Categories
Entertainment

LaNisha Cole Speaks Out After Nick Cannon Forgot Onyx

LaNisha Cole, the mother of one of Nick Cannon’s daughters, speaks out after the comedian forgot to mention the child in a recent interview while naming all his children.

LaNisha Cole took to her Instagram Story to share a message

On Thursday, LaNisha Cole took to her Instagram story to share a message with the world, seemingly addressing Cannon’s failings.

“It’s not normal to play your life out in front of an audience, but this is the age we live in. That being said, a person’s path is not a straight line. There will be blind turns, peaks, valleys, and sometimes we take wrong turns or hit dead ends. Just correct course and get back on your forward path…”

Cole shared that she knows God has her and that she “got” her daughter.

“I pray every day for strength, guidance and peace. No matter where I stand on my path, I know that God has me. And I have onyx…”

Then she shared an uplifting message she had written to other moms.

“To all the mothers out there… tend your heart with the same love and patience you have for your babies. It’s not always easy, but we were built for it.”

The interview that Lanisha Cole appears to be responding to

Earlier this week interview clips of Nick Cannon appearing on ‘The Howard Stern Show’ were released.

During the interview, host Howard Stern asked Cannon if he could recite the names of all 12 of his children.

“I can name all of them [them] — Of course, can’t you name all your children?!”

Canon replied.

Stern continued by saying he will “test” the comedian. Then Cannon started listing names.

“Moroccans and Monroe, who we call Roc and Roe. Golden, Powerful and then Zion, Zillion, Zen and then from there [it’s] Legendary…then there’s Rise…”

Later in the clip, Stern informs Cannon that he skipped Onyx Ice Cole.

“You got me.”

Cannon answered Stern defeated.

Social media reacts to Nick Cannon’s mistake

Social media users were quick to react to Cannon’s mistake during the interview in the comments section of a video post created by The Shade Room.

One Instagram user, @katrinatheartist, jokingly wrote.

“Maybe some index cards or a spreadsheet would help?”

While another Instagram user, @thelovengs, reacted strongly.

“Put him on child support whoever Onyx Mama is… I can’t keep up. But bet you won’t forget them again!”

One Instagram user, @shana_jewel, even went so far as to speak out about the pain LaNisha Cole is feeling because her daughter has been forgotten.

“That must hurt Onyx Smfh’s mother.”

Roommate what do you think?

Categories
Health

Florida Home passes six-week abortion ban with DeSantis backing

The Florida House of Representatives passed legislation on Thursday that would ban most abortions after six weeks when many people are unaware they are pregnant.

The bill passed by a vote of 70 to 40, largely along party lines. The measure now goes to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is expected to sign it into law.

Just last month, he reiterated his support for tougher abortion restrictions, saying, “We welcome the pro-life legislation.”

The bill would only go into effect if the state’s existing 15-week ban is upheld in an ongoing litigation in the state Supreme Court. The Republican governor signed this ban last February, which includes no exceptions for rape, incest or human trafficking.

The new legislation would make performing an abortion after the six-week period a third-degree crime, punishable by up to five years in prison.

However, there are exceptions in the case of rape and incest up to the 15th week of pregnancy after medical determination. In these cases, a pregnant person would have to provide documents such as a medical record, a restraining order, or a police report to prove they are a victim.

DeSantis called those and rape and incest provisions “reasonable” last month.

The bill also allows abortions in serious medical emergencies. However, only on the condition that two doctors certify in writing that an abortion is necessary to save the life of a pregnant person or to avoid a serious risk of significant and “irreversible physical impairment” of a bodily function. A single doctor can make this call when a second one is unavailable for the consultation.

Abortion is also allowed up to the third trimester if a fetus has a fatal abnormality, but two doctors must confirm this in writing.

A six-week limit would align the state more closely with the abortion restrictions of other GOP-controlled states. It would effectively end Florida’s reputation as a safe haven for people from other Southern states seeking abortions.

The move could also give DeSantis a potential political boost among Republican voters ahead of a potential presidential nomination in 2024.

Before the vote, Republican lawmakers reiterated longstanding conservative views on abortion.

Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka said the bill would save lives, noting the more than 82,000 abortions recorded in Florida last year.

“Today we stand for life, we stand for mothers and we stand for families in Florida,” Persons-Mulicka said. “We can transform the culture of abortion into a culture of life.”

State Democrats have criticized the bill since it was introduced early last month. The Florida Senate’s vote to pass the law last week sparked demonstrations outside the state Capitol in Tallahassee that led to the arrests of two of the state’s Democratic lawmakers.

Other Democratic officials slammed the bill on the floor of the House of Representatives before voting.

“Abortion is health care,” Rep. Kelly Skidmore said three times in a row. “This law denies it to millions of Florida residents. This is a dangerous law. We will never agree on that.”

“What you’re doing is telling every Floridian that they need to live how you want them to live, not how they want to live,” she continued. “Stay out of my business.”

Rep. Robin Bartleman similarly said, “The right to bodily autonomy is an innate right.”

“My body is mine. We don’t want unclear laws and muddy waters,” Bartleman said.

A recent poll suggests that the six-week abortion ban is not popular with Florida residents. About 75% of more than 1,400 people opposed the ban, according to a University of North Florida poll released in March.

The bill comes as a chaotic legal battle over the abortion pill mifepristone heats up. The US 5th Circuit Court of Appeals overnight froze part of a Texas judge’s order that would have suspended the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of mifepristone.

The Biden administration will ask the Supreme Court to intervene, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Thursday.

The Florida action also marks a broader shift in abortion litigation in the United States after the Supreme Court ruled in June’s 50-year-old Roe v. Wade had picked up. After this decision, the right to abortion was largely left to individual states.

Some states have rushed to ban the procedure outright, while others have gradually introduced new restrictions. Most abortions are now banned in more than a dozen states, including Idaho, Texas, Tennessee, Wisconsin, West Virginia and Oklahoma.

Categories
Science

What will be completed to assist astronauts see in house?

Space travel takes a heavy toll on the human body. As NASA’s Twin Study shows, long-term stays in space result in a loss of muscle and bone density. There are also notable effects on the cardiovascular, central nervous system, and endocrine systems, as well as changes in gene expression and cognitive function. There’s also a visual impairment known as Spaceflight-Associated Neuro-Ocular Syndrome (SANS) that many astronauts reported experiencing after spending two months aboard the International Space Station (ISS). This results from increased intracranial pressure, which puts strain on the optic nerve and causes temporary blindness.

Researchers are looking for ways to diagnose and treat these problems in preparation for future missions that will involve long-term extra-Earth stays and space transits. A multidisciplinary team of researchers led by the University of Western Australia (UWA) has developed a breakthrough method of measuring cerebrospinal fluid pressure that could reduce the SANS risk for astronauts on long-term spaceflights. This research could have applications to the many efforts to create a human presence on the moon this decade and manned missions to Mars in the next decade.

The team was led by William H. Morgan, an ophthalmology professor specializing in glaucoma and diabetic/vascular retinopathies. He is also Director of the UWA Center for Visual Science (COVS) and Executive Director of the Lions Eye Institute in Perth, Australia. He was accompanied by researchers from the International Center for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), the International Space Center (ISC) and Murdoch University. The study describing their findings was published in npj Microgravity, a publication maintained by Nature Partner Journals (npj).

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Professor Bill Morgan, director of the Lions Eye Institute, in the laboratory. Photo credit: UWA

As Prof Morgan explained in a recent UWA press release, human bodies evolved to counteract the effects of gravity by forcing blood up into the head:

“In microgravity, this can lead to increased mean CSF pressure, which affects the retina and impairs vision and other important functions. The strength of the pulsations in the small veins of the retina should in principle depend on the CSF pressure. All blood vessels experience tiny pulsations that come from the heartbeat.”

Until recently, intracranial pressure could only be measured through a spinal tap, a burr hole in the skull, or other invasive procedures that are painful, risky, and difficult to perform in microgravity. For their study, Morgan and his collaborators used a special eye camera to measure tiny changes in pulsation in subjects placed in different positions on a tilt table. This mimicked the effects of variable gravity on CSF pressure, simulating what astronauts experience transitioning to microgravity and back.

According to co-author Danail Obrezhkov, associate professor at the International Center for Radio Astronomy Research and director of the International Space Center, her team has developed the first non-invasive method of measuring pressure changes in cerebrospinal fluid that can be safely performed in space. This outcome study could be crucial in overcoming a type of blindness that often develops in astronauts on long-duration space flights. Said Obrezhkov:

“So-called space-associated neuroocular syndrome is one of the most serious risks faced by astronauts on long-haul flights and one that NASA has identified as a significant challenge for future human missions to Mars. Tilt-table experiments on Earth are the only way to controllably change the gravitational force on the human body, and have allowed us to change CSF pressure in small, defined increments. It also forced us to develop systems that can be used in any posture, which is portable, small, handheld devices that are essential if such systems are to be deployed in space.”

Astronauts in freefall on the International Space Station. Photo credit: NASA/ESA

Their findings could also lead to the development of wearable, handheld devices that could monitor intracranial pressure in astronauts, providing an inexpensive and low-risk means of quickly diagnosing SANS. It could also lead to the development of new treatments that mitigate the effects and ensure astronauts maintain healthy vision during long-term stays in space. This study is part of a larger research constellation examining the long-term effects on muscle, bone, and organ health that could lead to new treatments that will facilitate human space exploration (and perhaps even colonization).

Further reading: UWA

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Categories
Sport

What’s at stake on 15-game Thursday

7:00 AM ET

  • Tim KavanaghESPN.com

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      Tim Kavanagh is a senior NHL editor for ESPN. He’s a native of upstate New York.

Tonight was the originally scheduled final set of games for the 2022-23 NHL regular season, with 30 teams in action. Thanks to a pair of postponements — because of flooding at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and a wild winter storm hitting Buffalo — there will be two games tomorrow (Colorado Avalanche-Nashville Predators and Buffalo Sabres-Columbus Blue Jackets), although those games might be largely irrelevant to final playoff seeding based on what happens tonight.

Let’s dive into the implications of each of tonight’s games, a slate that includes a doubleheader on ESPN:

Boston Bruins at Montreal Canadiens, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): The Bruins have locked up the No. 1 seed throughout the playoffs and have already set records for regular-season wins and points. Although load management isn’t a prevalent strategy in hockey compared with other sports, there might be some Bruins who get a maintenance day here. As for the Canadiens, thanks to a loss against the Islanders on Wednesday, they’re currently No. 5 in the draft lottery standings. They cannot get into the top 3, but a win here coupled with a Coyotes loss would put them sixth.

New Jersey Devils at Washington Capitals, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): New Jersey authored one of the most epic turnarounds in recent history, going from a lottery team to hosting a first-round playoff game — and they can move up even higher if things break properly. They’re currently a point behind the Hurricanes but have an edge in regulation wins; any outcome that results in them tying (or besting, obviously) the Canes in the standings would thus give them the Metro Division title. The Capitals are eighth in the draft lottery standings, but a win could push them as far down as 11th — the good news is that thanks to the latest lottery rules, a team can move up a maximum of 10 spots, meaning they’d still be eligible to reach No. 1.

Pittsburgh Penguins at Columbus Blue Jackets, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): A loss to the Blackhawks on Tuesday put the Penguins in a bad spot, and the Isles’ win against the Canadiens on Wednesday sealed the deal to boot the Pens from the playoff field. Pittsburgh will finish in the bottom 3 of the draft lottery. Heading into this contest, the Blue Jackets stand alone in the basement of the league standings, giving them the best draft lottery odds. They can move down as far as No. 3 based on the outcomes of the games involving the Ducks and Blackhawks.

Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): These two teams are locked into their playoff positions: the Maple Leafs will host the Lightning in the Atlantic Division bracket, while the Rangers will be the No. 3 seed in the Metro, visiting either the Devils or the Hurricanes to start their postseason journey. However, there are some milestones in play: Mitchell Marner has 99 points, William Nylander has 39 goals, Mika Zibanejad also has 39 goals, and Adam Fox is four points from hitting a new single-season high (he had 74 last season).

Ottawa Senators at Buffalo Sabres, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): Both of these teams entered the season as potential disrupters of the Atlantic Division hierarchy. That didn’t quite happen, but the Sabres made it to the final week still alive for a spot, while the Senators have been playing effective spoilers the past month. A win in regulation by the Sens would push them ahead of the Sabres in the standings (and behind them in the draft lottery order); neither club is in range to land the No. 1 pick if it wins a lottery draw, but each could move into the top 5 in what is being billed as a very strong class of prospects.

Carolina Hurricanes at Florida Panthers, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): The math is simple for the Canes: Win this one in any fashion and they clinch the Metro Division title and a first-round date with the Islanders. Lose in any fashion, and they could wind up as the No. 2 seed (and play the Rangers) based on what the Devils do in their game. As for Florida, the Islanders’ win Wednesday night means they need two points to stay in the first wild-card spot and get the Metro winner in Round 1; a loss means they’re shipping up to Boston. If the Panthers win in regulation and the Devils lose in regulation, the Canes stay in the top spot and take on the Panthers again in Round 1.

Detroit Red Wings at Tampa Bay Lightning, 7 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): Tampa Bay will take on Toronto in the first round, so in theory the Bolts don’t have much on the line here. But they’ve lost four straight games (and 8 of 11 going back to March 19), so it might be good to get back on the positive side of the scoreboard once before the postseason begins. The Red Wings sit ninth in the draft lottery standings, and a win could drop them as far as 11th. That reduces their draft lottery chances but does still keep them in range of getting the No. 1 pick should they win the first draw.

Winnipeg Jets at Colorado Avalanche, 8 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): The Avalanche are duking it out with the Stars for the Central Division crown, and a win here would mean they’d have 107 points, with a game on the docket against the Preds on Friday. The Stars have 106 points, with a return match against the Blues tonight; a Dallas win tonight coupled with a Colorado loss of any kind against Winnipeg clinches the division for the Stars (thanks to the regulation wins tiebreaker). The Jets are locked in to the second wild-card spot, which most likely means a first-round date with the Pacific Division champ (currently the Golden Knights).

St. Louis Blues at Dallas Stars, 8 p.m. (ESPN): Don’t adjust your device: These teams did just play Wednesday night, a 5-2 win by the Stars. If the Stars win again tonight, that puts them at 108 points, ahead of the Avs when it comes to the Central Division’s No. 1 seed regardless of tonight’s game for Colorado. However, the Avs have a game Friday and could jump back over the Stars should they win that final one. The winner of the Central gets the top wild card, which is currently the Kraken. Meanwhile, the Blues are locked into a top-11 spot in the draft lottery, meaning they could land the No. 1 pick with a lot of luck, jump-starting a reboot that began with their in-season trades of Ryan O’Reilly and Vladimir Tarasenko.

Minnesota Wild at Nashville Predators, 8 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): The Wild’s loss to the Jets on Tuesday locked them in as the Central’s No. 3 seed, so they’ll visit either the Stars or the Avalanche to begin the postseason. Meanwhile, the Predators will be in the bottom 3 of the draft lottery standings entering the first offseason of new GM Barry Trotz’s tenure.

Philadelphia Flyers at Chicago Blackhawks, 8:30 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): It’s a rematch of the 2010 Stanley Cup Final! These two franchises have obviously seen more competitive days, and both are in the mix to win the draft lottery and boost their rebuilds. The Flyers are locked into the No. 7 spot in the lottery standings, while the Blackhawks are currently third but could drop to fourth with a win and a regulation loss by the Sharks.

San Jose Sharks at Edmonton Oilers, 9 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): The Oilers have been one of the NHL’s hottest teams of late, winning eight straight games and going 17-2-1 since March 1. The Pacific Division crown is theirs with a win here and a regulation loss by the Golden Knights; any other result and they’ll be the No. 2 seed and host the Kings to begin their playoff path. The Sharks are fourth in the draft lottery standings and can’t get any lower, but they could move up to No. 3 if they lose in regulation and the Blackhawks win.

Los Angeles Kings at Anaheim Ducks, 10 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): L.A. has been leaking oil a bit heading into the homestretch, going 8-5-2 since March 11. They can’t get any higher than the No. 3 seed in the Pacific, but they could fall back into a wild-card spot with a regulation loss and a win of any kind for the Kraken. The Ducks are currently second in the draft lottery and would move up to first if they lose in regulation and the Blue Jackets earn one or more points against the Penguins; they can also fall to third if they earn more standings points tonight than the Blackhawks.

Vancouver Canucks at Arizona Coyotes, 10 p.m. (NHL Power Play on ESPN+): Both of these teams have been eliminated from the playoffs for a while, but their precise lottery position remains to be determined. The Yotes are one point ahead of the Canadiens in the standings (with one less regulation win), so they will hope to avoid a regulation win here to give themselves the best chance at remaining No. 6 in the standings. Also, Yotes forward Clayton Keller is one point behind Keith Tkachuk for the single-season Coyotes scoring record (86), all the more impressive given that he broke his leg March 31 of last season. The Canucks are currently 10th, and they can climb as high as eighth or go as low as 11th based on a win (and the results for the Capitals, Red Wings and Blues).

Vegas Golden Knights at Seattle Kraken, 10:30 p.m. (ESPN): In the nightcap, the Golden Knights are looking to lock in the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference with a win of any kind or a loss in overtime or shootout. A regulation loss coupled with a win of any kind for the Oilers would make Edmonton the West’s No. 1 seed. The Kraken are in the first wild-card spot and can’t be caught from behind. However, a win for Seattle combined with a regulation loss for L.A. would push the Kings down to the wild card and the Kraken up to the No. 3 seed in the Pacific.

Jump ahead:
Current playoff matchups
Today’s schedule
Last night’s scores
Expanded standings
Race for No. 1 pick

Current playoff matchups

Eastern Conference

A1 Boston Bruins vs. WC2 New York Islanders
A2 Toronto Maple Leafs vs. A3 Tampa Bay Lightning
M1 Carolina Hurricanes vs. WC1 Florida Panthers
M2 New Jersey Devils vs. M3 New York Rangers

Western Conference

C1 Dallas Stars vs. WC1 Seattle Kraken
C2 Colorado Avalanche vs. C3 Minnesota Wild
P1 Vegas Golden Knights vs. WC2 Winnipeg Jets
P2 Edmonton Oilers vs. P3 Los Angeles Kings

Thursday’s games

Note: All times Eastern. All games not on ESPN, TNT or NHL Network are available via NHL Power Play, which is included in an ESPN+ subscription (local blackout restrictions apply).

Boston Bruins at Montreal Canadiens, 7 p.m.
New Jersey Devils at Washington Capitals, 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh Penguins at Columbus Blue Jackets, 7 p.m.
Toronto Maple Leafs at New York Rangers, 7 p.m.
Ottawa Senators at Buffalo Sabres, 7 p.m.
Carolina Hurricanes at Florida Panthers, 7 p.m.
Detroit Red Wings at Tampa Bay Lightning, 7 p.m.
Winnipeg Jets at Colorado Avalanche, 8 p.m.
St. Louis Blues at Dallas Stars, 8 p.m. (ESPN)
Minnesota Wild at Nashville Predators, 8 p.m.
Philadelphia Flyers at Chicago Blackhawks, 8:30 p.m.
San Jose Sharks at Edmonton Oilers, 9 p.m.
Los Angeles Kings at Anaheim Ducks, 10 p.m.
Vancouver Canucks at Arizona Coyotes, 10 p.m.
Vegas Golden Knights at Seattle Kraken, 10:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Wednesday’s scoreboard

Watch “In the Crease” on ESPN+ for highlights from every game.

New York Islanders 4, Montreal Canadiens 2
Dallas Stars 5, St. Louis Blues 2
Calgary Flames 3, San Jose Sharks 1

Expanded standings

Atlantic Division

Points: 133
Regulation wins: 53
Playoff position: A1
Games left: 1
Points pace: 135
Next game: @ MTL (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 109
Regulation wins: 41
Playoff position: A2
Games left: 1
Points pace: 110
Next game: @ NYR (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 96
Regulation wins: 37
Playoff position: A3
Games left: 1
Points pace: 97
Next game: vs. DET (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

Points: 92
Regulation wins: 36
Playoff position: WC1
Games left: 1
Points pace: 93
Next game: vs. CAR (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 87
Regulation wins: 29
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 2
Points pace: 89
Next game: vs. OTT (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 85
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 86
Next game: @ BUF (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 80
Regulation wins: 28
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 81
Next game: @ TB (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 68
Regulation wins: 21
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 69
Next game: vs. BOS (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Metropolitan Division

Points: 111
Regulation wins: 38
Playoff position: M1
Games left: 1
Points pace: 112
Next game: @ FLA (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 110
Regulation wins: 39
Playoff position: M2
Games left: 1
Points pace: 111
Next game: @ WSH (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 107
Regulation wins: 37
Playoff position: M3
Games left: 1
Points pace: 108
Next game: vs. TOR (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Playoff Hockey Challenge

Pick the winners and crown your Stanley Cup champion! Make Your Picks

Points: 93
Regulation wins: 36
Playoff position: WC2
Games left: 0
Points pace: 93
Next game: None
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 90
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 91
Next game: @ CBJ (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 79
Regulation wins: 27
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 80
Next game: vs. NJ (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 73
Regulation wins: 26
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 74
Next game: @ CHI (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 57
Regulation wins: 15
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 2
Points pace: 58
Next game: vs. PIT (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Central Division

Points: 106
Regulation wins: 38
Playoff position: C1
Games left: 1
Points pace: 107
Next game: vs. STL (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 105
Regulation wins: 34
Playoff position: C2
Games left: 2
Points pace: 108
Next game: vs. WPG (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 102
Regulation wins: 34
Playoff position: C3
Games left: 1
Points pace: 103
Next game: @ NSH (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

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Points: 95
Regulation wins: 36
Playoff position: WC2
Games left: 1
Points pace: 96
Next game: @ COL (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 90
Regulation wins: 29
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 2
Points pace: 92
Next game: vs. MIN (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 81
Regulation wins: 27
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 82
Next game: @ DAL (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 69
Regulation wins: 20
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 70
Next game: vs. VAN (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 58
Regulation wins: 18
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 59
Next game: vs. PHI (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Pacific Division

Points: 109
Regulation wins: 37
Playoff position: P1
Games left: 1
Points pace: 110
Next game: @ SEA (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 107
Regulation wins: 44
Playoff position: P2
Games left: 1
Points pace: 108
Next game: vs. SJ (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 102
Regulation wins: 36
Playoff position: P3
Games left: 1
Points pace: 103
Next game: @ ANA (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Watch NHL games on ESPN networks

This season will include 103 exclusive regular-season games across ESPN, ESPN+, Hulu and ABC. More than 1,000 out-of-market games will be available to ESPN+ subscribers via NHL Power Play on ESPN+.
• How to watch
• Subscribe to ESPN+
• Stream the NHL on ESPN

Points: 100
Regulation wins: 37
Playoff position: WC1
Games left: 1
Points pace: 101
Next game: vs. VGK (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Points: 93
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 0
Points pace: 93
Next game: None
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 81
Regulation wins: 24
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 82
Next game: @ ARI (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 60
Regulation wins: 16
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 1
Points pace: 61
Next game: @ EDM (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

Points: 58
Regulation wins: 13
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 2
Points pace: 60
Next game: vs. LA (Thursday)
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: E

P — Clinched Presidents’ Trophy; Y — Clinched division; X — Clinched playoff berth; E — Eliminated from playoff contention

Race for the No. 1 pick

The NHL uses a draft lottery to determine the order of the first round, so the team that finishes in last place is not guaranteed the No. 1 selection. As of 2021, a team can move up a maximum of 10 spots if it wins the lottery, so only 11 teams are eligible for the draw for the No. 1 pick. Full details on the process can be found here. Sitting No. 1 on the draft board for this summer is Connor Bedard, who has been lauded as a generational talent.

Points: 57
Regulation wins: 15

Points: 58
Regulation wins: 13

Points: 58
Regulation wins: 18

Points: 60
Regulation wins: 16

Points: 68
Regulation wins: 21

Points: 69
Regulation wins: 20

Points: 73
Regulation wins: 26

Points: 79
Regulation wins: 27

Points: 80
Regulation wins: 28

Points: 81
Regulation wins: 24

Points: 81
Regulation wins: 27

Points: 85
Regulation wins: 31

Points: 87
Regulation wins: 29

Points: 90
Regulation wins: 29

Points: 90
Regulation wins: 31

Points: 93
Regulation wins: 31

Categories
Entertainment

Love Is Blind’s Bartise shares cute new footage of Child Boy

Bartise BowdenThe love for his son is evident.

Almost a week after announcing he’s had a baby boy, the Love is Blind alum shared new footage of their father-son bonding time.

In an April 11 TikTok, Bartise can be seen cradling his newborn while he’s fast asleep and later snapping photos of him while he’s wide awake at family gatherings. The Netflix star captioned the post, “First Easter for the little man.”

The adorable footage comes just days after the Perfect Match star revealed he’s entering a new chapter in his life as a father.

“Might have been the villain on TV but I will be the hero to him,” Bartise wrote alongside his April 7 social media post announcing the news. “Instagram, meet my little man #bigfella.”

The 27-year-old, who has not revealed the identity of his child’s mother, also noted that he went from “zaddy on screen to dad in real life”.

Categories
Technology

ESA’s house mission to Jupiter launches in the present day

The European Space Agency (ESA) Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer mission – “Juice” – is ready to begin its journey to the largest planet in the solar system.

Juice is scheduled to launch today, April 13, at 14:15 CEST (13:15 BST). Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.

Juice will make the 8-year, 6.6 billion km journey to study three of Jupiter’s moons: Ganymede, Callisto and Europa. Each of these worlds has an ocean of water hidden beneath an icy shell – an important goal for astronomers looking for life beyond Earth.

The ESA will stream the launch live on its website and further his YouTube channel which you can view below. French viewers have access ESA’s Web TV Two.

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The satellite will lift off over Europe Ariane 5 rocket. Due to the intricacies of the trajectory that Juice will take to Jupiter, the rocket must lift off within a one-second window. Fortunately, additional one-second launch windows will be available each day until the end of April should today’s launch not be successful.

The Ariane 5 rocket will launch Juice into orbit. The launch is the penultimate flight of the heavy-lift Ariane 5, which will soon be retired after more than 30 years of service. Photo credit: ESA.

If all goes according to plan, Juice will separate from the Ariane 5 upper stage at 14:42 CEST before transmitting its first signal to the surface at 14:51 CEST. The space agency expects the solar arrays to be fully deployed by 3:55 p.m. EDT.

0️⃣ Good morning on the launch day of #ESAJuice!

How to follow👉https://t.co/WoeO7VSwWQ

Key moments (time = CEST):
🔴 13:45 live launch program starts at esawebtv
🚀 14:15 start
📡 14:51 detection signal (earliest)
🛰️15:55 Use of the solar system (time may vary)

Questions? #AskESA! pic.twitter.com/oaV77pV5iz

— ESA’s Juice Mission (@ESA_JUICE) April 13, 2023

Juice is equipped with two surveillance cameras that will capture parts of the deployment of the solar array after launch and the deployment of the 16 m long radar antenna a few days later. If suitable images are acquired, they will be made available for publication at the earliest possible date, ESA said.

In the two weeks following launch, the satellite will deploy all of its antennas and instrument booms. This will be followed by a three-month period during which all of the spacecraft’s science instruments will be commissioned.

sap satellite launch ESA jupiterAriane 5 (left) Juice is released into space just 28 minutes after launch. Photo credit: ESA.

It will be even longer before its first flyby, which is scheduled for August 2024. Then, about a day and a half later, it will fly past the moon and then Earth. The satellite will use the Earth-Moon gravitational field to propel itself towards Jupiter.

Juice is scheduled to arrive at Jupiter in July 2031.

Categories
Health

The ruling in opposition to the abortion tablet places “judge-buying” issues again into the limelight

A pivotal dispute over the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of the abortion pill mifepristone has sparked new allegations of “judge shopping” by plaintiffs seeking a favorable audience for their litigation.

Much of the abortion pill litigation has taken place in Amarillo, Texas, which has a federal division with only one district judge, Matthew Kacsmaryk.

Kacsmaryk, who was appointed to the Bundesbank by former President Donald Trump in 2019, previously worked for the conservative Christian rights group First Liberty Institute and represented socially conservative views on LGBTQ rights and abortion.

By filing the lawsuit in Amarillo, the cadre of anti-abortion groups seeking to have the drug revoked by the FDA virtually guaranteed that Kacsmaryk would hear their case. Critics have accused the plaintiffs of targeting Kacsmaryk as chair of the case because he was seen as more sympathetic to their arguments that the drug, approved in 2000, had major safety concerns.

“We can’t always predict that judges will act according to their biographies,” Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California, Davis, told CNBC.

But “if you’re the Alliance Defending Freedom” — the rights group representing some of the plaintiffs — “you’re going to want someone like this [Kacsmaryk] because your chances will be better,” she said.

The Amarillo court did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

The strategy of targeting one-judge sections harms perceptions of judicial fairness, critics say. They argue that plaintiffs are bypassing the usual process of randomly assigning cases — which is designed primarily to “avoid judge shopping,” according to a federal court.

Kacsmaryk on Friday suspended mifepristone approval, giving the Biden administration time to appeal. On the same day, another federal judge ordered the FDA not to restrict the pill’s availability in 17 states, essentially contradicting the Texas judge’s decision. The matter could go all the way to the US Supreme Court, which has a Conservative majority of 6-3.

A ruling on the legal status of the pill will have massive ramifications across the country, including in states that allow abortion following the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Tilting Wade last year remains legal. Medical abortion is the most common form of surgery in the United States

A lawyer for one of the plaintiffs has denied allegations of judge purchasing.

“We’re very confident that any judge who looks at FDA regulations and what the FDA actually did will rule for us,” Denise Harle, senior counsel for the Alliance Defending Freedom, told Fox News in February. “That’s what we’re looking for, just a fair trial, a fair opportunity to make our case in court.”

Harle also told Fox that the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, a group of anti-abortion doctors represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom, is based in Amarillo.

But the Kacsmaryk courthouse has reportedly become a prime target for conservative legal affairs. The judge has repeatedly sided with the challenges of the Biden administration’s policies.

Other judges have sparked similar allegations. Trump was accused of shopping for judges in Florida for his nominated federal judge Aileen Cannon when he filed a sweeping lawsuit against his former political rival Hillary Clinton in Cannon’s division in 2022.

That case was instead assigned to Judge Donald Middlebrooks, an appointee for former President Bill Clinton. Middlebrooks dismissed it.

But Cannon was randomly assigned to another Trump trial months later, which asked a judge to appoint a “special master” to review government documents the FBI found in a raid on the ex-president’s Mar-a-Lago resort confiscated in August. Cannon granted Trump’s request, surprising some legal experts at the time.

It is not new for litigants to seek to have their cases heard in the most favorable environment. The strategy is also nonpartisan: Ziegler noted that a challenge to then-President Trump’s controversial travel ban in Hawaii was filed in 2017.

This type of forum shopping is “always a kind of imperfect substitute” for those who are looking for a sympathetic judge, Ziegler said. She found that there are progressive judges in conservative states and vice versa.

However, by filing a complaint in a chamber with a single judge, it is easier for a plaintiff to target a specific judge.

Constitutional law expert Steve Vladeck wrote in February: “Of the 27 divisions of Texas’ four circuit courts, nine have a single judge; ten others have only two.”

In a separate case brought before Kacsmaryk this year, the Justice Department requested a transfer to another federal court, arguing that the decision to place the Amarillo court “undermine public confidence in the administration of justice” because the court “has no connection to this dispute.” Kacsmaryk refused this request.

Another DOJ letter in February singled out Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and accused the Republican official of filing 18 of his 28 lawsuits against the Biden administration in one-judge divisions. Paxton’s office has defended its decisions on where to file its cases, telling CNN last month that the Biden administration’s allegations risk “undermining public confidence in the legal system.”

Ziegler shared the view that even the appearance of judge purchases can erode trust in the courts.

“When the public knows that you can order an outcome by picking a judge, it becomes really difficult to convince the public that the courts are legitimate,” she said.

Categories
Science

“Sustainable Power for the Entire Earth” – watts with that?

MANHATTAN CONTRARIAN

Franz Menton

One of the core themes of this site for several years has been conducting reality checks on the plans of Net Zero’s central planners. Is there a possibility that these zero-carbon economies will work? Or is it just dreams that ignore obvious physical obstacles in a religious zeal to achieve an imaginary utopia of the future?

My previous writings on this subject are summarized in my December 2022 report The Energy Storage Conundrum and in my recent posts (here and here) on the work of Bill Ponton in relation to the UK.

On April 5, Tesla launched a major report of its own entitled Sustainable Energy for the Whole Earth. Tesla comes to opposite conclusions from me and the people I have quoted in my writings on the subject. From the summary:

This paper states that sustainable energy management is technically feasible and requires less investment and less depletion of materials than continuing today’s unsustainable energy management. While many previous studies have come to a similar conclusion, this study seeks to advance thinking in terms of material intensity, production capacity and manufacturing investments required for a transition across all energy sectors worldwide.

Could it be? Finally, this Tesla report is clearly backed by many millions of dollars in funding, with dozens of smart and highly paid people working on sophisticated computer models for months or even years to achieve impressive results. In contrast, the people whose work I have relied on – Roger Andrews, Ken Gregory, Bill Ponton – as well as myself are all unpaid volunteers working on my own with no resources other than the Internet and perhaps an Excel spreadsheet.

Before I go into some specifics, I should mention that I have a lot of admiration for Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk. He is a true creative business genius. However, let’s not lose sight of the fact that all of its key businesses before Twitter — electric vehicles, batteries, solar panels, space launches — depend almost entirely, if not entirely, for their revenue on the use of government subsidy and handout programs . In particular, the electric vehicle business, which accounts for the lion’s share of Musk’s net worth, has a valuation that can only be justified by the belief that essentially all vehicles will soon be electrified. Until now, EV market share has depended almost entirely on a combination of government subsidies and coercion (e.g., “fuel economy” standards that exempt EVs). If EVs don’t hit the auto market, Musk may not be wealthier than you or me by 2030. I suggest keeping this in mind as you look at Tesla’s Sustainable Energy report.

There is a huge amount of detail here and I only have time for so much. But let’s take a look at how this report proposes to deal with energy storage for the US. Recall that Ken Gregory calculated that with a full switch to wind and solar power, the US would need to store about 250,000 GWh (that would be 250 TWh ) to achieve full annual storage given the seasonal pattern of wind and solar power generation. and go through the discharge cycle. Try deploying the 250 TWh of storage with lithium-ion batteries at $200/KWh and that will net you about $50 trillion. Given the current US annual GDP of under $25 trillion, that would be a bit prohibitive.

Here’s the chart from the Tesla report on how they plan to handle storage in the US:

As you can see, their answer is almost all hydrogen. The proposed total storage of 120 TWh is less than half of what Gregory calculated would be needed, but not far out of range.

For Tesla, the idea of ​​using hydrogen for storage is a lot less crazy than relying mostly on batteries. But as discussed in my Energy Storage report, hydrogen produced by electrolysis from water and using only renewable electricity is far from cheap. For my report, I found a figure of $4-6/kg to produce this “green” hydrogen, which equates to a price of $32-48/MMBTUs (the units in which natural gas prices are usually quoted). In contrast, natural gas prices have fluctuated, but over the last ten years they have always been below $10/MMBTU and mostly around $3-5/MMBTU. The current price is closer to $2/MMBTU. The Tesla report quotes a price of around $3/kg ($24/MMBTU) just for storing the hydrogen annually.

As also discussed in my energy storage report, hydrogen is more difficult to manage than natural gas in every way. It’s less energy-dense (which means more pipeline capacity is needed to carry the same amount of energy), it embrittles steel pipes, it’s more explosive and dangerous, it’s more prone to leaks, and so on. Switching to hydrogen as a vehicle for energy storage would mean creating an entire national infrastructure of new plants. Almost none of this currently exists, is under construction or even in the planning phase. I can’t find any effort in the Tesla report to estimate the cost of this.

And private investments won’t build it. Why? For the simple reason that natural gas is cheaper and better in every respect. No one is going to buy green hydrogen at $40/MMBTU when natural gas is available at $5, and no one is going to build infrastructure to transport and store hydrogen until the price is competitive.

So Tesla can say whatever they want that their zero-carbon energy system “requires less investment and less material degradation,” but the fact is, the market says otherwise. The whole “hydrogen economy” thing is entirely dependent on a new economy of central government planning and handouts, and is sitting around waiting for the next round of hundreds of billions of dollars in government subsidies to get it going.

Without going into detail about other sections of the Tesla report, I’m just saying that there are many obvious fantasies. How about air travel, for example? No problem!:

Long-haul flights, which account for an estimated 80% of air travel energy use (85 billion gallons/year of jet fuel worldwide), can be powered by synthetic fuels generated from surplus renewable electricity using the Fischer-Tropsch process, which produces a mixture from carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H2) to synthesize a variety of liquid hydrocarbons and has proven to be a viable route for the synthesis of synthetic jet fuel.

Just another little thing that needs to be reinvented from scratch.

Why would a Tesla issue such a report? It doesn’t take much thought to understand why. Inspiring bureaucrats to realize their utopia is the path to the mandates and subsidies for electric vehicles and batteries for decades to come that will keep Musk as the world’s richest man. And what if everything doesn’t work out in the end? someone else’s problem

So, Mr. Musk, if all of this can be done for “less investment” than our current system, there should be real money in building the demonstration project to show us all how it works. How about taking one of the smaller Hawaiian islands (Maui?) and installing the wind turbines, solar panels, hydrogen electrolysers and storage facilities to go 100% carbon free? Hawaiians will all save money and you will make billions more. I hereby call your bluff. Open up or shut up!

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Categories
Sport

The $1 million shot that modified sports activities contests endlessly

Apr 11, 2023

  • Ryan Hockensmith

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      Ryan Hockensmith is a Penn State graduate who joined ESPN in 2001. He is a survivor of bacterial meningitis, which caused him to have multiple amputation surgeries on his feet. He is a proud advocate for those with disabilities and addiction issues. He covers everything from the NFL and UFC to pizza-chucking and analysis of Tom Cruise’s running ability.

RIGHT BEFORE HE HEAVED the million-dollar shot, the one that would launch an era of sports contests and change his life forever, Don Calhoun took a long look at his shoes.

He was only out here standing on the floor of Chicago Stadium on April 14, 1993, 15 feet from Michael Jordan and the Bulls, because of his shoes. “Those won’t scuff the court,” an arena worker said as she signed Calhoun up for a $1 million, three-quarter-court contest shot that the Bulls had been running every night.

As he stared at his feet, waiting to be told it was his turn to take the shot, he was warned, “Whatever you do, don’t step over the free throw line.” Calhoun, a 23-year-old office supply salesman from the Chicago area, darted his eyes from his non-scuffing sneakers to the free throw line about 80 feet from the hoop he needed to make.

The impossibility of the shot was settling in. He wasn’t going to be able to shoot it with both hands; he’d have to throw it like a quarterback. The Bulls had held the promotion 19 times that year already. Two people clunked the backboard. Another clanged the rim. The other 16 were air balls. Nobody came close. The best estimate of someone like Calhoun making that shot? Less than 1%.

But then, a calm came over him. He thought about his brother Clarence, who had told him five years earlier, just before he died, that Michael Jordan would soon be the best player in the NBA and the Bulls would be a dynasty. He thought about his bittersweet feelings toward the sport of basketball — he loved the game and was good at it, but he never made his high school team.

It might sound ridiculous, but as Calhoun stood there and heard his name announced, he became sure — 100% certain — that the shot was going to go in. The last thing he remembers is the steady hum of 18,600 people rising to cheer for him. As the Bulls huddled up nearby, Calhoun palmed the ball in one hand. The free throw line warning was bouncing around inside his head, and for a second, he felt his flow get disrupted.

But the flow came back as he stepped past the end line. He took one fast dribble, thought to himself, “This is for Clarence,” and then threw a high-arching rocket.

As the ball sailed toward the hoop, Calhoun’s eyes again turned toward his feet and he saw that he was very close to the free throw line — but a few inches behind. Whew. When he looked up again, he had a moment of panic. He’d thrown it too far and too hard.

“It looked like it was going to hit the shot clock,” he says.

But then the ball began to sink. It dropped, and dropped, and dropped, and… swish. Right through the net. Calhoun threw his arms toward the rafters, and the crowd let out one of those levels of cheers that aggravates the arena neighbors.

Then the real mayhem began.

The ensuing 30 seconds might be the most joyous footage of that Bulls team ever. Seriously, watch the most celebratory moments from “The Last Dance,” and compare those with the clips you will inevitably see this April 14 on social media on the 30th anniversary of Calhoun’s heave. John Paxson and Scott Williams go wild. Some player just off-camera slaps Calhoun’s ass over and over again, and even one of the game refs comes over, hits him on the back and hands him the ball from the shot. Phil Jackson stands there with an incredulous grin, looking like he just won the $1 million.

Suddenly, Calhoun found himself bumped and butt-slapped directly into the middle of the Bulls huddle, where the other players parted and there stood Scottie Pippen and Michael Jordan. Calhoun was the team’s 13th man at that moment. Calhoun was in there for a good 10 seconds when he felt Jordan slap him on the back and lean into his ear.

“Great shot, kid,” Jordan said.

Calhoun says he can still hear the way Jordan was yelling “Woo!” behind him the entire time. After the game, Michael Wilbon, then at The Washington Post, wrote, “Jordan, smiling in a child-like way I’ve never seen on the court, threw both arms around his neck and squeezed.” As the celebration exploded around him, Calhoun felt as if his life was going to change. He was the toast of Chicago for the next 24 hours, with the shot going viral by 1993 standards, with newscasts and newspapers all showing the clip so much that Calhoun’s shot is now referenced as the beginning of a boom in contests at sporting events. And best of all, Calhoun was about to become a millionaire.

Or so he thought.

play

1:05

Flashback: Bulls fan drains $1 million shot in 1993

Don Calhoun sinks a three-quarter-court shot for $1 million on April 14, 1993.

BY THE TIME DON CALHOUN made his shot, in-game contests had begun to pop up here and there across the country. But Calhoun’s make caused an eruption in popularity. Chris Hamman, VP at industry leader SCA Promotions, thinks “The Calhoun Shot,” as it’s become known in the business, might have doubled or even tripled the number of contests.

“These types of contests grew quite a bit, and a lot of NBA teams started doing similar contests,” says Hamman, whose dad, Bob, founded SCA Promotions, which has been insuring sports contests since the mid-1980s. Chris compares Calhoun’s make with the impact Chris Moneymaker had on poker in 2003 when he went from an $86 online qualifier to winning the World Series of Poker (and $2.5 million).

The contests took off afterward. They were the perfect way to keep 15,000-plus people engaged during TV timeouts and between quarters. They were wildly popular crowd-pleasers back then, and remain slam dunk #ViralContent in the social media era. SCA Promotions has insured billions of dollars of sports contests since the mid-1980s, paying out something like $250 million in winnings over the years, according to Bob Hamman. (SCA was not the insurer of the Calhoun Shot).

As the Hammans note, the perfect contest is like the most tempting carnival game: just feasible enough to make people think they can do it while actually being extremely difficult. Everybody at the Bulls game that night in 1993 probably had sunk a long shot or two at some point in their life. In reality, Jordan himself might not have made one if you gave him 100 tries. “With the shot that Don Calhoun made, you could have Steph Curry out there and still make money,” Chris Hamman says.

But, as was the case with Calhoun, people do win enough to keep contest dreams alive. SCA Promotions insures more than $100 million in sports contests every year, and the Hammans love telling stories of paying off winners … because the vast majority of holes-in-one and half-court shots never happen. It’s a little like when sportsbooks leak out those betting slips of the fan who hit a 12-team parlay that cost $40 and pays out $250,000. The good news fuels the delusion of it happening to you.

One of the Hammans’ favorite winners was a Diamondbacks fan, Gylene Hoyle, who won a 1999 radio contest where she had to pick one Arizona player and an inning. If that player hit a home run in that exact inning during a specific game, she’d win $1 million.

Seems doable, right? The math is actually obscene. She picked Jay Bell, who was in the middle of a monster year (38 home runs and 112 RBIs). She had about a 1-in-2,916 chance. And yet, Bell came to the plate in the sixth inning with the bases loaded. He fouled off two straight two-strike pitches, then hit a home run on a pitch that could have been ball four. Afterward, he acknowledged that he knew about the contest and swung hoping to get someone $1 million. “That one stung,” Bob Hamman says.

The math on insuring high-stakes contests generally works the same way. Brokers come up with a likelihood that a random contestant could win — the Hammans say a three-quarter-court shot is less than 1%, for example — and divide it into the prize amount, then charge about twice that to insure it. For a $1 million contest with a 1% success rate, that means it’d cost the team $20,000 every time they run it.

Once the details are ironed out, insurance companies come up with all the fine print. Contestants usually must be randomly selected from the crowd. If it’s one shot, there’s no warmup toss or second attempt. If it’s three makes in 30 seconds, three makes in 30.1 seconds is close but no money. For something like a hockey shot that must go through a tiny plywood cutout and into a goal, the shot has to be entirely through. Not mostly through. Not on the line. Entirely through.

Insurance companies are unforgiving with teams that don’t explain the rules right, and it’s not unusual for franchises to end up paying out the contest themselves if there are any issues. The PR hit of stiffing a middle school geometry teacher out of $25,000 generally isn’t worth it.

But lawsuits and disagreements happen, and that’s what almost happened to Don Calhoun. One key stipulation in most insurance policies is that the contestant can’t have played an “organized” version of the sport in question for a certain time period before the contest — usually, five years.

Calhoun grew up in Chicago playing hoops on the playground with Clarence. Both had trouble making it onto junior high and varsity teams despite what seemed to be a worthy skill set. They were tough guards who loved dogging opposing ball handlers on defense. But they also played a brand of streetball that didn’t always translate well to high school hoops.

They certainly had talent, though. Clarence graduated and played at a junior college for his freshman year, then transferred to DePaul to walk onto the basketball team as a sophomore. Don, then a senior in high school, drew inspiration from Clarence’s unwillingness to quit basketball despite a high school career that didn’t pan out — he, too, planned to go to a small school to play hoops before transferring to a bigger school.

But one weekend, Clarence was on his way home from school to hang out with his family for a few days when the Calhouns got a dreaded phone call. He had gotten tired on the drive home, pulled over to rest, and been struck and killed by another car. He was 20.

Don was devastated. He didn’t graduate that spring on time as he grieved. But he went back to school in the fall and got his diploma. He slowly landed in a headspace where he wanted to use his brother’s memory as fuel. He bounced around at two community colleges and walked on with both basketball teams. One newspaper account from the time says he was 3-for-12 shooting in 11 career games.

But Don eventually walked away from school and from any formal basketball. He found out his longtime girlfriend was pregnant, so he got a job as an office supply salesman. Binders, notebooks, day planners, you name it, Don Calhoun was the guy to talk to. He was making a decent living, and he eventually had a son. The little boy’s name? Clarence Calhoun II.

When Clarence was 3, Don hugged him and told him to watch the Bulls game that night because Dad might be on TV. Clarence remembers his mom letting him stay up, although he’s not sure he saw the actual shot. He just recalls yelling and pointing at the screen as he watched his dad leap up and down with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls. Then he went to bed.

Calhoun says that he marked on the forms that he had played some college basketball three years earlier and that the contest people shrugged about it. The insurance company disagreed, and the weekend after he had won, local news media began to report that Calhoun might not be getting the money. That prompted the Bulls to hold a news conference, where Calhoun sat beside Jerry Reinsdorf and several contest sponsors.

“It is unclear at this time whether the company that insured the event will pay on the policy,” a joint statement read. “However, regardless of its decision, [restaurant group] Lettuce Entertain You, Coca-Cola (Foundation) and the Chicago Bulls will honor the $1 million award and ensure that this event has a happy ending.”

Calhoun left that day knowing that the win was, in fact, going to be a win. He would immediately receive his first of 20 annual $50,000 payments. In the coming weeks, he appeared on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” and got a cup of coffee as a member of the Harlem Globetrotters. He was, unbelievably, the unofficial mayor of Chicago for a brief period. When Wilbon called Calhoun’s company for his story, someone answered by saying, “Reliable Office Superstore. This is the home of one-shot Don Calhoun, the million-dollar man.”

He never got many details about how the sponsors and insurance company worked it out. He just took yes as an answer. It wasn’t until a few weeks later that he found out that he might have needed a key assist from a secret source: Michael Jordan himself.

Michael Jordan looks to drive against Kevin Johnson in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA Finals. Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE/Getty Images

AFTER CALHOUN made the shot, he was asked to stay on the floor and do an endless string of TV hits and print interviews. As he bounced from camera setup to camera setup near the Chicago locker room, Bulls players kept leaving and spotting him on their way out. Almost every player came over, said congratulations and signed his basketball. “It took me three years to make a million dollars, and it took him five seconds,” Horace Grant joked afterward.

Calhoun got signatures from Grant, Scottie Pippen, John Paxson and B.J. Armstrong, plus two Heat players who swung by, Rony Seikaly and Steve Smith. And then, as he got ready to do another live hit, Calhoun saw Jordan and a Bulls staffer come out and stand nearby. Calhoun made eye contact with Jordan, who smiled back at him and was clearly there waiting to say hello to him. Calhoun wanted to run over and ditch whatever TV interview he was about to do, but producers kept telling him they were about to go live any second now.

When the lights went on, Calhoun did the best interview he could as he watched in dismay what was happening on the other side of the camera. Jordan said something to the Bulls staffer and left. Calhoun wasn’t going to meet MJ, after all, and it crushed him. The Bulls worker said he could leave the ball behind and they’d try to get Jordan to sign it.

But Calhoun had other plans. He didn’t want to leave the building without that ball, so he took it. He thought there was a chance he might run into Jordan somewhere down the road, then he could get an autograph.

Over the next few days, news broke all over the country that Calhoun’s winnings seemed to be in jeopardy. Calhoun clung to that ball, and it provided him hope. He had made the shot. The crowd had gone completely wild. The Bulls had pulled him into their huddle. He had left with the ball. That was all real, and he would have it forever. The $1 million? He sure hoped it was coming his way. But he also felt an odd peace about the money. The experience alone certainly wouldn’t pay for Clarence’s school clothes. But it wasn’t nothing, either. It was priceless.

As reports swirled, fan outrage was palpable in Chicago, which created enough heat on the franchise to figure out some way to pay the local office supply salesman his damn money. That led to the news conference and the first $50,000 check.

But what to do about his beloved basketball? The next school year, he had heard from a friend that Jordan always attended one of his kid’s home games at a specific school in the area. So he showed up that night — with his ball and two magazines — and tried to walk up to Jordan. The Bulls star had his own section away from the crowd, complete with security that kept people from doing exactly what Calhoun was trying to do.

Calhoun was stopped on his approach by a Jordan security guy, who said Jordan had a firm policy of no autographs at his kids’ events. Calhoun explained who he was and that Jordan had seemed to really want to meet him back in April. The security guy wouldn’t budge. “No autographs at his kids’ stuff,” the guy repeated.

But Calhoun had a funny feeling that he shouldn’t give up. He asked the security to pretty-pretty-pretty please tell Jordan that the guy who made The Calhoun Shot had come to the game hoping for his signature. The security guy shook his head. Calhoun was even willing to just hand the guy the ball to take to Jordan. No luck.

“Michael doesn’t do anything when he’s at one of his kid’s games,” Calhoun was told.

An unlikely thing happened near the end of the game, though. The security guard came to Calhoun in the stands and told him he could walk with Jordan to his car after the game. So Calhoun got his ball and Sharpie ready, then met up with the Jordan crew as he left the high school.

The first thing out of Jordan’s mouth? “Did you get your money?” Jordan asked.

Calhoun said yes, and Jordan told him something that caught him off guard. “We made them give it to you,” Jordan said. “We were upset that they were trying to not pay you.”

Calhoun was stunned. He had heard rumors that the Bulls players were agitated at the thought of him getting stiffed. But this was confirmation that Michael Jordan himself helped make him a millionaire. (Jordan declined an interview request for this story; the Bulls also passed on participating.)

As they got to a set of doors, Calhoun knew Jordan’s car was waiting for him on the other side. He asked whether Jordan would sign his ball, and MJ said no, that he had to stick to his principle of no autographs at his kids’ stuff. “Bring it down to my steakhouse and drop it off, then I’ll sign it,” he said.

Calhoun waved goodbye that night and thanked Jordan once more for advocating on his behalf. But as he left later, he felt a pang as he considered just pulling up to Jordan’s restaurant, dropping off the ball and hoping for the best.

The ball had grown to mean so much to him. It wasn’t the signatures, or that he thought the ball might be worth something like $20,000. Its actual worth was beyond what someone could pay. It represented the agony of losing Clarence and trying to carry his brother’s message with his own son. It represented the end of the bitter, unfulfilled taste that “organized” basketball had left in his mouth. It represented closing that chapter of his life when he had to fight and claw to pay every bill for his family, opening up 20 years where he knew he had a financial backstop each year.

Was he really going to hand the ball to some random steakhouse assistant manager and cross his fingers, hoping he’d see it again?

The answer was… yes, he was going to do exactly that. He felt as if Jordan’s signature was too important as the coda to the story of the ball. So he drove over there one day and implored the person he handed it to for help, saying that this ball meant so much to him, that MJ’s signature was the last missing component of an artifact from the most important moment of his life.

It must have worked. A few weeks later, he got a call to pick up the ball. “Michael signed it, and he wishes you well,” Calhoun was told.

The ball became a family heirloom over the next three decades. But not in the way you’d expect. Calhoun never locked it up in a vault or even put it in a protective case in the house. He left it in the basement of his house, and Clarence and Calhoun’s other three kids would dribble it and throw it around. He wanted his kids to be able to touch and feel something that had altered the trajectory of their family. “I’ll always keep it for you,” Don told Clarence.

For the next 20 years, Calhoun would get a check for $50,000 every year. Of that money, he’d have to set aside around $12,000 for taxes. He kept his office sales job for a few more years, and the other $38,000 (about $79,000 in 2023 dollars) was a very nice supplemental living. But, as Calhoun says, it was more like a bump up within the middle class. “In reality, you’re not rich,” he says. “You’re not a millionaire.”

Maybe he didn’t have generational wealth. But he was about to experience a generational breakthrough.

AS THE 30th ANNIVERSARY of the shot approaches, Calhoun takes a few weeks to decide whether he will talk about the shot, the money or any of it. He hasn’t done many interviews over the years. Eventually, he agreed to one but asked that his current location and occupation be left out of the story. Let’s say he’s living within a few hours of Chicago in the Midwest, and he works the second shift at a solid job.

He’s not hesitant because he’s a particularly shy person — once he gets rolling on the phone, he’s funny and unafraid to argue, and he comes off as very open and honest as he talks. Toward the end of an hourlong interview, he asks, “How can I get to the Hall of Fame?”

When the answer is a surprised chuckle, he says, “Don’t you laugh. I want to be in the Hall of Fame. I think I deserve it.”

He seems to be goofing around, but Calhoun changes lanes easily between being confident and reserved. He talks about the shot like he knew it was going in the entire time, yet it never sounds particularly braggy. He seems as if he had his 15 minutes and is content with that … but also thinks it’d be nice to have a small shrine to it.

Calhoun is 53 now. He catches the video only every few years, when somebody will show him a tweet or video link to a clip that you will most likely see every April 14 for the rest of eternity.

Calhoun is neither rich nor poor, at least in the traditional sense of the word. He does, however, feel wealthy when he talks about his four kids. The Calhoun Shot gave them all a better life. His youngest, Terrelle, is 20 and lives in Austin, Texas. Naomi, 22, is in nursing school. Gabriela, 28, is a teacher. And Clarence II, 33, is living out something beyond his own wildest dreams — and his dad’s.

Don Calhoun’s oldest son became a good prep basketball player at East Aurora High School and graduated in 2008. With five years of $50,000 checks left, Don encouraged Clarence to finish the job he and his brother had started years earlier: graduating from college. Clarence loved that idea. What a cool way to pay tribute to the uncle he never met but was named after. The problem was, he still didn’t know what he wanted to be when he grew up.

For the first few years after high school, he bounced between community colleges before getting into Wiley College, an HBCU in Marshall, Texas. He had developed an interest in the human body, especially biology. But college was no joke. Clarence Calhoun II limped to a 1.6 GPA in his first semester. It wasn’t that he couldn’t handle the coursework or the social life or the amount of work it took. It was the totality of doing all of those things all at once. He didn’t know a single person who had experience at this level of education. He was a rookie, surrounded by rookies.

That’s when he met a Ukrainian physician named Dr. Valentyn Siniak. Siniak was at Wiley teaching while he took mandatory tests to begin practicing medicine in the U.S. Calhoun was blown away by the level of support Siniak provided. Calhoun isn’t sure exactly what Siniak saw in him, but he saw something.

In emails to Calhoun, Siniak began calling him “Dr. Clarence Calhoun.” When Calhoun asked him for guidance on how he could get his grades up, Siniak made him laugh out loud. “I think you should start tutoring other students,” Siniak said.

“Tutoring?” Calhoun said. “I’m struggling to learn everything myself. How can I teach others?” Siniak thought this would give Calhoun an extra nudge to learn the material and boost his own command.

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Siniak was exactly right. So right, in fact, that Calhoun sighs and shakes his head on a Zoom describing this section of his life. He still can’t fathom the way Siniak manifested belief into Calhoun’s life. His grades soared, and he liked working with other students. He had to work his ass off to get there — at one point, campus security officers would close up the science building for the night, knowing Calhoun was still in there. He’d study most of the night, inflate a mattress for a few hours and wake up the next day ready to do it again. “I found out I was smarter than I thought I was,” Calhoun says now.

And so in 2013, Calhoun graduated from college just as his dad’s $50,000 annual checks ended. He was the first in his family to get a college degree, and he battled and scrapped every day to get it.

He also had found out that his girlfriend was pregnant and that they were having a boy. When he told Don, he said, “Know what we’re going to name him, Dad?”

Don began to think about it for a second … and then it hit him. He didn’t say a word, and his son didn’t either. They laughed, hugged and celebrated the upcoming birth of Clarence Calhoun III.

Clarence Calhoun II started to chart a course for the next phase of his life, which had come into focus for him. “I want to be a doctor,” he told his dad, and he began to try to get into medical school. He worked jobs at Jiffy Lube, a toxicology lab and other places before he finally passed his labs and got accepted. This was happening. Not only was a Calhoun going to earn his degree but he felt as if he might actually become the Dr. Clarence Calhoun his instructor, Dr. Siniak, had predicted in his emails.

That’s why it breaks the younger Calhoun’s heart to tell this next part of the story. Siniak didn’t get to see Calhoun get his degree. In January 2013, Siniak was struck and killed while riding a motorcycle in Texas. “Having him believe in me helped me believe in myself,” Calhoun says. “My biggest downfall that was keeping me from excelling was my confidence. I just didn’t think I could. I didn’t have anybody around me who had done it.”

Over the next eight years, he passed his boards and did his residency, and an envelope arrived in May 2021 that he couldn’t wait to open. The piece of paper inside made it official: He was now Dr. Clarence Calhoun.

He went to his dad’s house to show him in person, and they had a long embrace. Don couldn’t stop smiling. After a minute, he walked out of the room and came back holding two things he was giving to his son.

One was the shoes he had worn during The Calhoun Shot. Clarence noticed they had a signature on them. They were autographed by … none other than Don Calhoun, which makes Clarence laugh to this day when he holds them up. His dad can be a goofball — an inspiring goofball. “He drops spiritual motivation all the time, and that’s always needed,” Clarence says. “In moments when it feels like life is too difficult, he helps you figure out how you can do it.”

For the second item, Don Calhoun didn’t hand it to him. He reared back and threw a push pass at his son’s chest.

“Here, I want you to have this,” and he chucked an old basketball at his son. Clarence Calhoun II hadn’t seen the ball from The Calhoun Shot in 10-15 years, and now it was going to live with him and his son. The two older Calhouns, Don and Clarence, hugged once more. And as Dr. Clarence Calhoun left that day, with a basketball under one arm and some old shoes under the other, his whole life felt like sinking a less than 1% three-quarter-court shot.

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Uber Responds To Driver Who Tried To Rape A Passenger (Video)

Over says it is cooperating with police after viral video appears to show driver attempting to sexually assault female driver. In the brief clip in which a man confronts the half-dressed driver in the back seat, the passenger appears to be unconscious.

On Tuesday (April 11), the ridesharing company responded to the video. Shared by Inane Reality Leaks, it has over 16.8 million views and over 8,000 retweets on Twitter. However, it is unclear when the incident happened.

RELATED: Two women involved in the attack on an Uber driver are now wanted by the SFPD

“This video is terrifying and we are taking action. We have blocked the driver and are in contact with the police and will assist them with any investigation,” Uber Support tweeted.

In the video, the driver – dressed in a black shirt and light-colored pants – was sitting in the back seat with his pants pulled down when a man approached the car and filmed with the flash on.

Noticing the person was filming, the driver jumped out of the back seat, pulled up his pants, and climbed into the front seat. The filming person keeps asking the driver: “What are you doing?”.

A camera pan showed a woman with blond hair leaning sideways against the seat. Meanwhile, the blue vehicle featured a large, white Uber sign on the driver’s door.

Although the driver left with the passenger, the person who recorded the vehicle was able to capture the license plate number.

It’s unclear which country the incident occurred in, but the driver’s steering wheel was on the right side – an unusual location in the United States.

Although Uber support claimed to have banned the driver, no other details are known about him. It is also currently unclear whether the authorities intend to press charges.

The woman’s identity remains unknown.

This video is terrifying and we are taking action. We have blocked the driver and are in contact with the police and will assist them with any investigation.

— Uber Support (@Uber_Support) April 11, 2023