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Daily Archives: June 18, 2021
Kick out the drams: the musicians who went sober during the pandemic – The Independent
Posted: June 18, 2021 at 7:23 am
The entertainments of abandon, music and alcohol have been faithful bedfellows ever since mead tankard first clinked along to Viking war song. Throughout history, wine and music have flowed in bacchanalian brotherhood and, in recent decades, superhuman intoxication has become a fundamental strut of the myth, mischief and rebellion of the rocknroll era. From the bourbon-soaked laments of the 1950s bluesmen through Whiskey in the Jar, Cigarettes and Alcohol and much shouting of lager, lager, lager in the techno age, music has invariably failed the breathalyser test; when singing songs that remind you of the good times, its become customary to drink a whiskey drink, chased with a vodka drink, then a lager drink and, since youre at it, a cider drink for the road.
But Covid, to some degree, appears to have put a cork in it. In February 2021, Mike Kerr of Royal Blood posted an Instagram photo of his sobriety coin, marking two years since his last drink. The No 1 album that followed, Typhoons, detailed the paranoia, shame and self-loathing that forced him onto the wagon. I spent so long in this fuzz, in this washing machine of negativity, he told The Independent a few months later, lost in depression and lost in my own head. His biggest wake-up call was acknowledging that, unless he got dry, he could lose everything: My songwriting ability was slipping through my fingertips.
Little could Kerr have known that his social media statement was something of a rallying cry for legions of musicians using lockdown to get sober. If the pandemic gave the general public an insight into touring life minus the hour onstage ie, drinking earlier and earlier in the day to alleviate the tedium of being stuck in cramped, largely identical rooms with the same three or four people for months on end for many musicians it had the opposite effect. By removing the social gigging element of their lives and careers, lockdown starkly exposed dependencies theyd previously been able to disguise as a typical rocknroll lifestyle.
Its a job where you[r addictions] can go very undetected, Kerr said something Dan Pare, manager of south London post-punks Deadletter and currently five months into a 12-step recovery programme, knows only too well. The social and work aspects of the music industry can provide quite a good cloak, he says. If youre out every night going to a gig, seeing mates, the lines between socialising and work becomes so blurred. Once all of that is stripped away and youre basically just sat alone in your bedroom for the 90th day in a row, living exactly the same existence, its like OK, so I was just hiding in plain sight.
For many, simply continuing pre-lockdown habits was enough to alert them to their issues. In lockdown, when there was a lack of gigs, I became very aware of the fact that I was drinking a lot before we went on stage and then drinking more when we were on stage, says Deadletters similarly lockdown-sober frontman Zac Woolley. The majority of that time I was spending on my own I was drunk. When youre sat in your own bedroom, whether it be doing a bit of writing, playing a guitar or just watching a film, and youre hammered and not able to string a sentence together, I think thats when it really hits hard that there is an issue. One morning I woke up and I was going to go to work and I was hungover and I just thought, Why am I hungover on a Tuesday morning, having been on my own? And so I just decided to nip it in the bud. I was 60 days sober yesterday.
It felt like a bit of a groundhog day, says You Me At Six drummer Dan Flint, who quit alcohol for a more active, health-first lifestyle last year. Hed been feeling the creeping effects of late-night drinking sessions in his home studio begin to drain his energy and creativity. Every day feeling a bit rough and then by the afternoon having a drink. I was listening back to the [music] that I made and thinking, You know what, I can do better than this. I went and saw one of my friends whos a great personal trainer, because I was looking at myself in the mirror and thinking, Im not happy, Im not proud of how I look, and I wanted to do something about it.
And its not just Royal Blood whove been making new music about the darkness at the bottom of the bottle.Francis Lung, ex-WU LYF bassist, released a single about his relentless hangovers called Bad Hair Day in February, several months after his own music kicked him out of his alcohol stupor. Id just finished making a record, he says, and when we were mastering it I remember listening to it and going, This is so dark, why am I talking about death so much? Why does it feel like theres no way out all the time? A lot of it was written about drinking and I knew that I did drink too much and I knew I relied on it too much, but I needed to see how much I was writing about alcohol and dependence to realise that I even had some sort of problem. I had to go through that process to realise I was telling myself something, almost. Like a lot of people, I struggle with anxiety, depression, and it came to a head to a point where I thought, I think I might be doing this to myself, and stopping drinking was a more extreme measure that I took to see if it could alleviate some of these problems.
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Lung stopped drinking on 1 January, just as the second full lockdown was about to kick in. Did it prove to be the perfect opportunity to quit? Absolutely not. Its probably the worst time, he says. Really I shouldve given myself every break and gone, its tough enough, just chill and do whatever you need to. But mentally I was in a place where I just couldnt take it anymore What I found was I still suffered from anxiety and depression but when the symptoms came on I could manage them so much better since I stopped. So I realised I wasnt giving myself mental health issues but I was really aggravating them and that was really freeing to know that I had at least some control.
Francis Lung: I realised I was aggravating my mental health issues'
(Coralie Monnet)
Other musicians found lockdown, for all its frustrations, to be a sobriety lifeline too. South London singer-songwriter and Ghetts collaborator Jessica Wilde was in a Sony Studios in Amsterdam when the first lockdown hit, facing down her demons: the sort of self-sabotage levels of drinking that had earned her her stage name but also countless bad decisions, an operation on her vocal cords and a major productivity slump. It was like the universe kept saying to me, you have to stop drinking and doing drugs if you really want to do something with this life, she says, so she got dry and clean early in 2020 and, three weeks later, recorded a jubilant rap-reggae song in Amsterdam called F*ck U Im Sober Now. On it, she sings: Reckless weekends keep descending into nightmares with no ending, not any moref*** you Im sober now, turning my life around.
Released in February alongside the regretful Wasted (about the wasted times), the tracks preface a diary-style full album tracing Wildes route to sobriety, coming from really heavy drug-taking and drinking and all the toxic relationships that came off the back of that to then over the past couple of years going on a spiritual health journey. It just so happened to align with lockdown that I was finally like, I can do this [project]. It gave me the headspace to use this time to reflect on life and get focused on what I want to do, rather than drink my worries away and making them worse. It helped me with staying sober during lockdown as well. I cant f****** drink because everyone would say, I thought you said your albums about being sober and the albums not coming out until next February! Ive had a few people message me asking for tips about how to go sober and saying they put on my song when they wanted to have a drink and theyd dance in their front room going f*** you, Im sober now! That was amazing to hear.
I didnt want to be the person not drinking, bringing the mood down
Fiona Burgess
Likewise, lockdown came along just in time for Fiona Burgess, ex-singer with London indie-pop band Womans Hour, now beginning a solo career. For years shed played along with the popular image of the singer as the perma-swigging life and soul of any party, even as she realised she could no longer control her drinking and became increasingly anxious about her intake ahead of social events. It still felt like such a big part of my identity, she says, and also I felt a responsibility, I didnt want to be the person not drinking, bringing the mood down. I felt like I had this reputation of bringing something with my energy when I was drinking and Id always be the last to leave There was that feeling of powerlessness and regret and feeling out of control.
Following one too many midweek hangovers in December 2019, Burgess vowed to ditch the sauce and turned instead to books and podcasts about getting dry. I just needed to hear other peoples stories. One of the descriptions in [Annie Graces The Alcohol Experiment] book was of a field: if youre in a field and theres no pathway but you keep walking down the same path eventually that trampled path will become a pathway, and thats what your brain is like with these habits that you form. Its about finding a new pathway and slowly that old pathway becomes overgrown and it wont even be recognisable as a pathway eventually because youll have found a new one.
By the time lockdown arrived, Burgess had trampled herself a new, sober route. Perhaps, if the lockdown had begun and I had not already implemented those changes I maybe would have gone completely the other way, she considers. If I had not started that journey before I wouldve hit it hard, even though I was at home. So that was a real blessing for me.
No two roads to sobriety are identical and the musicians I speak to all have differing experiences of lockdown life on the wagon. No longer the readily available go-to drinking partner for midweek afternoon sessions (as is often the role of more successful musicians with time on their hands), Flint threw himself into his carb-free, zero-sugar health kick and found himself bouncing off the walls with new-found energy to the point where many of his friends signed up for similar training courses, after some of whatever he was on. Woolley, who quit just weeks before pubs reopened in the UK in April, struggled with the reopening looming around the corner and found boozy band rehearsals frustrating until hed had enough dry nights out to conquer his discomfort.
Lung plugged his brief alcoholic urges with other comforts sugary drinks and ice cream until the cravings stopped. Developing healthy habits is incredibly hard during a pandemic, he says. Learning to meditate or exercise when you feel like you have an attack coming on is so hard. But the one thing thats helped me when Ive felt really desperate is knowing that its not just me thats doing it and its really great to know that its becoming almost cool to say no to alcohol and be sober and clear. I like that theres another way of looking at things and its more acceptable.
Indeed, with new generations taking a more responsible approach to drinking, non-alcoholic brands on the rise and laddish hedonism looking increasingly boorish and old hat, rock sobriety once the remit of straight-edge emo punks and road-beaten rehab rockers is beginning to look like an increasingly credible new normal. Everyone I speak to hails the benefits of making music sober: the productivity, self-awareness and focus. Flint has taught himself production techniques, Wilde credits her improved mental health for giving her the clarity to do some really great stuff that I probably wouldnt have been able to have done if lockdown wasnt around, adding that being sober has given me something to feel elevated and proud of. Any fears that alcohol was a driving force or motivational factor intertwined with their songwriting process, that the booze was the muse, quickly dissipated. Theres a part of me thats like, what can I write about now?, says Burgess. Theres not necessarily the same drama in my life that there was when there was this cyclical self-loathing thing going on. But by not numbing my emotions and exploring in way more depth my inner psyche, it feels like a very rich and even more honest account of the human experience.
Fiona Burgess: Theres not necessarily the same drama in my life that there was when there was this cyclical self-loathing thing going on
(Fiona Burgess)
I was really scared that the only reason I wrote music was to feel better from being hungover, says Lung. I thought it was all part of a linked process. Since Ive stopped Ive been writing another record I was so happy that I could still do it and to know that it wasnt alcohol that was giving me some sort of impetus to create. It was already there. If anything it was making it harder to express myself clearly.
Im realising things about myself that I maybe hadnt brought to the front before because I was clouding it over with a drink, says Woolley. Im certainly going in with less anxiety with what Im comfortable saying. We had our first gig the other night and I came offstage, the first time Ive ever come offstage sober, and I felt better than I ever have done being drunk.
If anything, alcohol was making it harder to express myself clearly
Zac Woolley
The modern touring industry, with its fridges of lager at every turn, its crate-of-beer payments and its brand-sponsored aftershows, is virtually an industrial production line for alcoholics, and bands face an intense unspoken pressure to play the jovial, semi-sloshed hosts at all times, to surrender to excess, to live the cliche. Wilde argues that the industry is making strides in providing coaches to help acts deal with addiction issues (alongside social media backlashes, mental health and general wellness), but as gigs and tours begin to return, do they pose the biggest challenge yet for 2021s freshly sober musicians?
I used to drink all the time before I went onstage and there were times I fell over onstage, it wasnt cool, says Wilde. But I used to think I had to drink or I didnt have confidence. Then when I stopped drinking my performances were so much better This has been really good for me and has transformed my life. If I can stick with it I can help other people if they want it.
I learnt to drink when I was in WU LYF, says Lung. I learnt to drink on the road. You drink after the show because you want to get rid of those aftershow nerves, because theyre just as bad. And then you feel horrible in the van and then someone starts to drink at 12pm and then it just gets earlier and earlier and before you know it youre drinking every day. Its the aftershow beers that will be hardest to say no to. Its really hard to stay in tune when youve been drinking but after the show, whether it goes good or bad, youve got so much energy and you want to tranquillise yourself. So staying present after the show is gonna be really strange.
If you can get through the first few shows, the first week of touring, I think Ill be OK and Ill find a routine, says Flint. Its difficult with playing late, getting excited for shows, staying excited after the shows been great, thats the hardest part of it. But the most important part is that were not gonna do this job forever, so I want to enjoy the shows that I do play. Theres no point looking back on my life and thinking, I didnt enjoy half of that because I was hungover.
Lung, indeed, looks forward to a post-lockdown music world less obsessed with swilling your way into legend. I think its the lamest thing, he says. I cant think of anything less rocknroll than being a f****** drunk. Thats so lame. I think rocknrolls about art the excess should come from the excess of art rather than all these things that youre doing to yourself.
If you or someone you know is suffering from alcohol addiction, you can confidentially call the national alcohol helpline Drinkline on 0300 123 1110 or visit the NHS website here for information about the programmes available to you
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Kick out the drams: the musicians who went sober during the pandemic - The Independent
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Bones, Muscles, and Connective Tissue: Tales of Collectivity – E-Flux
Posted: at 7:21 am
Failure, mishap, and defeat cannot be excluded from the program of those who are dissatisfied with the inventory of the past and the present, but everyone tends to fall down differently, in a direction in which they walked. Radoslav Putar, new tendencies 1, 1961
To the whole, we oppose the parts. As parts taken out of their whole or a togetherness of several wholes that is of ourselves, individuals being in common. Communismthis word again.
when I say we, I am counting you in when I say we, I am talking about you too and also you when I say we, I am speaking from this space We were one and more than one before. Marko Guti Miimakov, Karen Nhea Nielsen, and LilySlava8 & AmpersandG8, Thank You for Being Here with Me, 2020
Old utopias have sobered up. Our collective body is tired and fragmented. How can it be recovered, reconstructed? One way, I think, is to approach the collective body as one might an actual body: through metaphors of the collectives bones, muscles, and connective tissues. In this essay I trace examples of collective practices from WWII to the contemporary moment in the post-Yugoslav context, where collectivity is no longer defined by the essentialist determinism that communist ideology used to supposedly fostered the inherent collectivism of the East. I follow a specific line of forms and structures of artistic productionseparate from mainstream discoursesthat sought to redefine arts social position, its role as a medium of social relations. I highlight paradigm shifts and trace the methodological and political connections between different generations that shared similar problems.
The Yugoslav partisan anti-fascist struggle during WWII was a foundational act in forming the new, postwar, socialist society. The Yugoslav Peoples Liberation Struggle (NOB)1 was characterized by a massive response from cultural workers, who employed artistic production as agitation and propaganda, but also as educational empowerment.
Through the visual articulation of war trauma, partisan art, with its participatory and activist character, involved heterogeneous artistic production, disseminated through partisan exhibitions and congresses of cultural workers during the war.
In the collective body of the Yugoslav region, the historical anti-fascist partisan struggle functions as the bones. In the upright human body, bones are the support structure, the scaffolding. Protecting and supporting the body, bones are the most permanent part of the body, its invisible infrastructure, its foundation, and this is the role played by the historical partisan struggle in the Yugoslav collective body.
The partisan legacy can be also considered a kind of ancestral knowledge: transmitted not only through official history, but also through cultural and social osmosis, directly, peer to peer. The partisans transformative knowledge accumulated in the bones of the collective body of postwar generations. The groundbreaking historical experience of political and cultural revolution achieved through this struggle was assimilated by the generations that followed.
Emancipatory artistic projects today still draw inspiration from the legacy of the social institutions established through the partisan strugglefree health care, education, and housing. The diverse cultural practices that accompanied the partisan struggle, many of which were collectivist and anonymous, played an integral role in constructing the new identity of socialist Yugoslavia.
The heterogeneity of partisan artwhich sought, according to poet and writer Miklav Komelj, to construct a new revolutionary subjectivityreconfigured the boundaries between art and society. Komelj describes partisan cultural production as a breakthrough through the impossible, a structural change, a discontinuation, caused by revolution in the field of art.2
Yugoslav partisan art can to some extent be seen as an actualization of leftist cultural ideas circulating in the 1920s (e.g., the Dadaist magazine Zenit, the Belgrade surrealist groups) and the 1930s. It also created an entirely new cultural situation: a melting pot that mixed high culture and popular culture, bringing together a wide range of participants from different classes, generations, and genres who would not cross paths in normal circumstances.
The association of artists called Zemlja (Earth) was active from 1929 until 1935, when their work was officially banned.3 They initially came together to oppose and reflect on the effects of the economic crisis of 1929 and the growing threat of fascism. They exhibited in Zagreb, Paris, and Belgrade. In addition to educated artists, Zemlja included peasants and workers. In the groups 1929 manifesto, a fervent polemic about art and revolution, they called for urgent collectivization and the fusion of life and art. The group continued its radical artistic activity into the 1930s, and then in the 1940s several members became partisan militants. With this shift, art and life became one. Zemlja members Marijan Detoni, Franjo Mraz, and Antun Augustini fought alongside numerous younger artists; one of them, Vlado Kristl, later joined the group EXAT 51, which included painters and architects. In 1950s, EXAT 51 developed an experimental artistic synthesis of art and architecture. In addition to members of Zemlja, a circle of Belgrade surrealists also joined the partisan struggle. Poet and writer Koa Popovi became the commander of the First Proletarian Brigade and was later made the chief of the general staff of the Yugoslav National Army. As Komelj notes, Never before or after has a Surrealist poet had such an influential post in a Socialist revolution.4
If the partisan struggle constitutes the bones of the Yugoslav collective body, we can also say that bones play a revolutionary role in the body, by enabling movement. The project of building socialist Yugoslavia through partisan struggle redefined the classes and introduced class mobility, based on the idea of social progress. Bones are also the locus of muscle production, since stem cells from bone marrow can be used to generate more muscle. From a different perspective, bones also symbolize the necropolitics of armed struggle and warthink mass graves and ossuaries. Marked by the tension between utopia and grim reality, the partisan struggle shaped future generations and helped construct the beginning of the Yugoslav collective body.
IRWIN,NSK Panorama,1997. Photo: Michael Shuster.
Ideological disputes on the left seemed to be temporarily silenced during WWII, when all hands were on deck. But in the postwar year, the debates resumed. This period also witnessed a surge in artistic collectivity focused on the task of rebuilding society. If the partisan struggle built the bones of the collective body, the postwar years built the musculature.
The aforementioned EXAT 51 group was active in Zagreb from 1950 to 1956.5 The group positioned itself against outdated ideas and types of production within the field of visual arts, and aligned itself with the social reality and social forces aspiring to attain progress within all fields of human activity.6 Its strategy was based on the re-actualization of historical avant-garde movements, predominantly from the constructivist tradition. Although EXAT 51 members each signed their works individually, the group acted collectively to build a platform dedicated to the synthesis of all artistic forms and the abolition of the boundary between fine and applied art. It should be remembered that in early 1950s Yugoslavia, abstract art was considered controversial by official ideology. Following the publication of its first manifesto in 1951, the group and its work received harsh criticism.
Despite this criticism, EXAT 51 remained active, publishing texts and designing Yugoslav pavilions at world exposlike the yearly expo of the Croatian Association of Applied Arts in Zagreb. This latter example in particular shows the groups commitment to fusing art and life. Although EXATs abstract artistic language is the opposite of the figurative directness of Zemlja and other partisan artists, the work of both groups illustrates, in different ways, what a synthesis between art and life can look like.
This way of looking at these art collectives is influenced by art historian Jea Denegris concept of the other line. He describes this as a mentality, and a reaction of certain artists and artists groups to the existing cultural and social circumstances. It was, in fact, a way of shrinking back from being integrated into those very circumstances and, thus, of searching for an independent artistic attitude.7
In the 1960s and 70s many groups withdrew from the political arena in order to produce alternative spaces of togetherness and collective determination, as happened in many other parts of the world during this time. Artist groups like Gorgona, OHO, and the Group of Six Artists were informal collectives that searched for more poetic and anti-systemic approaches to producing art, often at the margins of society and the official art system. These groups were concerned with creating refuges from common spaces and examining their own internal relations on a micro scale. If the partisan artists were the bones of the collective body, and the 1950s artist the muscles, the groups of the 1960s and 70s zeroed in on individual parts of that body.
The Gorgona group was active in Zagreb from 1959 to 1966. It consisted of artists and cultural workers who shared affinities but not a stylistic program.8 The groups activities were shaped by principles of anti-art, dematerialization, humor, and irony. Instead of a fixed program or manifesto, Gorgonas work involved transient and processual formats such as mail art, artistic walks in nature, and self-organized exhibitions. Between 1961 and 1966 the group also published the anti-magazine Gorgona, which lasted for eleven issues, and which included collaborations with Op artist Victor Vasarely, playwright Harold Pinter, and conceptual artist Dieter Rot.
In 1966, when the members of Gorgona voted to terminate the group, another group came together in Ljubljana: OHO.9 Though OHO was only a loose collective, its founding gesture is considered to be the publication of its manifesto in 1966. Whereas Gorgona ironically deployed the bureaucratic language of socialism to examine collective dynamics within society, OHOs telepathic Intercontinental group projects (at one point there were two members based in the US) explored micro-relations within the group itself. OHO worked with what they called reismsconceptual strategies that blended the ideas of Fluxus, land art, and body art. OHO members created artist books, objects, and situations that they claimed were liberated from primary functions.10 As for the groups name, the website Monoskop explains its origin: The term OHO refers to the observation of forms (with the eye, oko, and ear, uho) in their immediate presence, and is also an exclamation of astonishment, said Marko Poganik, the groups leader: Because when we uncover the essence of a thing, that is when we exclaim oho.11
In the 1980s, with the impending disintegration of Yugoslavia, art collectives turned again to the realm of politics, engaging in intense discussions about the political implications of artistic production. IRWIN proposed the retro principle concept, which highlights the emancipatory effects of repetitionthe restaging or reconstruction of historical avant-garde narratives.12 Rather than embracing the postmodernism that was all the rage at the time, IRWIN turned back to conceptualisma part of the collective body of the past.
IRWIN employed strategies of self-historicization and historical reappropriation to question the relations between art objects, exhibitions, museums, collectives, and states. The group constructed its self-narrative around a refusal to take up passive and powerless artistic positions. The larger collective that IRWIN helped found, Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK), created innovative (para)institutional forms that paralleled and counterbalanced existing social and state institutions. This was not just about the appropriation or mimicry of existing social forms; it was about creating a space of autonomous action. One such (para)institution, NSK STATE IN TIME (created by the groups IRWIN, Laibach, and the Noordung Cosmocinetic Cabinet), functions as an abstract organism, a suprematist body, installed in a real social and political space as a sculpture comprising the concrete body warmth, spirit and work of its members. NSK confers the status of a state not to territory but to mind, whose borders are in a state of flux, in accordance with the movements and changes of its symbolic and physical collective body.13
By the 1970s and 80s, as the collective body disintegrated, artists began to see the cultural production and revolutionary activity of the partisans as anachronistic, as something better left in the past. After a series of officially organized exhibitions of partisan art, some even regarded the work as merely serving the interest of reproducing the state. However, by the 2000s, a younger generation recuperated this history. After the breakup of Yugoslavia and the emergence of neoliberal capitalism, the history and collective values of the partisan struggle became relevant again.
The Group of Six Artists,14 active in Zagreb from 1975 to 1984, introduced the tactic of the exhibition action to bypassed mainstream art institutions. Exhibition actions took place in alternative locationson the grass, in the streetwhere the group showed their works and projected slides and films on the outside walls of houses. Group member Mladen Stilinovi once pointed out the difference between the groups of the seventies, which sought joy in collective work, and the groups of today. The collectives from the past dissolved when the enjoyment started to fade, whereas today, this enjoyment has given way to the attempt to bureaucratize pleasure through administrative structures and organizational protocols.
For decades these collectives were dominated by men. But beginning in the 2000s, many new female-dominated collectives formed, focused particularly on curatorial practices: BLOK; Institute for Duration, Location, and Variables (Delve); Kontejner (Bureau for Contemporary Artistic Practice); and WHW, among others. Numerous other independent groups and collectives came together in the former Yugoslavia in the 2000s: BADco., kuda.org, Prelom, How to Think Partisan Art?, Rena Rdle & Vladan Jeremi, KURS. Many of these groups looked to the emancipatory projects of socialist Yugoslavia to inform their own ideas about collectivity, socially engaged art, and progressive exhibition practices. Self-organized and extra-institutional, these collectives positioned themselves in opposition to the representational model that dominated local culture.
The most important muscle of the collective body is the heart. In the former Yugoslavia, recent years have brought new challenges that threaten the very corethe heartof many collective initiatives and groups. There is a growing fatigue with collective work, stemming from the pressure to sustain productivity in precarious labor conditions. Working as a collective body over the long term is made even more difficult by ongoing economic and political crises, from cuts to cultural funding to the rise of right-wing politics.
This breakdown in the historical continuity of the collective body is examined in the performance The Labour of Panic (2020) by the Zagreb collective BADco.15 The work can be seen as a metaphor for the collective bodys struggle to survive amidst hostile conditionsnot only austerity and nationalist politics, but Covid-19 and the ecological crisis. Since its formation in 2000, and until its recent dissolution after twenty years of working together, BADco. explored the protocols of performing, presenting, and observing. The Labour of Panic is the third part of their Trilogy of Labour, Utopias and Impossibilities (201820). It reflects on the uncertainty around beginnings and endings. As the group has stated, To allow something to end and something new to begin, the infrastructural space itself must allow the possibility of change. That is the terrain where one outlines the contours and excavates the remains of that which cannot come to be and that which may yet occur.16 Performed outdoors at night in extreme conditionsharsh wind, heat, mosquitosThe Labour of Panic shows how the collective body confronts external catastrophes and internal turmoil.
Nea Knez, Danilo Milovanovi, Toni Poljanec, and Luka Erdani,Y?(still),2019ongoing. Multimedia.Photo:Toni Poljanec. Project updates:.
For more than a half century, the Yugoslav collective body performed enormous ideological and metabolic work, and became exhausted. Rescued from the dustbin of history, it was turned into an ur collective body that neoliberal capitalism and the twenty-first century tore limb from limbdismembering the collective body. Everyone took a piecemuseums, galleries, archives, books. Where that collective body once stood is now an empty stagewhich also means that new beginnings are possible. How can we build our collective body anew?
In addition to bones and muscle, the collective body is held together by connective tissueligaments, fascia, blood vessels, and so forth, linking all the parts of the body. This connective tissue plays a crucial role in the care of the body.
The generation of artists born in the early 1990s, when the former Yugoslavia was riven by genocidal nationalist wars, will probably be the last generation to be touched by the legacy of socialismnot through personal memory, but through remnants and traces of socialist architecture, history, and political values.
Y? (2019ongoing), a project by artists Nea Knez, Danilo Milovanovi, Toni Poljanec, and Luka Erdani, uses a literal remnant of the Yugoslav pastthe Yugo carto map new geopolitical terrains. In the 1980s, the Yogu was produced in the same factory that, a decade later, would produce arms used in the Yugoslav civil war. In its heyday the car was imported into Reagans America and, due to its extremely cheap price, sold in massive numbers. At the same time, the American media denounced it as communist and proclaimed it to be the worst car in history.17 The artists behind Y? drove a Yugo from the city in Serbia where the factory was located, through Europe, to the UK, and then took it by boat to New York, meeting with Yugoslav expats along the way. Travelling this route in a car named after a country that no longer exists was a poignant symbol of unfulfilled narratives of progress and modernization.
A series of collective performances spearheaded by Marko Guti Miimakov shows how collaborations that are loosely organized can still be affectively intense.18 The project centers on interactions between performers and their digital counterpartskitschy animated figures called affective clones. This cloning points to the need to duplicate ourselves in order to fulfill the requirements imposed on us by capital. The project thus addresses the reality of precarious labor conditions, but also solidarity between human and transhuman communities, by creating an interspace where we can be (with) others.
The partisan art of the WWII period contributed to imagining a world that did not yet exist. The new generation of artists has inherited fragments of this emancipatory past, which they use to sketch out a new vision of collectivity. Like the bodys connective tissue, this new collectivity is flexible and fluid, but no less intense. Even within conditions of social and ecological collapse, the desire for collectivity continues to drive the formation of creative and affective communities inside and outside the art field. The tissue that connects body parts is the softest tissue, but also the most resilient.
A member of the curatorial collective What, How & for Whom (WHW), Ana Devi is a curator and educator living in Zagreb. On behalf of the collective, she currently runs two WHW programs: the WHW Akademija and Gallery Nova. She is a doctoral candidate at the University of Zadar, where she researches partisan artistic production and anti-fascist resistance during WWII. She teaches at the MA program in Visual Art and Curatorial Studies at NABA, Milan.
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We Can’t Cheat Aging and Death, Claims New Study – Reason
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Human beings and other primates all inevitably age at fixed rates, according to a new study in Nature Communications. "Human death is inevitable," one of the researchers concludes gloomily in the accompanying press release. "No matter how many vitamins we take, how healthy our environment is or how much we exercise, we will eventually age and die."
The study aims to test the "invariant rate of aging" hypothesis, which posits that the rate of aging is relatively fixed within species. Bodies break down as their tissue and genetic repair mechanisms fail at species-typical rates, leading inevitably to death. The researchers explore this hypothesis by comparing patterns of births and deaths in nine human populations and 30 non-human primate populations, including gorillas, chimpanzees, and baboons living in the wild and in zoos. Their results, they report, imply the existence of "biological constraints on how much the human rate of ageing can be slowed."
To reach this conclusion, Fernando Colchero of the University of Southern Denmark and his team looked at the relationship between life expectancythat is, the average age at which individuals die in a populationand lifespan equality, which measures how concentrated deaths are around older ages.
If deaths are evenly distributed across age groups, the researchers explain, "the result is high lifespan variation and low lifespan equality. If however, deaths are concentrated at the tail-end of the lifespan distribution (as in most developed nations), the result is low lifespan variance and high lifespan equality."
Human life expectancy has been increasing at the rate of about three months per year since the 19th century. The researchers report that most of that increase has been "driven largely by changes in pre-adult mortality." In the accompanying press release, Colchero notes that "not only humans, but also other primate species exposed to different environments, succeed in living longer by reducing infant and juvenile mortality. However, this relationship only holds if we reduce early mortality, and not by reducing the rate of ageing."
Historically, about 1 in 4 children died before their first birthdays and nearly half died before reaching adulthood. Globally, only 1 out 35 children today don't make it to their first birthday. The reduction of early adult deaths from accidents, natural disasters, and infectious diseases has also contributed to longer life expectancies. Consequently, global average life expectancy has more than doubled from just 31 years in 1900 to around73 years now. Since more people are now dying at older ages, global lifespan equality has been increasing.
In the United States, average life expectancy at birth was 47 years in 1900; back then, only 12 percent of people could expect to live past age 65. Over the past 12 decades, life expectancy at birth in the U.S. has increased by 30 years; life expectancy at age 60 has risen by only 7 years. In 2014, U.S. life expectancy reached a high of 78.9 yearsbefore stalling out due to the rising deaths from despair among middle-aged whites and then from the COVID-19 pandemic. Nearly 88 percent of Americans can expect to reach 65 years of age.
Why do all animals, including human beings, age? One popular theory for how species-typical rates of aging emerge is that individuals are selected by nature so that they can keep their health long enough to reproduce and get the next generation up to reproductive snuff. If a body invests a lot of energy in repairing itself, it will reduce the amount of energy it can devote to reproduction. Thus, natural selection favors reproduction over individual longevity.
"Understanding the nature and extent of biological constraints on the rate of ageing and other aspects of age-specific mortality patterns is critical for identifying possible targets of intervention to extend human lifespans," the researchers note. Colchero optimistically adds: "Not all is lost. Medical science has advanced at an unprecedented pace, so maybe science might succeed in achieving what evolution could not: to reduce the rate of ageing."
The good news is that a lot of promising research on anti-aging and age-reversal interventions is advancing rapidly. In December, researchers at the University of San Francisco reported that a small molecule drug achieved rapid restoration of youthful cognitive abilities in aged mice, accompanied by a rejuvenation of brain and immune cells. Another December study found that dosing aged mice with amolecule called prostaglandin E2 can activate muscle stem cells to repair damaged muscle fibers, making the mice 20 percent stronger after one month of treatment. As we age, senescent cells accumulate and secrete molecules that cause various age-related diseases. Researchers are working on senolytic compounds that would help restore youthful vigor by clearing out these senescent cells.
The transhumanist biogerontologist Aubrey de Grey, co-founder of the SENS Research Foundation, argues that anti-aging research is on the trajectory to achieve that he calls "longevity escape velocity." That's when the annual rate of increase in life expectancy exceeds 12 months for every year that passes. De Grey recently tweeted that he thinks that there is a 50 percent chance that humanity will reach longevity escape velocity by 2036. If so, our species may finally be able to cheat aging and death.
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RECORD BROKEN: Las Vegas reaches 114 Thursday, breaking another daily record – KTNV Las Vegas
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LAS VEGAS (KTNV) Our record run continues as this historic heatwave marches on across southern Nevada. For the second day in a row, Las Vegas set a record for the daily high temperature as intense heat continues to grip the region.
On Thursday, McCarran International Airport reached 114 shortly before 3 p.m., breaking the daily high record of 113 set in 1940, according to the National Weather Service.
RELATED: Death Valley few degrees shy of breaking 1913 record for hottest temperature on Earth
Wednesday's high of 116 also set a new daily high-temperature record and was just 1 shy of the all-time heat record of 117 in Las Vegas.
Thursday's triple-digit heat is expected to hold until almost midnight. Overnight lows only fall to the upper 80s and low 90s ahead of sunrise Friday.
And we'll continue to close out the workweek with near-record highs through Saturday and the Excessive Heat Warning in effect until Sunday night. READ THE ALERT
RELATED: Excessive Heat Warning extended through Sunday for Southern Nevada
With the extension of the heat warning, it's important to keep heat safety in mind as you make holiday weekend plans. Staying hydrated, limiting time outside between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., and wearing loose-fitting, light-colored clothing will reduce the risk for heat-related illnesses as the intense heat holds.
RELATED: Las Vegas cooks at 116, sets record as monsoon forecast shows little relief
Gusty wind increases this weekend as this strong ridge of high pressure begins to break down. The resulting wind will increase fire danger as conditions remain dry and warm, but the trade-off is the cooling trend that takes highs back to the seasonal average in the low 100s by the middle of next week.
FRIDAY FORECASTHigh clouds continue streaming in on Friday with an isolated (10%) storm chance favoring the mountains. Friday's forecast high is 113 in Las Vegas with the standing daily high-temperature record at 115 set back in 1940.
FATHER'S DAY WEEKEND FORECASTHigh cloud cover clears Saturday as gusts increase to near 25 mph. We'll hang near 113 again on Saturday with a forecast high of 111 for Father's Day on Sunday.
The Excessive Heat Warning should expire at 8 p.m. as gusts increase to near 30 mph, a sign that this strong ridge of high pressure is finally starting to break down.
NEXT WEEKIn response, highs fall to 107 on Monday, and to the low 100s for the rest of next week under a clear, sunny sky with a light breeze.
OTHER HEAT STORIES
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Las Vegas man pleads not guilty to grand theft – Black Hills Pioneer
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DEADWOOD A Las Vegas man accused of embezzling funds from an estate pleaded not guilty to the allegation Tuesday before 4th Circuit Court Judge Eric Strawn at the Lawrence County Courthouse.
Steven Michael Soffa, 55, was indicted by a Lawrence County grand jury Sept. 30, 2020 and charged with grand theft by embezzlement, more than $5,000, but less than $100,000, a Class 4 felony, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and $20,000 in fines.
The crime is alleged to have occurred in August 2019, whereby Soffa allegedly, after being entrusted with the property of another, with the intent to defraud, did appropriate such property to a use or purpose not in the due and lawful execution of his trust.
Court documents say the victims of the alleged crime are members of ATC Soffa, LLC.
Lawrence County Chief Deputy Pat Johnson said Soffa is free on $1,500 bond.
Soffa is due back in court July 6.
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13 Things To Do This Week In Las Vegas | June 18-24, 2021 – KTNV Las Vegas
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Here is a list of 13 things to do this week in the Las Vegas valley for June 18-24, 2021:
1. The Barrett-Jackson car auction is happening June 17-19 at Las Vegas Convention Center. The world-famous auction features dozens of highly collectible cars and memorabilia. T
2. The Mob Museum is now offering a Prohibition Virtual Tour and a themed cocktail demonstration. The pre-recorded guided tour explores the museums many Prohibition-themed exhibits. A bartender in the museums speakeasy will then make some of the eras most sought-after cocktails. To make a virtual tour reservation, please email sales@themobmuseum.org or by calling (702) 724-8622.
3. Las Vegas Restaurant Week, which is originally scheduled to end June 18, has been extended until June 25. Local restaurants are offering special menus at discounted prices with a portion of the proceeds benefitting Three Square food bank.
4. Fergusons Downtown and The Center are hosting markets in both locations from 5 to 9 p.m. June 18 and 19. They will be highlighting makers and artists that identify as part of the LGBTQIA+ community, Black identifying, and allies of the LGBTQIA+ community. At Fergusons Market, The Center will host a hygiene kit workshop on The Rooftop, where guests will receive a free drink from the popup bar when they make 10 or more kits for those in need. The Tiny Bloom will host a flower crown and boutonniere making station, and Tofu Tees will be selling Pride and pronoun bracelets both activations will donate 10 percent of proceeds to The Center.
5. Green Valley Ranch has introduced Summer Nights at The Pond, an all-new, late-night scene featuring hand-crafted specialty cocktails, light bites and DJs. Summer Nights at The Pond is happening from 8 p.m. to midnight every Friday and Saturday following The Backyard at Sundown, which takes place from 5 to 8 p.m.
6. The mermaids and interactive stingray feedings are back at Silverton hotel-casino. Get up close and personal with thousands of tropical fish, stingrays, and sharks swimming throughout the 15-foot deep, 117,000-gallon reef aquarium. Stingray feedings occur daily at 1:30 and 4:30 p.m. with mermaid swims Thursday, Friday, Saturday at 12-1:15 p.m., 2-3:15 p.m., and 5-8:15 p.m. and Sunday at 10:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m., 2-3:15 p.m., and 5-6:45 p.m.
7. Comedy in the Alley with Eric Stinson returns June 19 from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Vegas Test Kitchen. Guest comedians include Jody Carroll, Edwonda White, Tab Lloyd, Miquel Rojas and host Chris Kidder. Tickets are $30.
8. Field Trip returns to Fergusons Downtowns main stage at 8 p.m. June 19 with versatile singer/rapper Derek Dominique Montgomery; smoky R&B singer Tanna Marie; evocative singer, rapper and producer Baltimore Robinson; laidback rapper and singer CuddleTh0t; and DJ J.Rich. Must be 21 years of age or older. Tickets are $10 for general admission.
9. Bluegrass Republic is performing June 18 and 19 at Gilleys Saloon, Dance Hall & Bar-B-Que at Treasure Island. Line dancing lessons and bull riding is also back at Gilleys. Line dancing lessons are offered from 7 to 8 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays. Additionally, Las Vegas country station 102.7 Coyote Country will broadcast from Gilleys every Tuesday night with live music starting at 8 p.m.
10. The Vegas Room is welcoming Michelle Johnson, known as the First Lady of Jazz, back to the stage with her new show Lit It Be: A Tribute to the Music of the Beatles. Performances begin June 18 and continue through June 19. Tickets for the dinner show are $85. Dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. and Johnson performs at 8.
11. 4B and Disco Fries will perform during AREA15s A Series in their 32,000-square-foot, outdoor event space on June 19. There will also be an outdoor art garden featuring murals by local artists, container bars, a food truck, giant outdoor games and lounge seating for guests ages 21 years and older. General admission for guests ages 21 and older are $20. General admission for guests ages 18 to 20 are $25.
12. In honor of World Giraffe Day on June 21, the Lion Habitat Ranch is celebrating June 19-21 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. each day. Ozzie, Nevadas only giraffe, will paint for guests. There will also be other educational events and family fun. Local admission is $20 and guests can feed Ozzie for an additional $10.
13. Downtown Summerlin Sounds Summer Concert Series will feature Velvet Elise and Jase Naron on June 23. All concerts are free and open to the public. The first performance will take the stage at 5:30 p.m. with an acoustic act, followed by the first band set at 7 p.m. and a second set at 8:30 p.m. Families are encouraged to bring blankets and enjoy a socially distanced evening outdoors.
If you would like to submit an item for this list, send an email to joyce.lupiani@ktnv.com.
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UPDATE: California mother accused of killing son near Las Vegas waives extradition – KTNV Las Vegas
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DENVER (KTNV) UPDATE: Samantha Moreno-Rodriguez appeared in a Denver District Court this morning.
The judge denied media coverage of the hearing.
Moreno-Rodriguez waived extradition and will be transported to Nevada to face charges related to the death of her son, Liam Husted.
The judge also ordered law enforcement not to speak with her about her case before being sent back to Clark County.
ORIGINAL STORYThe woman accused of killing her son and leaving his body in the desert outside of Las Vegas is set to face a Colorado judge Thursday morning.
Samantha Moreno Rodriguez was arrested near Denver after a multi-state manhunt.
RELATED: California mother wanted in murder of 7-year-old son arrested in Denver
Police believe she killed her son, 7-year-old Liam Husted, while on a road trip from San Jose.
His body was found by hikers on a trail near Las Vegas.
It took more than a week for the police to positively identify him.
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Jol Robuchons two outstanding French restaurants reopen in July on the Las Vegas Strip – Eater Vegas
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After closing in March 2020 when the state shuttered nonessential businesses including restaurants and casinos to prevent the spread of COVID-19, two of the citys most beloved French restaurants get ready to reopen. Jol Robuchon returns July 1 at the MGM Grand and the more casual workshop LAtelier de Jol Robuchon reopens on July 15.
LAtelier de Jol Robuchon gives diners a front-row seat when they pull up a seat at the bar overlooking the kitchen to watch the artistry of the chefs. Robuchons more casual approach to dining offers tapas, a tasting menu, and wines from around the world. Patrons can even order Robuchons vision of a burger and snag a taste of his famous mashed potatoes.
Jonathan Doukhan, executive chef of LAtelier de Jol Robuchon, says his team spent the past year and change coming up with new dishes that transform commonly used ingredients into dishes never-before-seen at a Robuchon restaurant or elsewhere. The menu is both recognizable and approachable for newcomers, as well as a stimulating challenge for gourmands. The Le Saint Pierre features John Dory la plancha on a sambol of tomato, confits lime zest, and cilantro puree; Le Grenouillle comes with caramelized frog legs on creamy spelt risotto; and La Framboise brings a white chocolate sphere with fresh raspberry and yuzu ice cream.
Diners may sit next to Chuck Norris, one of the celebrity pics that line the opulently decorated space at the grand Jol Robuchon that feels like a cross between the inside of a Faberge egg and the boudoir of Marie Antoinette. The exquisitely crafted fare from the Robuchon returns, including the 15-course degustation menu. Its French grandiosity meets Asian refinement. Truffled langoustine ravioli in a foie gras sauce, a semi-soft boiled egg on a spinach puree, and Maine lobster in a thinly sliced turnip join roving cheese, bread, and mignardises carts. Do sit in the opulent lounge up front for a glass of Champagne.
Christophe de Lellis, executive chef of Jol Robuchon, says his team worked on a menu of beloved dishes for the return, such as Le Caviar Imperial with Osetra caviar served atop king crab in a crustacean gele dotted with cauliflower puree; La Langoustine with truffled langoustine ravioli served with simmered cabbage and foie gras sauce; and La Rosa, a gelee of Dassai 39 sake topped with white chocolate rose and orange coulis.
Both restaurants were part of the Eater 38 when they were open.
Robuchon died in August 2018 at age 73 due to complications of cancer. Robuchon earned the title Chef of the Century from Gault Millau in 1987.
Jol Robuchons Two Stellar Restaurants Will Return When Business Levels Allow for It [ELV]
All Coverage of Jol Robuchon [ELV]
All Coverage of LAtelier de Jol Robuchon [ELV]
How Coronavirus Is Affecting Las Vegas Food and Restaurants [ELV]
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Track trials could bring demonstrations on the medals stand – Las Vegas Sun
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Shizuo Kambayashi / AP
In this Sunday, May 21, 2017, file photo, Gwen Berry, of the United States, competes in the womens hammer throw at the Golden Grand Prix track and field event in Kawasaki, Japan. Gestures made at the Pan-Am Games in 2019 by Berry and fencer Race Imboden rekindled a contentious debate about the IOCs Rule 50. In a major shift in policy, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee has since committed to not sanction athletes who use their platform for socialdemonstrations.
By Eddie Pells, Associated Press
Thursday, June 17, 2021 | 11:45 p.m.
EUGENE, Ore. If American athletes plan to use their Olympic stage to take a knee or raise a fist, U.S. track and field trials figure to be the first place to see what sort of reaction they'll get.
The majority of America's Black Summer Olympians come from track and field, which puts the medals stand in Eugene under the spotlight when the action starts Friday. In a major shift in policy, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee resolved to not sanction athletes who use their platform for social demonstrations.
I'm happy in the sense that the United States has moved enough today that they will allow their athletes to make a statement on the victory stand as far as kneeling and putting the fist in the sky, said John Carlos, who along with Tommie Smith, raised his fist on the medals stand at the 1968 Olympics.
But the question I have is, when an athlete goes beyond the United States and steps into the realms of the international Olympic community, how supportive is the United States going to be to those athletes? Carlos said.
The USOPC stance does, indeed, set up the possibility for conflict and confusion at the Tokyo Games, where the IOC will be in charge, and has not clearly defined how it will handle violations of Rule 50 the rule that prohibits inside-the-lines demonstrations.
But at trials, which are owned and operated by U.S. entities, athletes are free to use their platform, so long as their demonstration fits within guidelines that were released earlier this spring.
An athlete might want to pay homage because they know they can do it here, and they're not sure what they can do in Tokyo, said Moushaumi Robinson, the sprinter who serves as chair of the USOPC Council on Racial and Social Justice. So, this is our battle right now, and the next battle is to wait and see what the IOC says the sanction might be there.
Gestures made at the Pan-Am Games in 2019 by hammer thrower Gwen Berry and fencer Race Imboden rekindled a contentious debate about Rule 50. After their demonstrations, USOPC CEO Sarah Hirshland sent both letters of reprimand and put them on probation.
The summer of violence and protest in the wake of last year's killing of George Floyd added a new sense of urgency to the debate. While the IOC barely budged in altering the rule, citing an international survey of athletes as a key reason to hone closely to the status quo, the attitude in America was far different.
The USOPC formed the council that Robinson leads, and that group spent months formulating a list of dos and don'ts in an attempt to lend some certainty to the complicated topic of what constitutes an appropriate demonstration.
Berry said she wouldn't be surprised if the USOPC support leads to a cascade of demonstrations in Tokyo that the IOC will be hesitant to stop.
The IOC can't punish us all, the IOC can't ban us all, and the IOC doesn't want any problems, she said in a recent interview with TV station KSDK in St. Louis.
In a letter that accompanied the guidelines for the demonstrations, Hirshland drew the ire of some U.S. athletes by adding the caveat that while we support your right to demonstrate peacefully in support of racial and social justice, we cant control the actions others may take in response.
It led to questions, the likes of which Carlos is asking, about how far the USOPC will really go to support athletes who take a stand in Tokyo.
The IOC has traditionally turned to national governing bodies to enforce its rules that was the case when Smith and Carlos got sent home after raising their fists at the 1968 Games. By taking itself out of that role, the USOPC has taken a stand, while also adding some uncertainty to the outcome of any demonstrations that occur in Tokyo.
There will be less uncertainty at trials. USA Track and Field CEO Max Siegel said I'm not dealing in hypotheticals, and I'm not at all worried because our athletes are thoughtful.
It's not new to us as an organization, us being proactive in terms of educating athletes to use their position for positive social change," Siegel said. It's what we do every day. We've been trying to educate athletes on how you can use the platform and be positive advocates.
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Son: Woman who died after hitting parked car in south Las Vegas suffered seizure before impact – FOX5 Las Vegas
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