Categories
Entertainment

Angel Brinks addresses criticism of pal RoccStar

In the latest episode of Stepping Into The Shade Room, designer and reality TV star Angel Brinks unveils her luxurious “dream” mansion. She also talks to presenter Thembi about her entrepreneurial career, fashion design, reality TV and more.

The 40-year-old’s passion for fashion was sparked while studying performing arts at school. Brinks became interested in stage clothing and soon took up sewing. As she got older, Brinks made it a point to work hard, launching her signature designs and her own window display. Brinks has created luxe ensembles for the likes of Missy Elliot, Lil’ Kim, Xscape, Mary J. Blige and more!

Aside from attracting the celebs, Brinks also appeared on the long-running reality TV series Basketball Wives, where their romantic relationship generated a lot of interest from viewers and fans. Brinks shares what she thinks of fans’ opinions and how her time on the reality series has been so far.

Angel is fighting back fan criticism of her relationship with RoccStar

Brinks acknowledged fans’ criticism of her boyfriend RoccStar by explaining that despite the negative feedback, their relationship has been “amazing”.

It was great… You have to find someone who shares the same values [with] and they share the same goals, morals, lifestyles… Rocc is just very ambitious. He always has something on his hands… and that’s just like me.

Brinks went on to say that they “don’t really pay attention to what people say.”

“I’m sure a lot of people have a lot to say… they always do… But our dynamic is cool. We literally laugh all day… so we’re just having a good time…”

In addition, Brinks concluded by explaining that the couple recently gave birth to a son, as reported by PEOPLE. But despite being parents to children from previous relationships, the merging of the two worlds has never been an issue for their family.

“When we get together, it’s just one big happy family.”

The reality star opens up about returning to ‘Basketball Wives’

In addition, Brinks also addressed the return to “Basketball Wives.” She shared that her castmates showed her newfound “respect,” though she received a harsh welcome on her first appearance when she returned to the show years later.

“At first they just said, ‘Shut up… you don’t know what you’re talking about…’ So when they walked in, they didn’t respect me… I think with women in particular, we probably feel like we don’t.” I want to no new friends… and I feel like they came across as not really accepting of me. And I don’t know exactly why…”

Upon her return, however, Brinks concluded by declaring that she had come with “revenge.”

“I figured, you know, I’m going to come back and do everything in my power. And they were so nice and respectful, so it worked out.”

Watch Stepping Into The Shade Room with guest Angel Brinks above!

Categories
Science

The solar will attain its photo voltaic most in 2032. A brand new NASA flagship mission may give us an ideal view

There are always more space missions than there is money to support them. Ultimately, some make the cuts, some don’t. Various factors play into this decision, although these factors may change over the years and decades some of these missions are designed for. But the more ideas the merrier, and now a new idea has emerged from a group of scientists from SWRI, NASA and the University of Minnesota, among others. Four different probes will be sent to different points in the solar system to observe the sun in an unprecedented way – just in time to witness its most spectacular display in 2032.

Dubbed COMPLETE (which doesn’t appear to be an acronym), the mission would send satellites to several different Lagrangian points in the Earth-Sun system. L4 and L5 (the trailing and leading Lagrange points) would each receive one probe, and L1, which is much closer to Earth, would receive two. Each of these probes could be launched on a Falcon Heavy rocket sometime around 2032, the expected peak of the next 11-year solar cycle.

When this cycle begins, FULL mission controllers could be watching it in unprecedented detail. Each probe would have a spectrograph to capture regular light and a magnetograph to detect magnetic fields associated with coronal mass ejections and other phenomena emanating from the Sun.

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A major focus of COMPLETE will be solar storms, which can have devastating effects on life here on Earth.

One of the most important considerations when choosing missions is cost, and four different probes for a single mission would increase the cost of COMPLETE. This is especially true given that each probe is thought to be large — much larger than a typical human. So the team behind it decided it was imperative to use probes that already have “heritage,” as the jargon calls it – meaning they were designed for another mission and don’t require expensive development effort themselves. They can be easily integrated into the probe design and each other.

These sensors are needed to answer four main questions about the magnetic and other types of energy released during momentum phenomena on the Sun. To answer these questions, the design team realized they needed sensors in several different wavelengths, including extreme ultraviolet, X-rays and gamma rays. Fortunately, sensors for other missions have already been developed for each of these wavelengths.

Unfortunately, there was one area where the team couldn’t get away with using technology developed for other missions – data transmission. NASA’s Deep Space Network, the most common way of communicating with probes outside Earth’s orbit, is two orders of magnitude too slow to communicate all of the data that COMPLETE’s probes will collect. NASA already has plans in the works for an optical communications system that the agency hopes to release by 2035. However, it would be a little too late to use them for the expected solar maximum in 2032 and thus the focus of the mission. Therefore, the COMPLETE team suggested putting some more money into accelerating the timing of this optical communication system so that not only COMPLETE but also other space missions in this timeframe could benefit.

Rough model of a COMPLETE probe.
Credit – Caspi et al.

So what about the final number given all the legacy hardware and required updates to the global communications infrastructure? The project team presents two different estimates for the mission, ranging from $2.1 billion to $2.5 billion. At this tier, it belongs to the “flagship” mission class, which is determined primarily based on the expected cost of the mission. Unfortunately, only a small number of flagship missions can be actively worked on at any one time, and COMPLETE has never received this recognition from any funding agency, including NASA. However, the paper describing the mission was submitted to the Heliophysics Decadal survey team and is freely available to anyone interested. With sufficient support from donors or the private sector, it could become a reality one day.

Learn more:
Caspi et al – COMPLETE: A flagship mission to fully understand 3D coronal magnetic energy release
UT – New detailed images of the Sun from the world’s most powerful ground-based solar telescope
UT – A new type of solar sail could allow us to explore hard-to-reach places in the solar system
UT – You are here! The first images from ESA’s Solar Orbiter

mission statement:
Diagram of probe locations for the COMPLETE mission.
Credit – Caspi et al.

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Technology

A must-attend presentation on the TNW convention

Lubomila Jordanova and Jamie Crummie will speak TNW conference taking place in Amsterdam on June 15th and 16th. If you want to catch the event (and say hello to our editorial team!), we have something special for our loyal readers. Use promotional code READ-TNW-25 and get 25% off your TNW Conference Business Pass. See you in Amsterdam!

The goals of decarbonization and the circular economy are two sides of the same coin. We cannot achieve one without the other, and both are vital to a sustainable and just future for humanity.

However, just a few years ago it was difficult to find actionable tools for businesses and consumers to reduce emissions and waste. But thanks to pioneering entrepreneurs like Lubomila Jordanova and Jamie Crummie, ways to measure and reduce our carbon and material footprint are now within reach.

Jordanova is the founder and CEO of Plan A, a AI-based carbon accounting tool This helps companies to measure, reduce and report on CO2 emissions. So far, Plan A has built a 100-strong team of leading scientists and developers, won big-name clients like BMW and the European Commission, and claims to have 5 million tons of carbon under its management.

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Crummie operates in a very different market and is the co-founder of the sustainable food app Too Good To Go allows consumers to buy unsold groceries at restaurants and retailers. It is currently the world’s largest surplus grocery marketplace, active in 17 countries, with over 75 million registered users and 135,000 active grocery businesses. The app claims to have saved over 200 million meals.

Both companies entered the market in the mid-2010s, at a time when climate technology received only a fraction of the funding it does today. Despite an unfavorable investment landscape, both startups have weathered their respective challenges and positioned themselves for impressive growth.

At next week’s TNW conference, Jordanova and Crummie will take the stage to discuss their respective paths and ways in which they are successfully making measurable impact within a for-profit business model.

So if you are an entrepreneur looking to start a startup or scale your existing business, you definitely shouldn’t miss this talk! The future of the planet could depend on it.

Controlling the spinout process is among the many startup growth topics to be covered at the TNW conference. You can find more on the event agenda – and remember: For 25% off Business Passes use promo code READ-TNW-25.

Categories
Sport

Iga Swiatek outlasts Karolina Muchova to win third place at French Open

June 10, 2023 12:02 p.m. ET

PARIS — Iga Swiatek seemed suddenly lost in the French Open final. Your punches were wrong. Her confidence was gone. Her big early lead also dwindled.

She kept glancing at the stands and seeking advice from her coach and sports psychologist.

Until she was two games away from the defeat against the unseeded Karolina Muchova on Saturday, not much was going on. And then when she needed it most, Swiatek morphed back into, well, Swiatek. The No. 1 player in women’s tennis for more than a year. The defending champion of Roland Garros. Aggressive. Decisive. Full of clarity.

Overcoming a crisis in the second set and a deficit in the third set, Swiatek defeated Muchova 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 to claim her third French Open championship and fourth career Grand Slam title.

“I really love being here,” Swiatek said. “Basically, it’s my favorite place on tour.”

Iga Swiatek passed Karolina Muchova to win her third French Open trophy and fourth Grand Slam title. Getty Images

She looked good at the beginning but was already 3-0 up after 10 minutes on Court Philippe Chatrier – taking 12 of the first 15 points – and then leading 3-0 in the second set before Muchova things more intriguing to equalize.

Swiatek couldn’t seem to find the right shots and couldn’t figure out why. Players are allowed to communicate with their coaches, but whatever Tomasz Wiktorowski – or sports psychologist Daria Abramowicz – wanted to convey to Swiatek, the message either didn’t get through or it didn’t work immediately.

“I know exactly how important teams are in our sport. Even though it’s an individual sport, I wouldn’t be here without my team,” Swiatek said afterwards. “Really, thank you guys. I’m sorry you guys are so annoying…” — and she ended the sentence with that.

Muchova picked up five games out of six, making it an even set apiece. She carried this momentum into the deciding set and took the lead twice with a break.

Swiatek then returned to her usual brand of crisp, clean tennis, scurrying across the red clay with superb defense and finding just the opportunities to create a winner. She won the last three games of the game.

When it ended with a double fault from Muchova, Swiatek dropped her racquet and leaned over, covering her face as she cried.

She has now won the French Open twice in a row, along with her 2020 title there and her triumph at the US Open last September. This makes Swiatek of Poland the youngest woman to win four Grand Slam trophies since Serena Williams was 20 when she reached that number at the 2002 US Open.

Alongside Monica Seles and Naomi Osaka, 22-year-old Swiatek is only the third woman in the professional era to start a grand final 4-0.

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“It was so close, but so far,” said Muchova, who is 43rd and taking part in a league game for the first time in a Slam.

“That’s what happens when you play against one of the best: Iga,” said Muchova. “That’s why I would like to congratulate you and your team once again.”

The competition was full of sections where Swiatek – the dominant player in women’s tennis for more than a year – was better and sections where Muchova was.

Every time one or the other woman seemed to lose control, every time one or the other raised her level to the point where the end was in sight, the road turned in a different direction.

Swiatek’s brilliant start meant little.

Just like Muchova’s lead of 2:0 and 4:3 in the third set.

One point made it particularly clear that Muchova was not willing to leave herself out.

Muchova served the second set at Deuce while she was 6-5 up, pushed to the net and fired a good forehand volley to the right. Swiatek then sent her left, and Muchova somehow slipped and stretched for a backhand volley while losing her balance at the same time. Her racquet fell, and she fell as well, putting her hands on the sand to steady herself.

Somehow the ball ended up in goal to take the point and moments later, as Swiatek’s backhand return sailed wide, Muchova raised her right fist and let out a scream.

Suddenly it was one set apiece. Suddenly the outcome was completely in doubt.

The question then arose: could Muchova be able to pull off another dramatic comeback like she did in Thursday’s semifinals? In that match against No.2 Aryna Sabalenka, reigning Australian Open champion, Muchova had a match point while trailing 5-2 in the third set and then completely turned the situation around by taking 20 of the last 24 points and winning each of the last five clinched games.

That result gave Muchova a 5-0 career win over top-three opponents.

Any hope of making it 6-0 faded over time.

Once again, Swiatek has shown what it takes to win. Once again, she was holding a trophy – although she waved it back and forth during the post-game ceremony, causing the top to fall off.

Categories
Health

Walmart plans to develop its devoted HIV outreach

David Rosario recalls the late 1980s with mixed feelings. He had achieved his goal of becoming a professional dancer in New York City, but in that world he also lost many young male friends to AIDS. At the time, there were few treatment options for the disease, which hit the gay community particularly hard.

“It was sad at the time,” Rosario said. “There was nothing, so these beautiful people lost their lives.”

Now Rosario owns a restaurant in New Jersey with his husband. Each month, he picks up drugs that make HIV undetectable and non-transmissible at his local Walmart pharmacy—a prospect unthinkable a generation ago. But this easy access now gives him hope.

“It’s not really a big deal to me, but for a lot of these boys who are looking for relationships and things, I think it’s a game changer,” he said.

Walmart’s HIV Outreach

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that new HIV infections have fallen by 12% in recent years, from 36,500 new cases in 2017 to 32,000 in 2021. Racial and ethnic disparities remain, however, with those of color people account for a disproportionate share of new HIV infection diagnoses. According to CDC data, in 2021, 40% of new cases were attributed to African Americans and 29% to Latinos.

Walmart In late 2021, the company launched a pilot HIV specialty pharmacy program targeting just over half a dozen hard-hit communities, including Rosarios County in New Jersey.

“From the data, we can see that there is a need here — HIV incidence is higher,” said Kevin Host, senior vice president of Walmart pharmacy.

Now the retail giant plans to expand its program to more than 80 HIV specialty facilities in nearly a dozen states by the end of this year.

Shoppers wait in line at the pharmacy of a Walmart store in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Callaghan O’Hare | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The company’s pharmacists have undergone special training on HIV disease and drugs to treat and prevent the virus. A big part of this is starting a conversation with patients who may be at risk.

“Getting patients to talk about their condition can be challenging,” said pharmacist Gemima Kleine. “There is a stigma, and it’s better than it used to be, but it hasn’t gone away.”

Public-private HIV partnership

This stigma can make people in some communities reluctant to seek treatment. But it’s not the only problem faced by people who may be HIV positive.

While just over half of non-Hispanic white patients were insured on pre-exposure prophylaxis drugs known as PrEP last year, CDC data shows that only 13.6% of Hispanic and 6.9% of African American patients were on the Medicines were insured that help prevent transmission of the virus.

To fill this gap, Walmart and two of its major pharmacy competitors, CVS health And Walgreenshave joined the Department of Health’s initiative to end the HIV epidemic by 2030 by making antiviral drugs more widely available and providing support services.

“There are certain drugs where it might not be the worst if you miss a dose and it won’t have much of an effect, but with the HIV-AIDS drugs, compliance is so important,” Kleine said.

CVS has made HIV testing available at its Minute Clinics and has helped patients obtain no-cost prescriptions through the government’s Ready, Set, PrEP program.

Similarly, Walgreens has trained more than 3,000 of its pharmacists to provide treatment advice, conduct ongoing testing and provide free home delivery of HIV medication to encourage patients to stick to medication schedules.

And Walmart has found that its commitment to local health clinics and community groups that help patients in hard-hit communities access medical care is beginning to pay off.

“If they know we have additional training and services to help their patients, we’ll see them coming to us soon, and then we can connect with them,” Host said. “It was really a great connection between community and company.”

On June 27, as part of National HIV Testing Day, Walmart will join other pharmacies and offer free HIV testing at many of its specialty pharmacies.

The outreach of the HIV program comes at a time when major pharmacies are focused on expanding their healthcare services. They hope initiatives like the specialty pharmacies will reinforce their role as community healthcare providers in consumer awareness—and improve patient outcomes.

“Hopefully they’ll implement something like that in small towns and big cities — maybe things are harder to get or they’re not aware of it,” Rosario said.

Correction: This story has been updated to clarify where Walmart will be offering free HIV testing on June 27th; The Company will offer the program at select pharmacy locations.

Categories
Science

Mexico and South America should use fossil fuels to battle poverty • Do you agree?

Despite intense coverage of issues related to the southern border of the US, headlines about the energy policies of Mexico and the rest of Latin America rarely make headlines. However, as in other regions, energy is a major concern that is inextricably linked to economic well-being.

Poverty remains pervasive in Mexico and several countries in the South. Hunger, malnutrition, poor health, lack of education and limited access to basic services are symptoms of the poverty that threatens the lives of millions of people.

Therefore, it would be disastrous for these countries to pursue policies that affect their economies. For this reason, many of them are wary of falling into the trap of the global net-zero agenda, which is being touted as a way to avert a fabricated climate emergency.

Despite pressure from international leaders to join the “decarbonization” campaign, these countries prioritize overcoming poverty through fossil fuel-based economic growth.

Mexico’s pragmatic approach neglects renewable energy

Mexico, for example, has made bold decisions about its position on decarbonization. Eight and nine percent of the primary energy consumed in Mexico comes from fossil fuels. Mexico’s current government is aware of the serious problems that intermittent wind and solar power could pose to the country’s growing economy.

For this reason, it has passed a bill to repeal existing laws that mandate the prioritization of renewable energy. The bill calls for the power grid to get its main power supply from state-owned power plants, most of which run on fossil fuels.

The two largest state-owned energy companies, Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex) and Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), are seen as crucial to realizing Mexico’s economic ambitions.

“We have to strengthen Pemex and the CFE, we have to save them, because deliberate steps have been taken to destroy them, so that the energy market can remain in the hands of private, national and, above all, foreign companies,” the Mexican president said López Obrador in February 2021.

The online news agency Equal Times reported that the President has “launched a crusade against private renewable energy companies, which he accuses of colluding with previous governments to make millions in profits at the expense of Pemex and CFE.”

75 percent of the country’s electricity already comes from fossil fuels, and Obrador’s approach almost certainly ensures that percentage doesn’t change drastically.

The US Energy Information Administration (USEIA) forecasts that Mexico’s oil production is poised for a rebound: “Recently, rising private investment and rising condensate production have helped reverse a downward trend in Mexico’s oil production that began in 2004 at nearly two million barrels per day ( b/d), similar to levels since 2019. In the March 2023 short-term energy outlook, we forecast Mexico’s oil and other liquids production to average 1.93 million b/d and 1.91 million b/d per year in 2023 2024.”

“Mexico will almost certainly not deliver on its promise to the world to reduce its carbon emissions,” the analysts said.

Brazil and Peru must use fossil reserves to advance

Like Mexico, countries in South America are hoping to use fossil fuels to fuel their economies. Brazil is the continent’s most populous country and also the largest oil producer.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that Brazil “will be responsible for producing about 50 percent of the world’s offshore oil by 2040, or about 5.2 million barrels per day.”

Brazil’s western neighbor Peru is expected to be among the three fastest growing economies in South America over the next few years. In 2021, fossil fuels accounted for almost 72 percent of primary energy consumption in Peru.

Still, the country is still at an early stage in energy consumption, ranking a dismal 116th in per capita primary energy consumption. In order to be able to cover the growing energy demand in the coming years, the country must increase its energy production.

According to USEIA, the country is “the seventh largest crude oil reserve holder in Central and South America with estimated proven reserves of 741 million barrels (as of January 2015”). To increase reserves, the State Petroleum Authority offered areas for oil and gas exploration earlier this year through negotiations and the completion of 31 technical contracts.

In the frenetic world of net-zero and green energy obsessions, it is not easy for emerging young economies to remain committed to the use of fossil fuels, which remain the bedrock of economic progress to this day. But you must.

This comment was first published by American Thinker on June 8, 2023 and can be accessed here.

Vijay Jayaraj is a Research Associate at the CO2 Coalition, Arlington, Virginia. He holds a Masters in Environmental Sciences from the University of East Anglia, UK and is based in India.

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Entertainment

Helpless Orphan or Harmful Grownup: The Unusual Story of Natalia Grace

Why did the Barnetts suspect Natalia Grace wasn’t actually 6 years old?

The day after Natalia was adopted, Michael recounts on the show that Kristine went to bathe the girl and screamed when she saw that Natalia had pubic hair. Michael says he looked online to see if that was possible and read that pubic hair could show up in a girl as young as eight. He goes on to say, however, that he and his wife assumed this was a child who obviously needed love and compassion, and so it didn’t matter if she was a little older than they were told.

(Natalia told Dr. Phil in 2019 that she was 8, “maybe almost 9,” when the Barnetts adopted her.)

A few months later, Natalia told them she was on her period and withheld the evidence, says Michael. A family friend heard in an audio recording that Kristine had found stained socks that Natalia had used as sanitary napkins and then thrown out the window. “She said: ‘This is not normal, what have I gotten myself into?'” recalls the friend. “And so I said, ‘You need to find out how old she is.'”

Kimberley FranklinMichael’s younger sister, recalls on the show hearing that the Barnetts had found “time underwear” hidden in Natalia’s room.

Also within the first few months after adopting Natalia, the Barnetts arranged a play date with Natalia Elva Reyes‘ Daughter, Theresewho had the same type of rare dwarfism and was also 6 years old.

As Elva and Therese, now 14, recall on the show, it was pretty obvious to them that Therese and Natalia weren’t the same age when they pointed to pictures of the girls from 2010.

Categories
Science

When black holes evaporate, every part evaporates

Hawking radiation is one of the best-known physical processes in astronomy. Hawking radiation causes a black hole’s mass and energy to escape over time. It’s a brilliant theory, and it says that black holes have a finite lifespan. If the Hawking radiation is true. Because as famous as it is, Hawking radiation is unproven. The theory is not even theoretically proven.

Hawking proposed the idea of ​​black hole radiation while exploring ways to integrate Einstein’s classical theory of gravity with the quantum theory of atoms and light. We don’t have a full quantum theory of gravity, so Hawking used a semiclassical approach, treating matter as quantum while gravity is treated classically. From this, Hawking showed that quantum fields can escape the event horizon of a black hole.

The Hawking process is typically represented by the production of virtual pairs. One approach in quantum physics assumes that pairs of particles can spontaneously appear and disappear in the vacuum of empty space due to Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. The “fuzziness” of quantum theory means that space can never really be empty. In empty regions of space these particles have no real effect and are therefore virtual particles. But near a black hole’s event horizon, one member of a virtual pair could be trapped by the black hole while the other could escape as real radiation.

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The virtual particle visualization is appealing, but not without problems. Hawking’s approach can lead to things like the firewall paradox, where the region near a black hole’s event horizon should be both empty and full of realized virtual particles. Without a full quantum approach to gravity, we cannot easily resolve these paradoxes.

Hawking radiation near an event horizon. Photo credit: NAU.

However, there are semi-classical approaches to gravity other than that used by Hawking. Most of them also predict that black holes will radiate but argue with a different approach. For example, one approach is to view the matter trapped in a black hole as a quantum wave function bound by strong gravity. Since the gravitational pull of a black hole at the event horizon is never infinite, the wave function is essentially bound to a finite bin. Through a process called quantum tunneling, quantum objects can escape any finite container in time. So you get radiation from black holes without the need for virtual particles.

That’s where a new study comes in. For this work, the team investigated a different formulation of Hawking radiation that is somewhat similar to the wave function approach. They found that a black hole’s event horizon is nothing special in terms of Hawking radiation. Any lumped mass, from neutron stars to pet rocks, has a gravitational well that acts like a finite container. So quantum particles can always escape. This has long been known, but the team showed that when expressed in terms of Hawking’s virtual particles, virtual particles can become real near any mass, not just black holes. Black holes are by far the most effective producers of Hawking radiation, but if you wait long enough, even your favorite rock will radiate its mass.

This model does not change our understanding of black holes, but it could have significant implications for long-term cosmology. If given enough time everything disappears into a cloud of radiation, the universe will disappear into a cold sea of ​​radiation.

Reference: Wondrak, Michael F., Walter D. van Suijlekom, and Heino Falcke. “Gravitational pair production and evaporation from black holes.” Physical Review Letters 130.22 (2023): 221502.

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Health

FDA advisors are reviewing Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi for full approval

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A panel of independent advisors to the Food and Drug Administration is meeting Friday to make a recommendation on whether the Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi, made by Eisai and biogenicshould get full approval.

The FDA is not required to follow the advisers’ recommendation, but a panel vote in favor of Leqembi would help pave the way for the treatment’s approval this summer.

The FDA is expected to make a final decision on Leqembi on July 6. The agency’s decision will determine whether Medicare broadly covers the treatment. The seniors program is currently severely limiting Leqembi’s coverage as it was previously approved under an expedited process.

Leqembi is the second Alzheimer’s drug from Eisai and Biogen to be reviewed by the FDA, following the controversial approval of the drug Aduhelm in the summer of 2021.

The drug agency gave accelerated approval to the Aduhelm developed by the two companies, although 10 out of 11 members of the advisory committee concluded that the treatment showed no clinical benefit. A congressional investigation subsequently found that Aduhelm’s approval was “riddled with irregularities.”

FDA officials said in a briefing document ahead of Friday’s meeting that clinical trial data presented by Eisai appeared to confirm Leqembi’s clinical benefit for Alzheimer’s patients, suggesting the agency is poised to approve the treatment this summer to permit.

Leqembi slowed cognitive decline by 27% in early-stage Alzheimer’s patients in the study, but the treatment also carries serious risks of brain swelling and bleeding. The antibody is given twice monthly by intravenous infusion.

Small panel due to conflicts of interest

The Advisory Committee for Leqembi is unusually small, with only six voting members.

dr Teresa Buracchio, acting chief of the FDA’s neuroscience office, said the committee was smaller than usual because a number of experts withdrew from Friday’s meeting due to conflicts of interest.

“Although this group is small, it has the expertise needed to have an informed discussion on today’s topic,” Buracchio said.

Buracchio said the FDA’s decision on who to include in Friday’s meeting was influenced by a letter from the Alzheimer’s Association, in which it advocated full approval of Leqembi. At least one member of the FDA Advisory Committee, Dr. David Weisman, signed this letter.

Weisman was originally barred from attending Friday’s meeting despite serving as the principal investigator for Biogen and Eisai clinical trials on Leqembi and Aduhelm at Abington Neurological Associates.

Weisman then withdrew from the meeting and is not attending.

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The incumbent chairman Dr. Robert Alexander was granted an exemption from chairing the panel on Friday, despite holding up to $150,000 worth of stock in companies that compete with Eisai and Biogen. The companies’ names were not named in the FDA disclosure.

Alexander is the scientific director of the Alzheimer’s Prevention Initiative at Banner Alzheimer’s Institute. Banner conducts an Alzheimer’s clinical trial for a competing company, and Alexander earns between $50,000 and $100,000 a year from funding the study.

Bryan Marshall, who heads the office that manages FDA advisory committees, asked the agency to grant Alexander a waiver because he has unique expertise that was “invaluable” to Friday’s meeting.

Medicare coverage, price controversy

Leqembi is technically already available in the U.S. market after it received accelerated approval in January, but very few seniors have access to the expensive treatment because Medicare limits coverage only to people participating in clinical trials. There are no ongoing clinical trials.

As a result, most seniors only have access to Leqembi if they can afford to pay for the drug out of pocket. Leqembi has a list price of $26,500 per year.

Medicare has promised full coverage for Leqembi the same day the FDA fully approves the drug. The Veterans Health Administration already covers the cost of treating veterans.

Members of Congress and organizations advocating for Alzheimer’s patients will be following Friday’s Advisory Committee meeting closely.

Senator Bernie Sanders, chair of the Senate Health Committee, said the price for Leqembi was “outrageous” and in a letter to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra ahead of the meeting, urged the Department of Health and Human Services to take action to bring the price down Week.

Sanders said in his letter Wednesday that “the FDA has a special responsibility to restore public confidence after forming an inappropriate relationship with Biogen during the agency’s review of a previous Alzheimer’s drug, Aduhelm.”

Categories
Sport

Oklahoma softball: Dynasty, superteam, 2023 WCWS champion

  • Alex Scarborough, ESPN Staff WriterJun 9, 2023, 01:15 AM ET

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    • Covers the SEC.
    • Joined ESPN in 2012.
    • Graduate of Auburn University.

OKLAHOMA CITY — THE TEARS and hugs and group photos were taking so long that the grounds crew couldn’t wait any longer. So they got to work, digging up the chalk lines with shovels and sweeping confetti into a pile with rakes. Then they ran over the collection of crimson and white and gold paper with a Billy Goat lawn mower, shredding it and shredding it and shredding it until it was indistinguishable from the dirt.

Backpack blowers wheezed in the background as the Oklahoma Sooners lingered in the outfield, their families and friends joining in on the celebration that so many of them had become accustomed to by now.

Three championships in three years. Six championships in 10 seasons. Seven championships in total.

Jayda Coleman, a junior who has known nothing but national titles, understood the drill when Jordy Bahl struck out the final batter and Oklahoma beat Florida State 3-1 to win the championship series. She raced from her spot in center field to join the dog pile that seemed to form in the blink of an eye between the pitcher’s mound and home plate.

It was fun, Coleman said later, watching the newcomers figure out where to be and how to behave.

“Just to see the joy of the transfers and the freshmen, for them, that’s what I love,” she said.

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For the players on the field, this didn’t feel stale or expected or … unfair.

Their dominance might irk others, particularly the way they hoard talent. There’s a phrase for it internally: Oklahoma fatigue. They could sense it building with each passing win, an NCAA-record 53 and counting.

The additions of Alex Storako, Haley Lee, Cydney Sanders and Alynah Torres this past offseason — all either all-conference or All-American picks at their previous schools — prompted superteam comparisons and made their critics that much more vocal.

Sooners coach Patty Gasso heard the breathless questions from reporters and fans: Why do you need that?

Well, she explained during an interview earlier this year, it’s simple. She had scholarships available, she said, and why would she go after the second-best player? “That makes no sense,” she said. “I go after the best as long as they fit.”

Parity isn’t her concern.

“Is that good for the game?” Gasso asked. “It’s good for job security. It’s kind of like UConn women’s basketball and winning the championship how many years in a row? And people are like, ‘This is boring’ or ‘This is not good for the women’s game to have an elite team.’ But it’s our job, and I think for sport connoisseurs, they want to see what greatness looks like.”

This is the story of how greatness happens — the players who are drawn to it and the coach who has built a program that has the rest of softball competing for second place.

Alex Storako transferred from Michigan to Oklahoma, where she started Game 2 of the WCWS championship series and ultimately won the national title. AP Photo/Nate Billings

STORAKO CRIED AS she embraced pitching coach Jennifer Rocha.

“Thank you so much,” she said.

A moment later, she and fifth-year senior shortstop Grace Lyons locked eyes, held hands and, jumping up and down, screamed in unison, “We did it! We did it!”

Around and around Storako went, grinning as she wore a championship T-shirt and hat that a year ago felt unattainable.

And to think, she wasn’t sure what to expect when she decided to transfer from Michigan in May 2022. Honestly, she said, she feared no one would call. But six minutes after she entered the portal, her phone rang and showed an Oklahoma City area code. Then Gasso introduced herself.

The pause that ensued might have lasted only a few seconds, but it felt like a lifetime. Storako whispered to her sister and roommate who it was.

The days that followed were some of the most stressful of her life, she said, because she was still torn about leaving Michigan. She loved the school and the community and the life she’d built there. But she was losing the spark she used to feel for softball — the sense that she was growing and building toward something. She felt that she’d maxed out and, on top of that, she felt the weight of having to carry the team.

“The pressure to perform — every pitch, day in and day out — it takes a different kind of wear-and-tear on you, mentally and physically,” Storako said.

So rather than hang up her cleats — which she said she considered doing — Storako opted for a fresh start elsewhere. And before her official visit to Oklahoma was over, she knew it was home. She immediately called Florida, Florida State and Alabama and canceled her visits. At the Oklahoma City airport, she posted on social media that she’d committed to OU.

That’s when the backlash began.

Storako, the former Big Ten Player of the Year, said she was “greatly criticized” for joining the defending champs.

“I was called ‘Kevin Durant,'” she said, referencing the star NBA forward and the criticism he received when he went to the Golden State Warriors in search of his first championship. “I was questioned whether I was getting an under-the-table NIL deal, which I think is unfortunate because these people asking that don’t know my personality and the way I grew up and play the game.

“I wasn’t a big recruit coming out of high school. I worked hard to get where I am.”

Lee could relate. Not only did she hear the criticism from fans, leading her to shut off all her social media notifications, she heard it from coaches as well. Like the one coach who told her, “You’ll just be another number on their roster.” Or the other coach who said, “The program’s already built. You don’t want to just jump on the train.”

Haley Lee, a transfer from Texas A&M, slashed .370/.474/.704 with 14 home runs, 51 RBIs and one national championship in her lone season with Oklahoma. Phil Ellsworth/ESPN Images

It’s as if everyone assumed the transition would be easy — that Lee wasn’t stepping far outside her comfort zone, that she wasn’t going to be battling for a spot in the starting lineup, that she wasn’t going to feel the pressure to live up to expectations. If all went well, Lee would be replacing Jocelyn Alo, the 2022 Player of the Year and the NCAA career home run leader, as the designated player.

“OU works hard, and works differently than a lot of schools,” Lee said. “So if I was willing to grind, put in the sweat and tears that it takes, then this was a spot for me.

“And I’ve enjoyed every moment of it since.”

Storako’s joy for the game was back when she started the decisive game of the championship series Thursday. She screamed in celebration and danced between innings.

She didn’t have to do it all herself. In the bottom of the fourth, she cheered on Coleman when she leapt at the center field wall and yanked back a would-be three-run homer. Coleman shouted to Storako: “I got you!”

When Storako gave up a solo home run in the bottom of the fourth, her teammates picked her up the very next inning as Sanders and Lyons hit back-to-back solo home runs to take the lead.

Forget getting her 18th win of the season. She got the thing she’d been chasing all along: A championship ring.

“There are a lot of dreams that came true tonight,” Gasso said. “Alex Storako is definitely one of them.”

Patty Gasso coached Oklahoma to only the second three-peat in Division I softball history. AP Photo/Nate Billings

GASSO SAT AT the far side of the podium during Thursday night’s postgame news conference and turned to the seats Coleman, Bahl and Tiare Jennings had recently vacated.

“Looking at all these guys coming back, they’re the future,” she said.

Then she paused, as if trying to will herself from the inevitable work that awaits tomorrow.

“I don’t even want to think about it right now because the grind will start again,” she said.

Make no mistake, though, Gasso enjoys every bit of it.

“I’ve been doing this here for 29 years,” she said. “It’s not a job. It’s life.”

A similar scene played out last year when Gasso said she was “swallowed up” by the emotion of the moment — the team and family photos, the parade of thank-yous and congratulations.

She sighed and explained how, “you just kind of get stuck with that.”

There was frustration in her voice because she was ready for everyone to get the celebration out of their system. She needed them to move on to the question that had been gnawing at her for weeks: How do I keep this going?

To compete at Oklahoma’s level, there’s no choice but to think that way. Consider Alabama football coach Nick Saban and how he once complained that playing for a championship — and winning — cost him a week in recruiting.

“You high-five, you hug and then you move,” Gasso said. “You just move.” Remember, Alo was on her way out the door a year ago. So were All-Big 12 pitcher Hope Trautwein and four other seniors.

Gasso had already signed a freshman class that included Extra Innings’ No. 1-ranked prospect, Kierston Deal. But how long would it take for the newcomers to acclimate? To avoid any chance of a dip, Gasso needed the kind of ready-made talent only the transfer portal could offer.

That process began before the WCWS started. And it continued with her making calls to Storako and other targets between games at the WCWS.

Gasso said it’s a common misconception that the coaches pick whichever player they want, wait until the season ends and scoop them up like a cheeseburger at a takeout counter. They can’t wait and risk that player going elsewhere. Nor can they jump the gun and take a player without doing their due diligence, studying video and calling trusted sources to get a sense of whether they’re a good cultural fit.

Gasso estimated they walk away from 30% of prospects because they spot a red flag in the evaluation process. The balance of team chemistry and talent is that important, she said, because it’s the newcomers who have to fit into Oklahoma, not the other way around. Storako might have been Michigan’s ace, but she had to be OK with being the No. 2 or No. 3 starter. Torres was a star shortstop for Arizona State, but Gasso needed her in right field.

Depth is everything. Gasso’s goal is to have two quality athletes at each position, but this season was different. During fall intrasquad scrimmages, Gasso said, “It felt like two top-10 teams playing against each other.”

Then, early in the season, Gasso said she did something new: She called timeout and substituted essentially the entire defense. “And it was kind of prideful to see — the depth and hard work — that I didn’t feel uncomfortable doing it,” she said.

It was also pragmatic because she needed everyone engaged in order to get back to the championship series. She needed Sophia Nugent to come off the bench and deliver a pinch-hit RBI against Clemson. She needed Sanders to weather an early-season slump, be OK not starting a few games and bounce back during the NCAA tournament to drive in seven runs.

It’s a unique challenge managing such a deep roster — one that other coaches surely envy — but it’s a challenge, nonetheless.

“I need to keep these young players learning the game, playing the game, feeling the game — at an elite level,” Gasso said. “I’m trying to keep feeding them because I need them. They’re my future.”

And the future is bright.

In November, Oklahoma signed what Gasso called a “monumental” class that featured the country’s third-, fourth- and sixth-ranked recruits.

Lyons, Storako and Lee have played their final games, but who knows what star is waiting in the portal to replace them?

She can hear the groans about fairness now, even as she tries not to think about next season.

“Everybody’s out to get us,” Gasso said from that far end of the podium. “They want to bring down the Evil Empire.”

Oklahoma finished the 2023 season with 53 straight wins and, more importantly, a third consecutive WCWS championship. AP Photo/Nate Billings

IN 2016, WHEN UConn was dominating women’s basketball to the tune of 72 straight wins and three straight national championships, Huskies coach Geno Auriemma had an answer for critics who said they were ruining the game.

“When Tiger [Woods] was winning every major, nobody said he was bad for golf,” he said. “Actually he did a lot for golf. He made everybody have to be a better golfer.”

The growth of college softball in recent years — 24 schools averaged more than 1,000 fans per game last season, up six from five years earlier, and 1.74 million people tuned in to watch the WCWS final last year, roughly 150,000 more than the men’s final — suggests that what the Sooners have accomplished is good for the sport. But parity is a legitimate concern when Oklahoma is winning 28 games by mercy rule and has a run differential of plus-442.

“It’s always healthy to have several teams with a shot to be the top program,” Baylor coach Glenn Moore said. “And they’ve really separated themselves. Everybody else, I’ll tell you, is playing for No. 2.”

And that’s coming from the only coach to beat Oklahoma during the regular season — a 4-3 win in February.

Two months later, the Bears were swept in a three-game series by the Sooners with a combined score of 13-0.

“Patty has just figured out how to do it,” Moore said. “There’s something to be said about staying on top because everybody is shooting for you and saying things that will hurt your recruiting, and she continues to bring in those magnificent, All-American type players.”

It’s hard enough to overcome the pipeline Gasso and her staff have established with certain travel ball programs. But throw in their use of the transfer portal and it’s borderline insurmountable.

Liberty coach Dot Richardson said she’s fine with players transferring when they aren’t seeing the field enough at their current school. But what she sees now is starters who are going into the portal and saying, “I just hope I get picked up by Oklahoma.”

“I look at some of their pitchers who are threes or fours and go, ‘If you were here, we would go to the World Series this year,'” Richardson said. “They can pick and choose and say, ‘This is the best one.’ And then they’ll get her.”

It happened last season when Oklahoma brought in Trautwein from North Texas. Storako said Trautwein was a model for her decision to leave Michigan.

With a new head coach, the Wolverines missed the NCAA tournament for first time since 1994.

“Everybody wants close games, the excitement of the College World Series,” Gasso said. “They want extra innings, they want that, ‘Oh, I’m on the edge of my seat’ thing. And I’m like, ‘Well, that’s great, but I’m not here for your enjoyment.’

“Our goal, like any other team’s goal, is to win.”

Richardson helped UCLA take home the first of seven championships from 1982 to 1992. And she saw how that dynasty eventually fizzled out. She saw it happen again at Arizona and again at Florida.

“Someone will throw the queen off the throne,” Richardson said. “It’s going to happen. So will her run take her to eight, 10, 12 championships? I don’t know.”

Moore believes, “Rome will fall … eventually.”

“Honestly it only takes a few mistakes in recruiting to take them off that pedestal,” he said. “There’s a lot of programs out there investing a ton. So two years from now it could look completely different.”

As for next season, don’t bet against the Sooners.

Oklahoma is at 53 wins and counting, three championships and counting.

On and on it goes.

“Momentum,” former Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver once said, “is the next day’s starting pitcher.”

But when that pitcher next season is Bahl or Nicole May or Deal — and the second baseman is Jennings and the center fielder is Coleman — it’s hard to imagine the freight train that is Oklahoma slowing down.

Players and coaches didn’t seem to be in a hurry to return to Norman on Thursday night, but the team buses exited the stadium and left something important behind: the national championship trophy.

A staff member who drove separately was able to grab it for safekeeping, but maybe he could have left it behind and picked it up, same time next year.