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Ex-Knick Butch Carter joins lawsuit alleging sexual abuse by Indiana University doctor

Butch Carter became the fifth former Hoosiers player to make the allegation with his sworn testimony submitted Thursday.
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One-of-a-kind Paul Skenes card sells for $1.11M — more than Pirates ace will make this season

There was a total of 64 bids on Skenes’ debut patch card, which is autographed and contains a patch that was on the pitcher’s jersey for his heralded major league debut in May.
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Michelle Obama blames partisanship for making school lunch program controversial

Former first lady Michelle Obama said she couldn’t believe how controversial her school lunch initiative turned out to be during a recent podcast interview.
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I get a $40K a year glow-up for my jailbird boyfriend — haters say I shouldn’t primp for a prisoner

She’s all glamour, he’s in the slammer.
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Is Selena Gomez’s ‘How Does It Feel to Be Forgotten’ a diss track about ex Justin Bieber?

Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber dated on and off from 2010 to 2018.
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Big UC News From Enterprise Connect, Zoom, Cisco, Microsoft, Google, Wiz, OpenAI and Slack

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Iceland’s Minister for Children quits after admitting she had a baby with 16-year-old boy: report

Ásthildur Lóa Thórsdóttir fessed up to the secret relationship, which started she was a 22-year-old counsellor at the church group the teen attended, on Thursday after Icelandic news outlet RUV was tipped off about the saga.
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Snow White Reminds Us That Some Remakes Are Absolutely Warranted

Snow White

In a movie climate where remakes tend to draw sneers of derision and claims that people have just gotten too lazy to invent anything new, Disney’s remakes of its own products are always a chief target. It should surprise no one that a media behemoth would try to make big bucks recycling past hits. Barry Jenkins’ Mufasa: The Lion King, conceived as both a prequel and sequel to the 2019 live-action version of The Lion King, itself a reimagining of the 1994 animated film, may be the best example of the hall-of-mirrors nature of this type of filmmaking. And because Disney remakes of one sort or another just keep coming, from Mulan to Pinocchio to The Little Mermaid, the temptation to be cynical about them is enormous.

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Yet a surprising number of the Disney-remaking-itself projects have been wonderful, or at the very least, have found inventive ways to build on the appeal of their source material without slavishly duplicating it. Kenneth Branagh’s vivacious and clever Cinderella (2015), Bill Condon’s joyous, gonzo Beauty and the Beast (2017), Rob Marshall’s practically perfect Mary Poppins Returns (2018): all of these films stand proudly on the shoulders of their predecessors rather than noisily trying to improve upon them. Some of the Disney reinventions, like the 2018 Christopher Robin, Marc Forster’s almost-melancholy meditation on how easy it is to be crushed by the pressures of adulthood, are deeper than you might expect them to be—though even then, there’s always a Pooh Bear or a Piglet padding through the landscape to remind us what really matters.

Now Marc Webb’s Snow White, a live-action reimagining of Walt Disney’s enchanting 1937 animated feature, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, joins the ranks of the surprisingly pleasurable Disney remakes, thanks largely to the no-nonsense charms of its star, Rachel Zegler, whose Snow White dreams less of finding the right princely guy than of building a better world for everyone.

Read more: Every Disney Live-Action Remake, Ranked

You already know the essence of the story: Snow White is an orphaned princess forced into servitude by her vain wicked stepmother, played by a slinky-icy Gal Gadot. Webb, director of pictures like The Amazing Spider-Man and 500 Days of Summer, working from a script by Erin Cressida Wilson, begins with the backstory of the kingdom over which Snow White’s parents ruled, a place of singing, dancing peasants who celebrate not just tending the land, but sharing its riches equally among themselves. Snow White’s mother dies; her father remarries, making Gadot’s evil enchantress the new queen of the land. Then Snow White’s father leaves her behind as he embarks on a journey, never to return. The evil queen seizes the opportunity to turn the kingdom into a place of hardship and fear, and to turn Snow White into a servant-prisoner: Zegler plays her, at this stage, as a lonely young woman filled with longing for something she can’t name.

Jealous of Snow White’s beauty, the evil queen orders her killed. The footsoldier charged with the mission can’t bring himself to do it, and she escapes into the surrounding haunted forest—a terrifying place, where gnarled black tree branches grab at her as she tries to run, a detail handily re-created from the original—eventually landing at the quaint home of a group of hardworking dwarves.

SNOW WHITE

The dwarves may be the biggest misstep of this Snow White: rather than being played by real actors, they’re computer-animated figures, and though their characters are vested with appealing attributes—Grumpy is suitably crabby, and Doc is the loquacious, brainy one—there’s no getting around the creepiness of their almost-alive-but-not-quite-verisimilitude. But reimagining an old story also means new opportunities to tweak details that may have rankled in the past. In the Brothers Grimm version of Snow White most of us are familiar with, Snow White ingratiates herself with the dwarves by tidying up their living space; she’s happy to make up their small rustic beds and sweep away the crumbs from their dinner. No wonder they adore her: who doesn’t love a housekeeper who works for free? In the animated version, the animals of the forest, in thrall to Snow White’s gentle, generous nature, gamely help out—a moderate improvement. In this version, Snow White puts the dwarves to work, giving them each a job and acting as a kind of foreman. The 2025 Snow White has enough work to do, getting her kingdom back. The dwarves can make their own damn beds.

Read more: Why Disney’s Snow White Remake Is Creating Controversy

This is where the real value of a remake comes in. It’s convenient to grumble about updates that mess with the classics, but there’s nothing in the new Snow White that dishonors the earlier Disney version. If anything, it reminds us why we loved it. That goes for Condon’s Beauty and the Beast, too: its exuberant live-action retooling of the “Be Our Guest” number—replete with its Maurice Chevalier-esque singing candelabra, as well as a chorus-line-cutie lineup of dancing plates and cutlery—has a zany go-for-broke audaciousness. It’s over the top to the point of madness, but how else do you compete with the artistry of animation, which makes just about any image you can dream up possible? Condon pulls out all the stops; it’s the only rational choice.

There’s something else about these Disney remakes that sets them apart even from a lot of other current big-budget movie projects. So much of today’s moviemaking feels rushed and cheap, as if the studio-money guys have already conceded that most people are just going to watch these movies at home, slumped on their couches, anyway—why splash out? But the Disney remakes, Snow White among them, don’t skimp on the lavish details. Snow White opens with a familiar kind of movie frontispiece: the opening of a story book, this one a leather-bound beauty guarded by a chubby hedgehog. (The new Snow White features a delightful assemblage of computer-generated animals—squirrels, bunnies, swerving, tootling birds—that are much more appealing than the dwarves.) This is how we’re introduced to the story of Snow White’s parents, two kind, generous rulers who long for a child and are thrilled by their daughter’s arrival. The page margins of this storybook introduction are decorated with vivid medieval-style illuminations that appear to come to life before us. They’re just one of those little touches that show evidence of human thought and care.

That’s true of the costumes as well, designed by the great Sandy Powell, who also created a host of sumptuous and cinder-girl looks for Cinderella, as well as a gorgeous array of suitably rustic-looking World War II-era handknits for the children in Mary Poppins Returns. Powell is the master of the telling costume detail: In Snow White, she gives the evil queen a whole wardrobe of glittering, honking jewels that let us know she has grand, extravagant taste. One of the queen’s necklaces, a circlet of ruggedly cut gemstones, conjures the decadent spirit of early-1970s Yves Saint Laurent. I’d wear it in a heartbeat. Does that make me evil, too?

SNOW WHITE

People often laud Disney films for their wholesome messages, even if those are almost always the least interesting things about them. And by now, Disney’s endless parade of modern-day empowered princesses have become their own cliché. The problem with cheerfully and aggressively reminding little girls that they can do anything is that it never occurs to some little girls that they can’t: only when a grownup bends over backwards to encourage them do they begin to question their own confidence and capabilities. Refreshingly, this new Snow White pulls back a bit in the empowered-princess department. For one thing, Zegler’s prince charming isn’t actually a prince. He’s a common bandit, essentially fighting for human rights. (He’s played by Andrew Burnap.)

Snow White may resist her “prince” at first—he wins her over, funnily enough, with a slightly mocking song about her “princess problems”—but she’s not so superhuman that she can deny the pleasures of human companionship. That said, her chief goals here are civic ones, and as the kingdom of her now-dead parents lies in ruins, she dreams aloud of a better future, warning those around her not to become so accustomed to the wicked queen’s status quo that they become hardened themselves: “You’ve forgotten how things used to be,” she tells them, “when people were kind and fair.” Historically, Disney movies are anything but political; they tend to studiously avoid controversy to the point of toothlessness. But this Snow White, emerging in an era of government-sanctioned cruelty, seems to know exactly what it’s saying, even if it chooses to speak only in a discreet whisper. It’s the right Snow White for this moment. Like the animated version that preceded it—released in the midst of a depression that must have seemed never-ending to those living through it—it’s a story in search of a happy ending. Or at least an assurance that no dark, haunted forest can stretch on forever.

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Australian tourist killed and 2 injured as snorkeling boat capsizes off Indonesia’s Bali island

Australian tourist killed and 2 injured as snorkeling boat capsizes off Indonesia’s Bali island [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
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Some of History’s Worst Air Travel Disruptions

Aviation Disruption Glance

LONDON — A fire that closed London’s Heathrow Airport has sparked one of the most serious disruptions to air travel in years.

Read More: What to Do When Your Travel Plans Go South

More than 1,300 flights were canceled and hundreds of thousands of journeys were disrupted following the blaze at an electrical substation, whose cause is under investigation.

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Here is a look at some past incidents:

July 2024: Faulty software causes chaos

A faulty software update sent to millions of Microsoft customers by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike caused technological havoc worldwide. Airlines lost access to their booking systems, thousands of flights were canceled and tens of thousands were delayed, leading to long lines at airports in the U.S., Europe, Asia and Latin America.

August 2023: UK air traffic control problems

A glitch at Britain’s National Air Traffic Services in August 2023 meant flight plans had to be processed manually, rather than automatically. Hundreds of flights were delayed or canceled at the height of the summer holidays. The NATS system had already suffered several software-related failures in the years after it opened in 2002.

March 2020: COVID-19 pandemic

As a new coronavirus spread around the globe in early 2020, the world’s airports shut down. Many governments closed national borders and imposed travel restrictions. By April, the number of flights around the world had fallen by 80%. When air travel resumed, it was with masks, mandatory coronavirus tests and other measures that made flying more onerous and expensive. It wasn’t until 2024 that global passenger numbers reached 2019 levels again.

December 2018: Gatwick drone sightings

More than 140,000 travelers were stranded or delayed after dozens of drone sightings shut down London Gatwick, south of the U.K. capital and Britain’s second-busiest airport, for parts of three consecutive days before Christmas. A monthslong police investigation failed to identify the culprits or determine how many of the sightings were real.

May 2017: British Airways IT glitch

A computer failure at a British Airways data center forced the airline to cancel all flights from Heathrow and Gatwick on a holiday weekend. The airline blamed a power-supply issue for the incident which affected some 75,000 travelers.

August 2016: Delta outage

Delta Air Lines planes around the world were grounded when an electrical component failed and led to a shutdown of the transformer that provides power to the carrier’s data center. Delta said that it canceled more than 2,000 flights and lost $100 million in revenue as a result of the outage.

April 2010: Iceland’s volcano

People around the world learned how to pronounce the name of Iceland’s tongue-twisting Eyjafjallajökull volcano (ay-yah-FYAH-lah-yer-kuhl) after it roared to life, sending plumes of ash and dust into the atmosphere. Airspace over northern Europe was shut for several days and airlines canceled flights between Europe and North America because of concerns the ash could damage jet engines. More than 100,000 flights were canceled, stranding millions of passengers, at an estimated cost of $3 billion.

September 2001: 9/11

U.S. airspace was closed to commercial flights on Sept. 11, 2011 after hijackers crashed planes into the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania. Thousands of planes were grounded and flights in the air heading for the U.S. were diverted to Canada and Mexico. Flights began to resume two days later, but air travel was forever altered, with passengers facing more rigorous security, more intrusive scrutiny and longer lines.

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