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Facebook Twitter WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save Each week Hot off the Wire looks at a variety of stories in business, science, health and more. This week's headlines include: Airports ready for holiday crowds. Starting a small business is hard. Exiting can be even harder, but planning early is the key. McDonald's to expand US value menu as fast food chains battle for bargain seekers. Has a waltz written by composer Frederic Chopin been discovered in an NYC museum. The 'super year' of elections has been super bad for incumbents as voters punish them in droves. Trump has promised again to release the last JFK files. But experts say don’t expect big revelations. Donald Trump's latest branded venture is guitars that cost up to $10,000. Should women be allowed to fight on the front lines Trump’s defense pick reignites the debate. Texas offers Trump land on US-Mexico border for potential mass deportations. About 20% of Americans regularly get their news from influencers on social media, report says. Betty White Forever New stamp will honor the much-beloved Golden Girls actor. Forget driverless cars. One company wants autonomous helicopters to spray crops and fight fires. Volunteers came back to nonprofits in 2023, after the pandemic tanked participation. New Hampshire shelter faces enor-mouse problem after man surrenders nearly 1,000 rodents. NFL issues security alert to teams and the players' union following recent burglaries. NBA memo to players urges increased vigilance regarding home security following break-ins. WNBA corporate sponsorship deals are growing. But not every athlete is getting their due. Today he is a high school football player. Soon he'll be a Buddhist lama in the Himalayas. Denmark will plant 1 billion trees and convert 10% of farmland into forest. $344 for a coffee Scottish farm is selling UK's most expensive cup. Texas weighs Bible-related curriculum for public schools, placement of the Ten Commandments in classrooms faces a legal roadblock, and Ohio religious schools may so. Jersey Shore restaurants shift gears to survive in offseason Not too late! Voting closes at noon for The Press Football Player of the Week Galloway Township gymnastics center co-owner charged with sexually assaulting minor What does Spirit Airlines' bankruptcy mean for Atlantic City International Airport? Galloway man gets 3 years in Ocean City fatal crash Offshore wind company to buy vacant 1.5-acre Atlantic City lot for $1 million Atlantic City International Airport's 1 carrier, Spirit Airlines, files for bankruptcy Prosecutor still determined to find whoever is responsible for West Atlantic City killings Which players did the Cape-Atlantic League coaches pick as the best of the best in fall sports? Ocean City introduces new fees on rentals Friday’s New Jersey high school football playoff scores Upper Township employees disagree on morale High school football scoreboard: Friday's semifinal winners, plus Saturday updates These Atlantic City area restaurants are serving Thanksgiving dinner $23 million apartment complex promises to bring new vitality to quaint Swedesboro —The Associated Press About this program Host Terry Lipshetz is managing editor of the national newsroom for Lee Enterprises. Besides producing the daily Hot off the Wire news podcast, Terry conducts periodic interviews for this Behind the Headlines program, co-hosts the Streamed & Screened movies and television program and is the former producer of Across the Sky, a podcast dedicated to weather and climate. Theme music The News Tonight, used under license from Soundstripe. YouTube clearance: ZR2MOTROGI4XAHRX Be the first to know Get local news delivered to your inbox!Musk Ducks Sanction For Choosing Rocket Launch Over SEC Meeting
Michigan, Ohio State fight broken up with police pepper spray after Wolverines stun Buckeyes 13-10
Sinn Fein actively pursuing route into government, insists leader McDonald
AP Trending SummaryBrief at 12:19 p.m. EST
Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel gets 5-year contract extension
Bachelorette star Tayshia Adams and Dale Moss cozy up after THOSE romance rumors following Clare Crawley splitThis ‘Soft and Cute’ Turtleneck Sweater Is Currently 50% OffWriter-director Marielle Heller has a gift for making familiar emotions, characters, and situations feel fresh. Whether she’s dealing with a type as well known as the embittered failed writer (Melissa McCarthy in Can You Ever Forgive Me? ) or an icon as universal as Mr. Rogers (Tom Hanks in A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood ), her movies lend them additional dimension and nuance. That’s true of her new dark-comedy sort-of-a-werewolf-film Nightbitch as well. Here, the lead character is so subsumed into her new-parent identity that she’s never even named: Mother (Amy Adams) is a former artist now working as a stay-at-home mom in the suburbs because Husband (Scoot McNairy) has the more consistent, higher-paying job. For a while, it seems like Heller will bring her attentive eye to detail to this well-worn setup, even when Nightbitch appears to be leaning toward obvious tropes. Early on, the film establishes a running motif based around a fairly hoary comic concept: that editing trick where it appears a character has said or done something genuinely provocative, upending social order in response to another person’s dumb question or galling action... until a cut back in time reveals that she was only imagining that cathartic action, and she actually responds meekly or politely, keeping her true feelings bottled inside. In theory, that’s hacky stuff. But Heller holds the camera on Adams in these moments — in her imagined honesty and her deflated real-world lack of it. And what lingers afterward isn’t necessarily frustration that Mother hasn’t told anyone off. Instead, it’s a pervasive feeling of loneliness. A sitcom-level gag becomes, on Adams’ face, an ineffable feeling of loss. That articulation of disappointment is exactly what many full-time parents feel they must lose in order to get through the day. Nightbitch gets plenty of other things right about the messiness of motherhood and the sometimes-conflicting primal instincts that accompany it. For example, Mother’s toddler actually behaves like a real 2-year-old. This may sound like a minor concern, but most movies throw up their hands at the prospect of distinguishing between kids between the ages of 0 and 6. Heller, by contrast, takes care to capture the beautiful, maddening strangeness of a toddler. There’s a small moment when Mother carries her child into a library for storytime, and the kid semi-nonsensically murmurs “They can’t stop us” about the woman at the desk. If this isn’t a real toddler’s ad-lib, it sure sounds like one, and Heller smartly leaves it in the movie. The film, based on Rachel Yoder’s 2021 novel of the same name, isn’t purely observational, however. When Mother is left even more on her own by Husband’s business trips (and his general fecklessness), she starts feeling a transformation into a more instinctive, animalistic version of herself. Eating in public, she wolfs down her food with utensils-free abandon, and encourages her young son to do the same, regardless of the gawking they receive. She notices hairs growing in odd places, initially assuming it’s just one more post-pregnancy indignity. At the park, she discovers a newfound kinship with roving, seemingly ownerless dogs. Eventually, she’s running with them at night. Yes, Nightbitch is a werewolf story — sort of. Whether trying to keep the story grounded or Mother’s transformation ambiguous (does she literally shape-shift, or just tap into primal urges?), Heller treats the story’s body-horror elements gingerly, cautiously. She also has the misfortune to do so just months after moviegoers fell in love with the unapologetic wildness of The Substance . That movie similarly illustrates something many people already understood about the female experience: Women are valued and commodified for their bodies, then heartlessly discarded when they show normal human signs of aging. The thrills in The Substance come from the zeal writer-director Coralie Fargeat poured into her ideas, physicalizing them into memorable grotesquerie. For all Heller’s scrupulous dedication to the realities of parenthood — Mother’s worn body, the inevitable imbalances, the absolute rage with no easy target — she doesn’t seem interested in going for broke in the same way, particularly around her central conceit. Obviously, Heller’s movie has no formal connection to The Substance , was completed before The Substance was released, and aims for a completely different tone. It’s not that Nightbitch cries out to be remodeled as an arch, gory, knowingly broad satire crammed with body horror. But the movie tantalizingly promises weirdness growing from within, then wilts into domestic melodrama. The female dog, with its name claimed as a common slur and its combination of wildness and domestication, has a lot of metaphorical potential. So why does Heller insist on shoving all that to one side to focus on marital problems and possible reconciliations that both emerge too easily? Nightbitch ’s final half hour or so is especially baffling. After concluding that there are no easy solutions to the push-pull between a mother’s parenting instincts and her autonomy, the movie proceeds to make up a bunch of them anyway, with a decisiveness that I fear is supposed to read as empowering. That’s especially disappointing given Amy Adams’ fiercely committed, vanity-free performance as Mother. Alternately playing with and against her image as an essentially sunny, optimistic throwback star, she’s the perfect performer to embody the contradictions of motherhood: utterly warm and dedicated to her son, yet pointedly and productively lacking the righteousness of a true believer. She’s too hyper-aware of what she’s lost by focusing on parenthood. Unfortunately, the movie seems to think that stranding Adams in the movie will cleverly evoke Mother’s loneliness, meaning that McNairy and the rest of the supporting cast (Zoë Chao, Mary Holland, and Ella Thomas as younger fellow moms; the original 1977 Suspiria ’s Jessica Harper as a librarian) are given nothing roles. Nightbitch has an ample supply of sharp observations, but it retracts its claws too soon and too easily. It becomes a text on self-help — something The Substance clearly, and thrillingly, portrays as out of reach. Nightbitch debuts in theaters on Dec. 6. Entertainment Horror Movies Reviews
SC State 72, IU Indianapolis 62
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Michigan gave athletic director Warde Manuel a five-year contract extension Thursday on the heels of the Wolverines' upset over rival Ohio State and a strong start to the basketball season. Manuel, who has held the position since 2016, signed through June 30, 2030, the school announced. Manuel is also chairman of the College Football Playoff selection committee. “During Warde’s tenure as director, Athletics has put a structure in place where our student-athletes compete for Big Ten and national championships, excel in the classroom, and proudly graduate with their University of Michigan degrees,” university President Santa J. Ono said in the announcement. Michigan had a disappointing football season, finishing 7-5 (5-4 Big Ten), but a 13-10 win over then-No. 2 Ohio State took some pressure off of the program. The Buckeyes were favored by 21 points, the widest point spread for the rivalry since 1978, according to ESPN Stats and Info. The Wolverines won the national championship last year in their final season led by coach Jim Harbaugh, whose tenure at the school involved multiple NCAA investigations for recruiting and sign-stealing allegations. Manuel supported Harbaugh through those processes. In basketball, the women's team made its season debut (No. 23) in the AP Top 25 this week. The men are 7-1 a season after firing coach Juwan Howard, who lost a school-record 24 games in 2023-24 as Michigan plummeted to a last-place finish in the Big Ten for the first time since 1967. Michigan has won 52 Big Ten championships since 2020. “Every day, I am thankful to work at this great institution and to represent Michigan Athletics," Manuel said in a statement. "I especially want to thank the student-athletes, coaches and staff who compete for each of our teams and who have helped us achieve unparalleled success athletically and academically. I am excited to continue giving back to a university that has provided me with so much over my career.” Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here . AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
Naga Chaitanya announces new film NC24 on his birthday, shares poster
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Column: Trump’s billionaire budget-cutters are dangerously out of touchGenpact Signs Strategic Collaboration Agreement with AWS to Accelerate AI AdoptionIs Enron back? If it's a joke, some former employees aren't laughing
BC-Index fut.Musk files injunction to stop OpenAI for-profit transitionFinkAvenue Intel ( NASDAQ: INTC ) ( NEOE: INTC:CA ) stock's wild ride continued this week as the company said on Monday that CEO Pat Gelsinger was retiring. Shares ended more than 5% higher on the day, but gave up those gains and then some in Tuesday Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of INTC either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Seeking Alpha's Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.Pep Guardiola gets brutal with Man City squad and calls them out before Forest clash
Revealed: NDIC issues important update on KYC of bank customersTop cancer doctor accused of duping dementia-ridden relative into changing will to give her $750K apartment By NIC WHITE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM Published: 10:29 EST, 30 November 2024 | Updated: 10:46 EST, 30 November 2024 e-mail 6 View comments The daughter of a prominent fashion editor claims a top cancer doctor and distant relative duped her into signing over her apartment while he was suffering from dementia. Jo Ann Paganette died at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City on April 30, aged 85, six years after a stroke that brought on her condition. Her daughter Georgia Lee Sarah Andrews expected to inherit her one-bedroom apartment at 152 East 94th Street on NYC's Upper East Side. But she discovered Paganette had changed her will to instead give her home to Dr Ann Marie Egloff, an oncologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. The head and neck cancer specialist is distantly related to Paganette, whose mother's maiden name is Egloff. DNA testing confirmed all three women were related. Egloff, 58, put the apartment up for sale for $749,000 and Andrews sued her in Manhattan Supreme Court on Wednesday, seeking to block the sale. Dr Ann Marie Egloff, an oncologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, is accused of duping her relative into signing over her apartment while he was suffering from dementia Jo Ann Paganette died at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City on April 30, aged 85, six years after a stroke that brought on dementia Paganette gave up her daughter for adoption as a baby in 1966, but Andrews wrote in her lawsuit that she later pursued a relationship with her. She claimed the pair remained close and Paganette named her as the beneficiary in her will in 1986, leaving her the apartment. Egloff only got involved last July, Andrews claimed, when was moved to the Upper East Side Rehabilitation and Nursing Center. Andrews claimed a lawyer for Egloff showed up and tried to get the ailing woman to sign what appeared to be estate planning papers. Doctors objected because Paganette was 'under the influence of psychotropic medication', the lawsuit claimed. 'Dr Egloff throughout her involvement in the decedent's affairs took steps to isolate the decedent from the rest of her family,' the lawsuit claimed. A trust was eventually set up in March this year and the co-op shares were transferred into it by April 18, less than two weeks before her death, by AKAM Living Services. Andrews is also suing AKAM, a property management company. Egloff tried to claim Andrews was not Paganette's biological daughter soon after her death, according to the lawsuit, but the DNA tests proved otherwise. The one-bedroom apartment is at 152 East 94th Street on NYC's Upper East Side Egloff (far right) with colleagues at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston Paganette was a professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology and was a retail editor for several magazine in NYC, including Neiman Marcus magazine, and a founding member of the Women's Jewelry Association. Her obituary detailed that she was born in Detroit to and earned her BA from Marygrove College, then graduate studies at the University of Detroit and Wayne State University, majoring in journalism and English. After winning the College Board Competition at Mademoiselle magazine, she became a fashion accessories copywriter for Hudson's in Detroit, before moving to NYC. 'She was an FIT professor, writer, and frequent judge of national and international advertising competitions. Her books featured the best photographers, artists and writers of the 1970s to 2000s,' the obit detailed. She often wrote under the name 'Paganetti' and is known by both name variations professionally. Signs of Paganette's dementia after her stroke appeared in scathing reviews from her FIT students on Rate My Professor. Students overwhelmingly portrayed her as rude, stuck in her ways, disorganized, and generally difficult to deal with, and had problems following her lectures. 'She talks about nonsense and barely explains the material... Her emails are unclear, shes really rude, and condescending,' one student wrote. Egloff, 58, put the apartment up for sale for $749,000 and Andrews sued her in Manhattan Supreme Court on Wednesday, seeking to block the sale Another added: 'You could tell how unclear and messy she is just by the syllabus.' A third wrote that Paganette was 'doing her best' but 'just rambles on the entire class'. 'She seems like she is very knowledgeable if only you could understand and hear the words that are actually coming out of her mouth,' another added. A particularly scathing review claimed: 'I cannot stress this enough, do not take her class. She is very inconsistent, unorganized, condescending, and rude. 'She is narrow-minded and will not listen to ideas that aren't hers. The class itself is an easy-A but it is not emotionally worth it.' Egloff's ad for the apartment noted it was an 'estate sale' and described it as a 'welcoming Art Deco co-op built in 1937'. 'This freshly painted, north and west facing, fifth floor co-op apartment looks over the serene tree-lined street of brownstones on East 94th street,' it read. The ad spruiked the hardwood floors, five large closets, eight-foot beamed ceilings, a separate dining room, oversized corner windows, and a grand living area with room for dining, custom built-ins. The was also a windowed kitchen with dishwasher, and the building had two elevators, a bike room, storage, and onsite laundry. 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