch on Netflix May 29. See the new trailer. – Space.com
Posted: at 6:48 am
Editor's note: The "Space Force" trailer features strong language.
The U.S. Space Force faces the parody treatment in a brand new Netflix series aptly titled "Space Force."
The show stars Steve Carell as General Mark R. Naird who, as you can see in the brand new trailer released today (May 5), is surprised to be given command of the brand new military branch "Space Force."
This show takes the "workplace comedy" genre to a new, cosmic level. Instead of leading a small team at a paper company, like he did in "The Office," Carell is leading the entire United States in space. Much like NASA's current goals with the Artemis program, in the show, Gen. Naird's prime objective seems to be to return land on the moon.
Related: 20 sci-fi movies and TV shows to binge watch on Netflix right now
But, from the trailer, it seems as though Gen. Naird was set up to fail. As he walks through what is presumably Space Force's headquarters, he overhears someone talking about him on the phone, saying "he is blowing it just like you thought yeah, it is a complete shitshow."
Gen. Naird seems a bit goofy to begin with and it's clear from the trailer that, not only do people not take him that seriously, he is prone to mistakes. Big, explosive mistakes.
Carell seems perfectly suited for this character who, while a bit of a buffoon, seems truly dedicated to and excited about space exploration. "This is a great adventure we are embarking on today," Gen. Naird says in the trailer. "There will be setbacks, but greatness was never won without sacrifice."
In the same speech, he references the anniversary of Apollo 11, which landed astronauts on the moon in 1969. "Fifty years ago, our country put a man on the moon. Well, guess what, kids? We're going back," Gen. Naird said.
The trailer ends on a surreal note, with Gen. Naird dancing around his office while singing "Kokomo" by the Beach Boys. The show will also star John Malkovich, Ben Schwartz, Diana Silvers, Tawny Newsome, Lisa Kudrow, Jimmy O. Yang, Jane Lynch, Fred Willard and Noah Emmerich.
This show, which was created by Carell and writer Greg Daniels, who has worked on shows including "The Office" and "Saturday Night Live," comes to Netflix on May 29.
Follow Chelsea Gohd on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.
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Steve Carell's 'Space Force' farce will launch on Netflix May 29. See the new trailer. - Space.com
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