Daily Archives: November 19, 2021

The ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ season 4 premiere is not one of its strongest starts (review) – Space.com

Posted: November 19, 2021 at 6:06 pm

Spoilers decloaking off the port bow!

It's been just 10 months since Michael Burnham's indecisive yo-yoing between should-she-stay-in-Starfleet and should-she-go on "Star Trek: Discovery."

Ten months since we discovered a young Kelpien with self-confidence issues stranded on a planet comprised almost entirely of dilithium accidently caused the deaths of millions of members of almost every spacefaring species in the galaxy.

And while the last season took a nosedive into absurdity in the second half, it did have one of the strongest starts of any new season of any "Star Trek" show. The first episode alone, "Hope Is You, Part 1" was one of the best episodes we've ever seen and it continued for a short while at least, which was wonderful to see.

Needless to say, we were cautiously optimistic for the fourth season premiere on the streaming service Paramount Plus. And tragically, we have to report that it's an uneven, contrived and somewhat clichd offering that leaves us feeling disappointed to say the least, but also not significantly invested in any of these characters.

Here's how to stream Star Trek: Discovery in the U.S. and check out our streaming guide for Star Trek if you're looking to expand your Trek palate.

This winter, "Star Trek: Discovery" season 4 is going up against well, just about everything. In just two weeks, "Lost in Space" returns for the third and final season on Netflix. "The Expanse" returns on AmazonPrime Video for its sixth and final season in three weeks. And in a little over a month, "The Book of Boba Fett" airs on Disney Plus.

Those three shows represent consistent high-quality, well-written science fiction and with these alternatives on offer, "Discovery" is going to have to work hard to keep up. Sadly however, judging from what we've seen already, it's not going to. If this were the Premiership, "Discovery" would be just one loss away from relegation.

It's not a crime to wish for cerebral sci-fi and "The Expanse" for example is certainly that. Moreover, it's addictive and it's a page-turner; I absolutely, positively must watch the next episode as soon as humanly possible, because I need to see what happens, because I want to know how the characters survive. This is most definitely not the case with the fourth season opening episode of "Discovery." It feels like it's been deliberately dumbed down and produced for a super-easy-to-satisfy audience. Even "Star Trek: Prodigy" which is made specifically for children doesn't underestimate its audience quite as badly as "Discovery" does.

If you recall, the first few episodes of Season 3 of "Discovery" dealt with Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) landing on the planet Hima almost a year before the USS Discovery showed up, as a result of fluctuations in the massive jump undertaken at the end of Season 2. We got an awesome introduction to the city of Mercantile and an equally awesome introduction to Cleveland Booker (David Ajala). Then not long after, the Discovery crashed on a planet known as the Colony and Tilly (Mary Wiseman) and Saru (Doug Jones) found themselves at phaser-point in an alien saloon with a nasty character called Zareh (Jake Weber).

That was all brilliant, unquestionably some of the Very Best of "Discovery." The disappointing dilithium-destroying-delinquent story arc didn't really start until half way through. But this first episode of Season 4, entitled "Kobayashi Maru" is somewhat unevenly paced.

It mulls along, quite happily, quietly culture building for just under an hour then, 30 seconds before the end, WHAM! And we're not talking about '80s pop music sensation. Or even '60s diptych pop art. No, instead we're handed a cliffhanger of profoundly out-of-proportion scale that jars spectacularly against the rest of the episode and to be perfectly honest, is far too much of a big deal to be used in the very first episode. It also means that the Another Anomaly story arc has started straight away and that really wasn't necessary. But we'll get to all that later.

Related: 'The Expanse' dials the space drama up in full trailer for Season 6

After a nearly two-minute recap of the events of the last season, we see the USS Discovery spore jumping to a point in space and Booker's ship launches form the shuttle. It performs a seemingly unnecessary disassemble-reassemble maneuver as it flies over Discovery's saucer section, which feels like it's been put there for our entertainment, rather than realism and heads down to the planet below.

What follows, to all intents and purposes, is a rehash of the beginning of "Star Trek Into Darkness" so at least the writers room is borrowing from Paramount's own IP this season. While not a first contact situation, this feels almost like a second contact situation, since diplomacy had broken down long ago between the people of Alshain IV and the Federation. Perhaps that's the influence of "Lower Decks," but more than likely not. This is an attempt to rebuild relations now that using dilithium is no longer dangerous.

After some not-unamusing cultural misunderstandings, the already-suspicious Alshains open fire on Burnham and Book who flee into the surrounding woodland. It seems the indigenous population have a symbiotic relationship with other lifeforms and are able to utilize butterfly-like creatures in order to fly. And fly they do, while still shooting and somehow still missing the two dimwitted diplomats.

Related: 'Lost in Space' Season 3 trailer shows the Space Family Robinson in danger

It could've been a fun set piece, but it drags on far too long and as such falls victim to too many clichs. For some unexplained reason, the Alshains are able to follow the undynamic duo for many miles as they flee in a transport pod, but the moment Burnham and Book cower behind a tree stump, they're utterly flummoxed. Clearly, they have no clue what a flanking maneuver is. An implausible plan is hatched, the planet's magnetic field-based sensor-satellite array is reactivated and finally the Alshains can advance up to and beyond the tree stump.

Before disappearing into the night sky, Book and Burnham beam over the promised dilithium, despite the attempts to utterly annihilate them, because that's what Starfleet does. And naturally, the moment Burnham bounds back onto the bridge of the Discovery, the leader of the Alshains, hails the Crossfield class ship and more or less apologizes. Smiles all round then.

The opening credits haven't changed very much, there's a few new graphics in there including Book's ship and an updated NCC 1031-A, plus the same utterly astounding number of producers. In fact, it feels like there's even more than before; the list of producers, co-producers, executive producers, co-executive producers, consulting producers and supervising producers takes up over half the length of the credits sequence.

We cut to what looks like a high council meeting of some sort on Kaminar in what is the first example of one of the highlights of this episode: extensive culture building and taking worlds we've seen before and adding a hole new dimension to them, after all it's been just shy of a millennia since we last saw the Kelpien homeworld. Moreover, this is the first season of "Discovery" and, in fact, the very first "Star Trek" series to air after filming with the Stagecraft LED virtual wall technology developed by ILM, Pixomondo and others and pioneered for the first season of "The Mandalorian." So we can expect some beautiful VFX set designs and this scene is one of those.

The dialogue serves largely as exposition as Saru (Doug Jones) explains to the high council how a "burn" will definitely not happen again and that the Kelpien's should look to once more reach out into space. Before long we cut to the USS Discovery and Burnham is anxious about delivering a speech to celebrate the reopening of Starfleet Academy with the President of the United Federation of Planets present. The chemistry between is Book and Burnham is boiling over with potential, yet the dialogue always seems to let them down, as it seldom feels natural. Plus, no normal couple smiles quite that much.

The President, Laira Rillak (Tara Rosling) takes over and talks to those gathered about the gallantry of the Discovery crew, so lots more smiles all round. We learned during the earlier scene on Kaminar that five months have passed since the events of the concluding episode of Season 3, so yes, there probably would still be quite a lot of this sort of thing going, after all, the "Burn" did last approximately 120 years.

This episode is guilty of a little fan service and that's fine as long as it's kept to a minimum, but to this fan, whose favorite series is "Enterprise," the announcement of the Archer Space Dock, along with a few seconds of the familiar closing theme, was rather nice. After El Presidente's speech, she thanks the Discovery's crew personally and Burnham tiptoes off to talk to now-Lieutenant Tilly.

Her promotion to first officer last season, from ensign, was controversial to say the least, since from a practical standpoint and especially one if you've actually served or are serving she simply didn't have the knowledge, training or experience for such an unprecedented jump in rank. So almost like the producer's felt it necessary to close the lid on this, Burnham reassures Tilly that she was ready.

Then the emergency transmission comes in for the set piece that will tie everything together. Deep Space Repair Beta Six has lost reactor control thrusters plus gravitational stability is also compromised and it's sending a distress call. However, whatever affected the station also knocked out the subspace relays in the area and they cannot wait for any vessel to reach them at warp so the USS Discovery must go.

At which point President Rillak insists on joining the mission and immediately sets up a predictable and somewhat clichd "who's in command here" confrontation at the crucial moment, on the bridge of the Discovery, during the rescue mission. Naturally, Burnham objects, but she's ultimately overruled, immediately setting up a nice and prickly relationship.

Then the strangest thing happens as the USS Discovery makes its spore jump; at about 23:20 in the episode, a new sound effect has been addedand well, it just sounds silly, almost like a comedy whistle that doesn't do anything for the credibility of the spore drive, which needs all the credibility it can get. Hopefully, it will be removed from future episodes, a little like how the producers got trigger happy with the phaser charge-up sound effect in the episode "Project Daedalus" (S02, E09) until the novelty wore off.

Upon reaching the station, an "Interstellar"-style rotation-match maneuver is required in order for the Discovery to mount a rescue. You'd think in the 32nd century they'd simply be able to use the tractor beam, but no adequate reason is provided as to why this isn't possible. Using the transporters is mentioned, but there's too much interference, naturally.

We cut to Kwejian, Book's beautiful homeworld, for some more culture building. He's returned to take part in his nephew Leto's (Luca Doulgeris) coming of age ceremony and it's a nice set piece, although it's now painfully obvious something is going to happen, but the sheer scale of it is still a shock. His nephew is given the traditional amulet containing the sap of the root of a sacred tree and the blood of his family, which is never taken off. However, Book no longer wears his and his brother Kyheem (Ache Hernandez) explains that it's a story that he will share another time.

At this point we return and remain with the dilemma aboard Deep Space Repair Beta Six. We cut back and forth from the Discovery bridge to Engineering and back to the station where Tilly and Adira (Blu del Barrio) are aboard. The set piece is enjoyable and successfully builds a little tension as one attempt after another to get the survivors off the doomed station fails for a variety of reasons. Naturally though, the President disagrees with almost every decision Burnham makes and the predictable confrontations occur. Meanwhile, the station and the Discovery are both being bombarded by asteroid debris thrown at them by the gravitational distortion, now positively identified as the cause of the damage to the Deep Space outpost.

One thing to note here is that as Tilly and Adira beam from the Discovery bridge to the Repair Beta Six station, their clothes change from standard uniform to a more rugged, away mission outfit and if you look closely, for a second Adira can be seen slightly surprised and checking out their new look after they materialize, so it's evidently deliberate. Are we to assume then, that in the same way beaming technology has replaced stairs as we saw in the Season 3 penultimate episode "There Is a Tide..." (S03, E12) it's also replaced dressing yourself? What's next, beaming food into your stomach to save you the time of actually having to eat it..?

There's an unexpected cut to Kaminar where an interesting conversation takes place between Su'Kal and Saru as the young Kelpien can easily see the former starship captain's desire to return to Starfleet, the Discovery and his friends. It's a nice scene, with good dialogue that hints fairly heavily at what's to come.

Through a combined effort of using the escape shuttle, Burnham's emergency EVA, the President's persuasive skills and an excessive amount of technobabble, the survivors barely make it aboard the Discovery just as the space station is destroyed and the Federation starship itself is also struck by a particularly large piece of frozen asteroid. Unfortunately, the captain of Deep Space Repair Beta Six is killed by falling debris on the bridge.

What follows is the seemingly predictable pep talk from the President to Captain Burnham. However, thankfully, it's not quite what we were expecting. Rillak uses the famous Kobayashi Maru no-win scenario to explain to Burnham that sometimes we might believe we've lost, especially if people have died, but if people have also been saved, then it shouldn't be considered a loss the lesson is acceptance. And then she reveals the real reason she's aboard; turns out the next generation of starships are under construction that feature what she calls the "pathway drive" and the prototype ship is the USS Voyager NCC-74656-J that we first caught a glimpse of in the episode "Die Trying" (S03, E05) and she's evaluating the shortlist for the center seat.

However, she says Burnham isn't ready, which puts her nose right out of joint. It seems she cannot adequately accept all potential outcomes of a command decision. "It's a matter of experience really," she says. "Your acts of bravery are irrefutable, but they are also huge swings of the pendulum and in the time of rebuilding, there is a very fine between a pendulum and a wrecking ball," she adds thus fulfilling the required role of a command character that Burnham can square off against.

We cut to the bridge as sensors have detected something strange in the Kwejian system. Book is already there and explains that his ship was struck by something on his return journey. The image is put up on the viewscreen and we see the gasping faces of many of the bridge crew, then Burnham then Book and finally the viewscreen itself. Kwejian, Book's beloved homeworld, once lush, fertile and full of symbiotic plant and animal life a bit like Pandora in "Avatar" is now, to all intents and purposes, has been reduced to a burning cinder.

And that's the end of episode one. It's a surprise that the producers went full Alderaan in the Season 4 premiere episode and such a decided, obviously included for sheer shock value, jars considerably against the rest of the episode. It's extremely unlikely that this scale of end-of-episode cliffhanger will be maintained each week, so why put it right at the beginning? Better to commit planetary genocide later in the season, surely. After the Season 3 premiere episode was all about saving the trance worm, was this a conscious decision to go in the polar opposite direction and kill them all along with everything else..?

Rating: 5 / 10

The first episode of Season 4 of "Star Trek: Discovery" is available to watch now and subsequent installments will drop every Thursday on Paramount Plus in the U.S. However, in a move that's upset rather a lot of people, "Discovery" has been removed from Netflix in all non-US/Canada regions and will not be available until Paramount Plus launches in wider European regions next year. This will not impact Canada's availability (on CTV Sci Fi / Crave) or the US region. "StarTrek: Picard" and "StarTrek: Lower Decks" will continue to be on Amazon in non-US/Canada territories.

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Apple AirPods 3rd gen: An upgrade inspired by the more expensive AirPods Pro – Hindustan Times

Posted: at 6:06 pm

Lets start off with some trivia. When was the last time the Apple AirPods got a design change? The answer is - never. Since the first generation fit into our ears back in 2016, the AirPods retained the same bud with stem design.

In fact, in these five years since, there have been three iterations of Apple AirPods, culminating into this - the third generation. The understanding being people dont necessarily upgrade wireless earbuds and headphones every year.

With the arrival of these third generation Apple AirPods, the wireless earbuds range for Apple now starts with the AirPods 2nd gen, which are still on sale for 12,900 and tops out with the AirPods Pro that have a sticker price of 24,900. These 3rd gen AirPods sit snugly in the rather wide sticker price gap, at 18,500.

Same, yet very different

The Apple AirPods 3rd gen sees the biggest design change, inspired by the more expensive AirPods Pro wireless earbuds. For all intent and purposes, the dimensions and the contours are the same as the more expensive sibling. The only differentiating factor being that the Pros get the silicon eartips whereas these dont, like their elder sibling.

The fit will still depend on your ear shape and comfort levels, but we have a feeling the chunkier new design should help these fit larger ear canals better - and stay in place.

That is one way for Apple to distinguish within the ever widening line-up as well. Perhaps that was needed, because the similarities with the AirPods Pro comes down to even the indents on each earbuds stem for the pressure sensors for touch commands and IPX4 water resistance.

Also Read: Apple will soon let you repair your iPhone, Mac at home

The white colour remains consistent, as it has over the years, with hard plastic that adds to the solidity to the overall build. If Apple had introduced the latest AirPods in some additional colour options, that wouldnt have been exactly out of place.

A Space Grey or Space Black AirPods would have their own charm. The Apple AirPods 3rd gen do get the wireless charging case with support for the MagSafe wireless charger, if you have that for your Apple iPhone.

As far as dimensions go, the Apple AirPods 3rd gen case is slightly less wide than the AirPods Pro case.

Better sound with computational audio at work

The Apple AirPods 3rd gen doesnt get active noise cancellation or a transparency mode. But these do take advantage of new acoustic drivers and amplifier hardware - these arent the same as the ones in the AirPods Pro. They get the sound signature and the overall fullness very close to the AirPods Pro, while compensating for the ambient noise that will still stream in, to a certain extent.

It is immediately noticeable how much better the bass is and the sound overall has a dollop of dynamism that the previous generation didnt have.

What hasnt changed is the neutrality of the sound. Youll immediately recognise the AirPods-esque sound and flexibility. It will be as brilliant with podcasts as it will be with a trance music playlist - dialling up whats needed when it is needed. To get this from earbuds that have an open design isnt easy, and we suspect Apples focus on computational audio (weve seen this with the HomePod Mini too) is reaping rich rewards.

The H1 chip continues to do its bit with real-time Adaptive EQ. The Spatial Audio compatibility is a nice add-on to have, considering Apple Music and Apple TV+ have enough content for you to enjoy the directional sound experience. It is nice that the Apple AirPods 3rd gen sound very similar to the AirPods Pro with Dolby Atmos content on Netflix - and while being the most inexpensive in a line-up that includes the AirPods Pro and AirPods Max, it doesnt sound any inferior.

Health-tracking in the future?

Apple has replaced the IR sensor with a new skin detection sensor, and the expectation is itll be more accurate in detecting the differences between your ear or the dark corners of your trouser pocket. We never noticed the previous generation AirPods stumble at this step, but this hardware upgrade could very well give Apple the basis to add health tracking features to the AirPods in the future - it is a rumour that refuses to go away.

More runtime on a single charge

The Apple AirPods 3rd gen is the best in terms of battery stats. These will last around six hours on a single charge with Spatial Audio off. You shave off one hour if thats on. This is more than 4.5 hours that the AirPods Pro last. The charging case on the Apple AirPods 3rd gen adds up to 30 hours of listening time before everything needs to be charged again. This is again more than 24 hours that the AirPods Pros case manages. As does the second generation AirPods.

Mind you, do not think youll be able to reverse charge by placing them on the back of your iPhone 12 or iPhone 13 - the case has been designed to specifically prevent that from happening. Youll feel a very slight magnetic tug if you glide the Apple AirPods 3rd gen case just over the back panel of your iPhone, but nothing strong enough for charging to work for hours on end.

The big question: Apple AirPods 3rd gen or AirPods Pro?

The thing is, the Apple AirPods 3rd gen is getting very close to the AirPods Pro in what matters the most - sound. That means youll need to start weighing in on what additional features mean for you. Noise cancellation. The silicon eartips option for better fit. Apart from that, the spec sheet is on an even keel. Also, the noise cancellation on the AirPods Pro is one of the better implementations youd find on wireless earbuds, and most rivals are unable to get this close, apart from Sony and Samsungs recent wireless earbuds.

In most likelihood, youd be better off saving some money and buy the Apple AirPods 3rd gen instead of the AirPods Pro. The new custom audio hardware is worth every bit of money you spend on these wireless earbuds, instead of the rivals. And the chucky design makes it a better fit even without silicon eartips, at least for most ears. Does it work for you, too?

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#FilmyFriday: Chithram: Vishnus golden rule to life is ‘living in the moment’ – Times of India

Posted: at 6:04 pm

We are back with yet another exciting episode of #FilmyFriday.ETimes presents - #FilmyFriday, wherein we recommend our readers one Malayalam movie, every week.And for this week, we have picked a screwball comedy helmed by Priyadarshan, starring Mohanlal! Well, the dynamic duo always creates magic on screen and this movie is no different.And we have chosen the evergreen movie Chithram for this week.

Director: Priyadarshan

Cast: Mohanlal, Ranjini, Nedumudi Venu, Poornam Vishwanathan, Lissy, Sreenivasan, Jagadish, Maniyanpillai Raju, KB Ganesh Kumar, MG Soman, Unni Mary, Shanavas, Thikkurissy Sukumaran Nair, Sukumari

Release year: 1988

The film opens with the visuals of a city, where Adv. Purushothama Kaimal (Nedumudi Venu) lives with his friend Ramachandran Menons (Poornam Vishwanathan) daughter Kalyani (Ranjini). Kaimal is a caretaker and more like a father figure for Kalyani as her dad lives abroad.

The camera moves into Kaimals room, and one can see a dozen or two alarm clocks ringing. Kaimal surely has trouble waking up in the morning. And now we see Kalyani, who is decked up in workout outfits, asking her Kaimal uncle to wake up. Although Kalyani is a fitness freak, her uncle seems to be not so keen, especially waking up in the morning and going for a jog. The title cards start changing as they hit the road.

Kaimal is almost done with the days workout and tells Kalyani that this wont last for so long as her dad will take her abroad soon, or marry her off to the Mangalyapuzha, her dads hometown, which is apparently in a remote village.

Although we dont affirm the Adivasi reference made by Kaimal, the dialogue that follows is something that transports the audience immediately to Mangalyapuzha. Avide Mangalam kaavund, manjadi kaadund, mangalya deviyund, mangalya puzhayund,(Kalyani- pinne ente ammavan Mamapurathe Bhaskaran Nambiyarumund), Kaimal says and the editor N Gopalakrishnan translocates the audience to Mangalyapuzha.

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#FilmyFriday: Chithram: Vishnus golden rule to life is 'living in the moment' - Times of India

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Rosie on the House: Organize decorations & wrapping before use – Arizona Daily Star

Posted: at 6:04 pm

1. Buy a gift-wrap organizer that hangs in a closet or on the back of a door. These organizers usually hold roughly a dozen rolls of wrap and have room for ribbons and bows, too.

2. Pick up a shallow, clear, plastic storage container thats long enough to hold rolls of wrapping paper and flat enough to slide under a bed. Get one with a lid that fits at least a dozen rolls of wrap.

3. Invest in a gift-wrapping station. It looks like a desk and comes with rods for hanging ribbon and rolls of wrap, drawers for storing tape and gift tags, and plenty of tabletop space for wrapping gifts and keeping scissors within reach.

4. Use a sectioned toolbox or craft organizer box to store holiday odds and ends, extra extension cords, spare holiday light bulbs, extra ornament hangers, and more.

The Professional Organizers Golden Rules

Keep these rules in mind when storing your holiday items.

Golden Rule #1: Vertical is visible, horizontal is hidden. If items get stacked, you cant see whats at the bottom.

Golden Rule #2: Store it where you use it. Keeping like items together will help save time and keep them accessible when youre ready to use them.

Golden Rule #3: Everything needs to have one home. Whatever you end up using to organize them, create one home for these items as they come out for use at the same time of year.

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JCPenney and Muhammad Ali Announce a Long-Term Strategic Partnership that Features the G.O.A.T. as the Amplifier for JCPenneys Goodwill Mission and…

Posted: at 6:04 pm

The strategic initiative kicks off this holiday season with the Be The Greatest campaign in conjunction with Step Up who has been selected as the Inaugural Cause Partner

LEWISVILLE, Texas, November 18, 2021--(BUSINESS WIRE)--JCPenney today announced that it has partnered with Muhammad Ali Enterprises, appointing the global icon as its Goodwill Ambassador. Through the long-term charitable partnership, Alis Six Core Principles will be integrated into JCPenneys community initiatives and utilized to uplift JCPenneys corporate mission to live by James Cash Penneys Golden Rule. The partnership will kick off on Nov. 30 with the Be The Greatest campaign in honor of Giving Tuesday.

To kick off the partnership, JCPenney has engaged the nonprofit Step Up to serve as the inaugural charitable partner. In celebration of Giving Tuesday, a global day of giving on Nov. 30, JCPenney and Muhammad Ali will launch the Be The Greatest campaign to inspire people to lift others up and be their best selves.

Step Up propels young women facing system barriers to pursue their dreams of success by empowering them to become confident, career-focused, and ready to join the next generation of leaders. Step Ups purpose fundamentally aligns with Alis Six Core Principles and JCPenneys values. Alis monumental life and journey were fueled by Confidence, Conviction, Dedication, Giving, Spirituality, and Respect. These Six Core Principles were the foundation of his activism and today, serve to inspire greatness in others. The Be The Greatest campaign is an evergreen initiative that will tap into Alis guiding principles and aim to inspire JCPenney associates and customers to make a difference in their communities.

Be The Greatest kicks off this holiday season with a virtual livestream event featuring a surprise guest from Muhammad Ali Enterprises, members of the JCPenney community, and Step Up leaders, students, and alumni. The occasion will be marked by a $100,000 donation to Step Up from JCPenney.

Story continues

"I have always believed that Muhammad belonged to the world," said Lonnie Ali. "The principles by which he lived are more relevant than ever in 2021. I know that Muhammad would be honored to see his Six Core Principles illuminated by JCPenney and extended to the young women of Step Up."

"We are incredibly honored to partner with one of the most influential humanitarians of all time to inspire greatness in others," said Andre Joyner, senior vice president and chief human resources officer at JCPenney. "Muhammad Alis Six Core Principles are a natural extension of JCPenneys founding principle of the Golden Ruleto treat others as we would like to be treated. Were excited to launch Be The Greatest with Step Up, especially during this season of giving."

JCPenney has supported Step Up since 2018 by providing grants for their Young Luminaries program, prom dress shopping sprees, associate mentoring opportunities, and most recently a virtual panel in association with International Womens Day and JCPenneys Womens Initiative Networking Group of Success (WINGS) Business Resource Team.

The partnership was created by Authentic Brands Group (ABG), a brand development, marketing, and entertainment company, which owns Muhammad Ali Enterprises in partnership with Lonnie Ali as trustee of the Muhammad Ali Family Trust (MAFT).

About JCPenney

JCPenney proudly serves customers at more than 650 stores across the United States and Puerto Rico, and at the Companys flagship store, jcp.com. JCPenney is one of the nations largest retailers of apparel, home, jewelry, and beauty merchandise with a growing portfolio of private and national brands. Guided by the Golden Rule, JCPenney employs more than 50,000 associates worldwide and has served customers for over 119 years, playing a vital role in the communities it serves. For additional information, please visit jcp.com and follow JCPenney on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

About Muhammad Ali

Muhammad Ali is one of the most influential athletes and humanitarians of the 20th century and has created some of the most legendary moments in sports and civil rights history. More than 50 years after he emerged as a Gold Medalist in Boxing at the 1960 Rome Olympics, Alis legacy extends beyond the ring and he continues to be widely recognized as one of the most celebrated and beloved icons of all time.

His incomparable work ethic, signature boxing techniques, and fearlessness towards standing up for his beliefs, all contribute to the legend that is Muhammad Ali. Among his countless awards and accolades, he was named Sports Illustrateds "Sportsman of the Century," GQs "Athlete of the Century," a United Nations Messenger of Peace, and has received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Amnesty International Lifetime Achievement Award. Muhammad Alis legacy is celebrated across cultures and continues to inspire todays most influential athletes, artists, musicians and humanitarians around the world.

Follow Muhammad Ali on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211118006070/en/

Contacts

Aubrey DeZego Director, Corporate Communications, JCPenneyjcpnews@jcp.com

Haley Steinberg VP, PR & Corporate Communications, Authentic Brands Grouphsteinberg@authenticbrands.com

Michelle Ciciyasvili Director, PR, Authentic Brands Group/Muhammad Alimciciyasvili@authenticbrands.com

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JCPenney and Muhammad Ali Announce a Long-Term Strategic Partnership that Features the G.O.A.T. as the Amplifier for JCPenneys Goodwill Mission and...

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What About Love of the Earth – Psychiatric Times

Posted: at 6:04 pm

We are all citizens of the same planet.

Psychiatry & Society

H. Steven Moffic, MD, talks climate change and the lukewarm climate summit. He poses the question, who are you and how do you identify as a citizen of this planet?

To see the last video in this series, watch What About Love and the Golden Rule, the Platinum Rule, and the Walrus Rule.

To see the latest in his column series, Psychiatry Views On The Daily News, see Psychedelics Providing Hope for Veterans and Others.

Dr Mofficis an award-winning psychiatrist who has specialized in the cultural and ethical aspects of psychiatry. A prolific writer and speaker, he received the one-time designation of Hero of Public Psychiatry from the Assembly of the American Psychiatric Association in 2002. He is an advocate for mental health issues relate to climate instability, burnout, Islamophobia, and anti-Semitism for a better world. He serves on the Editorial Board ofPsychiatric TimesTM.

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What About Love of the Earth - Psychiatric Times

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The Day is shining a light in East Lyme – theday.com

Posted: at 6:04 pm

In response to The Day's coverage of events at East Lyme High School, Students to protest East Lyme High Schools handling of racism, (Nov. 15):

I discern that Vice Principal Henry Kidd has spoken wisely and well in this article and I think the students are wise to call a non-violent action to bring attention to their experiences of racial oppression.

Having grown up in East Lyme where I was born in 1945, I can say we never saw a person of color in school, or in town. Because East Lyme had no high school we went on to New London High and just then my mother advised me that I would be meeting "colored children" (the term used in those days, around 1960) and, she stated, "In our family we do not discriminate."

My mom was Fran Fraser, the Day's Flanders correspondent and I am proud of her for many reasons especially her guidance on living by the Golden Rule and treating all others as kin.

East Lyme is now considered "the place to live" and I believe The Day does a service in shining a light on the shadow side of that once humble farming town now morphed/mutated into what too often appears to be a bastion of upper middle-class self-satisfaction. The light of journalism helps us recognize what we need to attend to.

Sue Fraser Frankewicz

Noank

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EADS: A kind word turneth away aggravation | Opinion | gainesvilleregister.com – Gainesville Daily Register

Posted: at 6:04 pm

You may have seen the pictures on todays front page from the United Way award luncheon at the Gainesville Civic Center.

The place was full of people who organized fundraisers in their workplaces over the last year to benefit very worthy causes around Cooke County, including Abigails Arms, CASA of North Texas, Cooke County Junior Livestock Show, Meals on Wheels of Texoma, Muenster Youth Council and a couple dozen more.

The 2022 campaign was a big success, netting over $350,000 to be turned into grants next year for the participating agencies. Everyone who participated should be proud, as pulling in that kind of money in the midst of a pandemic and topsy-turvy economy is unabashedly good work.

These noble efforts are going to help some of our neighbors and thats not nothing; however, its easy to say how wonderful these efforts are, then forget about them until next years awards luncheon. We often look at groups like the United Way and its member agencies and content ourselves that everything that can reasonably be done is being done.

But thats not really the case, is it?

Dont panic: Im not suggesting that you dig deeper into your pockets or pay more taxes. Give more if you can, by all means, but what Im getting at is more subtle.

I am suggesting that you (and I) could do more to make Cooke County a better place by doing more of the little things to take some sting out of day-to-living:

Try saying Please and Thank you all the time, and not just when youre in a good mood;

Dont get mad when the other person fails to say Youre welcome;

Dont lash out at cashiers and waitresses because youre having a crappy day;

Open doors for other people not just old ladies;

Dont stare at your phone when someone is trying to talk to you;

Turn down whatever it is youre watching when someone is trying to talk to you on the phone;

Dont join a long line at a drive-thru, then honk your horn because its taking so long;

Stay off your phone when youre driving as in dont hold it or look at it or talk on it;

Dont take everything you read on Facebook as the Gospel Truth and reject out-of-hand any assertions to the contrary;

Give the all caps and exclamation points a rest when youre texting or emailing or on social media. TRY TO MAKE YOUR POINT WITHOUT THROWING TANTRUMS!!!!!!

Being polite is not a sign of weakness, nor is it an invitation for someone to get over on you in some petty way. Your mother raised to be polite for a reason.

Will any of these suggestions cure cancer? No, of course not. They could, however, spare you and the people you come across every day a little bit of aggravation, one less thing to drag home at night after a long day at work.

Im not a churchgoer, but I do believe in the Golden Rule. Ive seen too many good turns in my life that have inspired others to better things. I choose not to pout every single time something doesnt go my way. I think I and the people in my life are better off for it, however slightly.

Give it a try, please.

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Three Reasons Why Modi Government Should Not Have Repealed the Three Farm Laws – News18

Posted: at 6:04 pm

First came the retreat. Then the surrender. Prime Minister Narendra Modis stunning decision to repeal the three farm laws will have three repercussions.

First, it will be seized upon by the Opposition as a sign of Modis political vulnerability to concerted pressure. The farmers agitation was never aimed at repealing the farm laws alone. The subterranean objective was weakening Modi ahead of the spate of Assembly elections in 2022 and the Lok Sabha poll in 2024.

Second, parallels will be drawn between the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance-II governments abject surrender to Anna Hazare in 2011 in its eighth year in office and the BJP-led NDA governments surrender to the farmers agitation in its own eighth year in power. The end result for the Congress was a collapse in credibility and a rout in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.

The parallel, however, needs a caveat. The UPA government was immersed in alleged corruption scandals. With or without the anti-corruption crusade of Anna Hazare, it was heading towards defeat. The Modi government is in a far stronger position. But warning lights are flashing.

The third repercussion of the decision to repeal the farm laws is the strengthening of a nagging perception that the Modi government will put bad politics ahead of good economics. The three farm laws were beneficial for 95 per cent of Indias farmers. Repealing them sets back agricultural reform by a decade.

Worse, giving into the bullying of violent farm union leaders like Rakesh Tikait may not have the outcome Modi is banking on. Tikait and his fellow-wealthy farmer-politician leaders will now twist the knife in. Having bludgeoned the government into defeat, it will manufacture yet another set of demands on, for example, passing an MSP law in Parliament. When you resort to a policy of appeasement, you surrender more than just your credibility. You surrender your political options.

It can be argued that while the repeal is a nakedly political move, Modi knows what hes doing. You dont win five consecutive elections (three in the Gujarat Assembly and two in the Lok Sabha) without exceptional political acuity.

The reasoning is that the farmers protests were likely to hurt the BJPs prospects in western Uttar Pradesh in the 2022 Assembly polls. The entente cordiale between the Jats and Muslim worries the BJP. In 2013, following riots in Muzaffarnagar, the cleavage between Jats and Muslims had widened. The farm laws and shrewd politicking by Tikait have bridged the gap. It could have an impact on key seats in western Uttar Ptadesh.

Meanwhile the enthusiasm with which former Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh has greeted the repeal of the farm laws could lead to a seat sharing deal with the BJP in the Punjab Assembly polls early next year. The Akalis are watching developments carefully. So are the Congress and the AAP. They will have to recalculate their projections and reset their tactics. A hung Assembly looms in Punjab.

Isnt that precisely what Modi wanted? To retreat and then strike?

Whatever the electoral consequences of this decision, Modi must remember that retreat can become a habit. We saw the Citizenship (Amendment) Act being put in cold storage with rules not yet notified. The government has sought time till January 2022 to issue them. The golden rule is: Dont pick a fight you arent sure of winning. Once is a coincidence. Twice is carelessness. Thrice is unprincipled.

Modi is the consummate politician. But he is not infallible. By repealing farm laws designed to modernise agriculture he has taken a step back in his reformist agenda. Its not his first. He retreated amid protests on land reform. Labour reform remains a work in progress.

Winning elections is important. Standing by sound economic principles is equally important. That is a question on which the electorate will shortly deliver a verdict.

The writer is editor, author and publisher. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent the stand of this publication.

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Into the Metaverse | Samuel D. James – First Things

Posted: at 6:02 pm

Its fitting that Mark Zuckerbergs company is no longer defined by the concept of social networks, but by an alternate reality altogether. Facebook recently announced it is changing its name to Metashort for metaverse. As it rebrands, it continues its movement toward posthuman ambition that has been evident for many years. For nearly a decade, Facebook has been shifting the company away from an ethos of connecting real people and toward a kind of permanent digital habitation, the contraction of life so as to fit inside algorithms.

What is the metaverse? Its an immersive network technology that promises to take users beyond the limits of physical environments. If traditional social networking connects people to one another through shared texts, images, and videos, the metaverse creates shared space through computer-generated presence. Ian Harber and Patrick Miller observe:

Harber and Miller list several examples of existing metaverse technology, such as Pokemon Go, the game in which players use augmented reality to catch digital Pokemon in real-world places.

But Zuckerbergs vision goes far beyond gaming. In his video explaining Meta and its projects, he declares that the feeling of presence [is] the defining quality of the metaverse. Youre going to really feel like youre there with other people. Youll see their facial expressions, youll see their body language . . . all the subtle ways we communicate that todays technology cant quite deliver.

This is indeed the Achilles heel of all digital technology: the inability to satisfyingly reproduce the feeling of physical community. The pandemic has reminded us that not even the swiftest text message or highest resolution Zoom call can compensate for physical isolation. But Zuckerberg and his colleagues see this not as an inherent limitation of technology but as a flaw in our humanity. If the humane minutia of personal relationships cannot be adequately simulated, the answer, according to Meta, is to make our relationships less humane.

Advocates of metaverse technology insist that there is no dilemma here. Why cant people continue to work in their offices, host dinner parties, and plan playdates, all the while using the metaverse to bridge geographic divides? But this reasoning is misguided. First, as Neil Postman observed, technologies are not epistemologically neutral. Rather, technologies create the ways in which people perceive reality. The metaverse is a teacher, and her lessons will shape her students. What are those lessons? That the human self is indistinguishable from desires or mental will, that our bodies are irrelevant at best, and that the ideal mode of life is one in which your attention can be anywhere, at any point, for any reason. The metaverse preaches the death of place.

Second, Facebooks own history strongly suggests that the goal is not balance, but an end-to-end digital existence. Few active on Facebook today will remember that the site originally required new users to be part of a preexisting college network. As the site expanded, this rule was stretched to include hometown networks; if your university wasnt listed but your city was, you could select that network and join Facebook. The network requirement was eventually dropped altogether, a move that suggested a major transition in how Facebook thought of itself. Now the goal was not to offer a technological way to connect with people already nearby, it was to redefine nearby to mean Facebook itself. Facebook became the only neighborhood that matters.

Facebooks infrastructure betrays a desire to keep its apps at the center of users lives, whether through an overwhelming number of notifications, algorithms that read and manipulate user moods, or the revelation that its leadership doesnt care about how its products affect the mental health of minors. There is no reason whatsoever to think that Zuckerberg and his team, armed with technology even more immersive and addicting, will shape users that are less hooked than they are now.

So what will happen? Much will depend on how cost-efficient the metaverse can become, but we can say confidently that Facebook's emerging vision of the good life is one in which people become polygons and places become projections. The metaverse offers a digital liturgy that will entice us to leave behind the inconveniences and limitations of bodily humanity. The yearning for hearth and homecentral to not just art and literature but to the Christian lifewill be reduced to a buffered connection. Inside the metaverse, we will become less human.

But turning our backs on God has not freed us of him. As Francis Schaeffer observed in Escape from Reason:

Our construction of an eternity unto ourselves simply betrays our incurably religious humanity. By trying to become more than creatures we have patented devices that make us more like machines. Nonetheless, not even the trillions that flow through Silicon Valley can vacuum up the divine breath of life inside us. There is a givenness to the world and to ourselves that we can ignore but not erase.

Samuel D. James serves as associate acquisitions editor at Crossway Books and publishes a regular newsletter calledInsights.

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