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SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- California, home to some of the largest technology companies in the world, would be the first U.S. state to require mental health warning labels on social media sites if lawmakers pass a bill introduced Monday. The legislation sponsored by state Attorney General Rob Bonta is necessary to bolster safety for children online, supporters say, but industry officials vow to fight the measure and others like it under the First Amendment. Warning labels for social media gained swift bipartisan support from dozens of attorneys general, including Bonta, after U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy called on Congress to establish the requirements earlier this year, saying social media is a contributing factor in the mental health crisis among young people. âThese companies know the harmful impact their products can have on our children, and they refuse to take meaningful steps to make them safer,â Bonta said at a news conference Monday. âTime is up. Itâs time we stepped in and demanded change.â State officials haven't provided details on the bill, but Bonta said the warning labels could pop up once weekly. Up to 95% of youth ages 13 to 17 say they use a social media platform, and more than a third say that they use social media âalmost constantly,â according to 2022 data from the Pew Research Center. Parentsâ concerns prompted Australia to pass the worldâs first law banning social media for children under 16 in November. âThe promise of social media, although real, has turned into a situation where theyâre turning our childrenâs attention into a commodity,â Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, who authored the California bill, said Monday. âThe attention economy is using our children and their well-being to make money for these California companies.â Lawmakers instead should focus on online safety education and mental health resources, not warning label bills that are âconstitutionally unsound,â said Todd OâBoyle, a vice president of the tech industry policy group Chamber of Progress. âWe strongly suspect that the courts will set them aside as compelled speech,â OâBoyle told The Associated Press. Victoria Hinks' 16-year-old daughter, Alexandra, died by suicide four months ago after being âled down dark rabbit holesâ on social media that glamorized eating disorders and self-harm. Hinks said the labels would help protect children from companies that turn a blind eye to the harm caused to childrenâs mental health when they become addicted to social media platforms. âThere's not a bone in my body that doubts social media played a role in leading her to that final, irreversible decision,â Hinks said. âThis could be your story." Common Sense Media, a sponsor of the bill, said it plans to lobby for similar proposals in other states. California in the past decade has positioned itself as a leader in regulating and fighting the tech industry to bolster online safety for children. The state was the first in 2022 to bar online platforms from using usersâ personal information in ways that could harm children. It was one of the states that sued Meta in 2023 and TikTok in October for deliberately designing addictive features that keep kids hooked on their platforms. Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, also signed several bills in September to help curb the effects of social media on children, including one to prohibit social media platforms from knowingly providing addictive feeds to children without parental consent and one to limit or ban students from using smartphones on school campus. Federal lawmakers have held hearings on child online safety and legislation is in the works to force companies to take reasonable steps to prevent harm. The legislation has the support of X owner Elon Musk and the President-electâs son, Donald Trump Jr . Still, the last federal law aimed at protecting children online was enacted in 1998, six years before Facebookâs founding.
Ottawa police arrest 3 during pro-Palestinian demonstrations this weekendLuigi Mangione, accused of fatally shooting Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, pleaded not guilty on Dec. 23 in a Manhattan courtroom to multiple charges, including murder as an act of terrorism. Mangione, 26, also faces federal charges of murder and stalking that could carry the death penalty. For the state charges, the maximum sentence is life in prison without parole. Images appearing to be Mangioneâs New York City Police Department (NYPD) mugshot went viral online amid his New York court appearance. Mangione was arrested by Altoona, Pennsylvania, police on Dec. 9 and was extradited to New York on Dec. 19 to face prosecution. Social media users sharing the image were critical of the NYPD because it appears like it was taken by a professional using â photo shoot lighting .â Others questioned if it is real. This Threads post says , âNYPD official mug shot ARE WE KIDDING HERE ?!? Does Annie Liebovitz [sic] moonlight for the NYPD ?!?â Leibovitz is a famous portrait photographer. THE QUESTION Is the image of Mangione a real NYPD mugshot? THE SOURCES THE ANSWER No, the image of Mangione is not a real NYPD mugshot. WHAT WE FOUND The image circulating as an official NYPD mugshot of Luigi Mangione is fake and was likely created using artificial intelligence (AI). VERIFY reviewed the NYPDâs social media accounts and website and found no evidence the image was ever posted on official channels. While the NYPD has posted recent images of Mangione, such as his arrival in New York , they have not released any official booking or arrest photos. âThe NYPD does not disseminate arrest photos unless we are attempting to locate an individual,â the department said in an email to VERIFY. It is unclear if Mangione even had a booking photo taken upon his arrival in New York. A 2019 New York state law prohibits the release of arrest or booking photos unless their disclosure serves as a specific law enforcement purpose. If an NYPD booking photo of Mangione exists, it likely would not have been made public. The only official booking photos of Mangione released so far were by the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections on Dec. 9 and Dec. 10 . Maria Bivens, the spokesperson with the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, confirmed to VERIFY that the viral image was not distributed by their department. Using RevEye, a reverse image search tool, VERIFY found the viral image has never been published by credible news outlets as an official booking photo. It was also not published by the Manhattan District Attorneyâs Office , which is prosecuting the case, or the Department of Justice , which brought the federal charges. There are clues that suggest the image was generated with AI. For instance, the mole on Mangioneâs right cheek is misplaced in the fake image, and the white undershirt disappears entirely on one side of his neck. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Related Articles The VERIFY team works to separate fact from fiction so that you can understand what is true and false. Please consider subscribing to our daily newsletter , text alerts and our YouTube channel . You can also follow us on Snapchat , Instagram , Facebook and TikTok . Learn More » Follow Us Want something VERIFIED? Text: 202-410-8808Abu Dhabi [UAE], November 22 (ANI/WAM): The Air Expo Abu Dhabi 2024 has come to a close, with the next edition set to return in 2026. The event wrapped up after three dynamic days dedicated to aviation training, advanced air mobility, and the latest trends shaping the future of aviation. Air Expo Abu Dhabi attracted over 15,000 participants, including top executives from the aviation industry, representatives from 50 aviation training academies, and more than 50 airlines from across the GCC, Europe, and Asia. Also Read | France Shocker: Man Rapes Daughter For Years, Offers Her to Strangers For Sex; Sentenced to 20 Years in Jail. The successful conclusion of the Expo's seventh edition highlights Abu Dhabi's ambition to establish itself as a global aviation hub by bringing together leading industry players such as Gulfstream, Bombardier, Jet Aviation, FlightSafety International, and Sanad, a Mubadala company. The event featured the latest advancements in aerospace technologies and advanced air mobility, while also tackling important issues related to training, services, and sustainable aviation safety. Didier Mary, CEO of 4M Events, stated, "We are delighted that more than 160 exhibitors joined us at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre, ADNEC, marking a new chapter for the event. The satisfaction among exhibitors surpassed expectations, with high-quality business interactions over the three days. Numerous MoUs were signed during the event, solidifying this B-to-B event as a preferred fixture on the aviation industry calendar." Thanks to our sponsors for their amazing support in showcasing Abu Dhabi at its best! Also Read | PM Narendra Modi Returns to Delhi After Concluding Nigeria, Brazil and Guyana Visit (Watch Video). One of the major successes of the 2024 edition was the Middle East Aviation Career Trade Show and Conference (MEAC), which stood out among the various programs held at the event. MEAC garnered much attention as a platform dedicated to educating, inspiring, and promoting inclusivity within the aviation industry. Leading companies, industry experts, and over 40 top international flight training schools participated in this specialised career fair, enabling attendees to explore promising opportunities in the aviation sector in roles such as cabin crew, pilot training, airport management, and engineering, among others. As the UAE's aviation sector continues to flourish, fueled by a rise in tourism and strategic investments, such conferences are essential to addressing the growing demand for skilled professionals. They provide a unique opportunity to explore diverse career prospects, embrace innovation, and share valuable insights. (ANI/WAM) (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)
President-elect Donald Trump was welcomed back to the world stage on Saturday, sitting down with Ukraineâs Volodymyr Zelenskyy and French President Emmanuel Macron with a dramatic backdrop: the reopening of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame. With Trump set to return to the White House in January, the three leaders met at the Elysee Palace in Paris with diplomacy on the war in Ukraine in flux. Officials close to Macron and Zelenskyy said the meeting was positive, without providing details. âThe world is going a little crazy right now and weâll be talking about that,â Trump told reporters as he arrived for an initial two-way meeting with Macron. Macron had sought to engineer the talks to initiate a discussion on how to end the war in Ukraine, an official in his office said. Later, the French president hosted guests, including heads of state and global business leaders, at the cathedral that was painstakingly restored after a catastrophic 2019 fire. For Macron, the dayâs events offered a brief fillip as he seeks a new prime minister after his government collapsed this week in a show of force by far-right leader Marine Le Pen. Almost three years after Russiaâs full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Zelenskyy and his allies are anxiously watching Trump for signs of how he plans approach the conflict. U.S. weapons and financial aid have been a vital crutch for Kyiv, but Trump had promised he would engineer a swift end to the war on the campaign trail. Thatâs fueled concerns in Kyiv and other European capitals that the next U.S. administration might roll back support for Ukraine to pressure Zelenskyy to compromise. On the battlefield, Ukrainian forces have been on the back foot for most of the year and Russian gains have been accelerating in recent weeks. The incoming U.S. president faces a daunting range of geopolitical challenges, including war in the Middle East and long-running tensions with China. Shortly before arriving at the presidential palace, Trump posted on his Truth Social platform about the conflict in Syria, where rebels opposed to President Bashar Assad have made rapid advances. A withdrawal of its troops that are helping support Assad might be âthe best thing that can happenâ to Russia, he said. The U.S., he added, âshould have nothing to do with it. This is not our fight.â The visit to Paris is Trumpâs first trip abroad to meet with world leaders since he won back the White House in November and is a coup for Macron, whoâs seen his political program decimated by the domestic opposition who forced out his prime minister with a no-confidence vote on Wednesday. Macron worked hard to engage Trump through his first term, despite Trumpâs occasional barbs, inviting the U.S. leader to the Bastille Day ceremony in 2017 and taking him to dinner at the Eiffel Tower. Trump called Macron weak after the âYellow Vestâ protests broke out in 2018 and attacked him for cozying up to China. On Saturday, Macron deployed all his experience of dealing with Trump, welcoming him with a red-carpet ceremony at the Elysee and making him effectively the guest of honor at the cathedral. Trump was seated in the front row next to Macron and the two men were seen chatting during the service. Regardless of Macronâs domestic struggles, the meeting was testament to the unique soft power of France and the presidentâs ability to wield it. As Trump and Zelenskiy were speaking, an exclusive list of guests were arriving at the cathedral, which has been rebuilt at a cost of 700 million euros ($740 million). Bernard Arnault, Europeâs richest man, was among the early arrivals. Kering SA Chief Executive Officer Francois-Henri Pinault came with his wife, the actor Salma Hayek. Both men were major donors to the reconstruction effort. Billionaire John Elkann, who chairs automaker Stellantis SA, was also in attendance as was FIFA President Gianni Infantino. Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni chuckled as she posed for the cameras with Macron and his wife Brigitte. Zelenskyy embraced Macron as he arrived and appeared to say âthank youâ to the French leader. The Ukrainian was given an ovation by the guests as he entered the nave. Trump was among the last of the grandees to be greeted by Macron outside the cathedral, though Elon Musk, a close ally of the president-elect, arrived shortly afterward, scurrying across the square in the rain. First lady Jill Biden followed soon before the ceremony started. After the ceremony at the cathedral, a select group of guests will attend a dinner back at Macronâs presidential palace. ©2024 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.AP News Summary at 5:46 p.m. EST
PHILADELPHIA (AP) â Former Temple basketball standout Hysier Miller sat for a long interview with the NCAA as it looked into concerns about unusual gambling activity, his lawyer said Friday amid reports a federal probe is now under way. âHysier Miller fully cooperated with the NCAAâs investigation. He sat for a five-hour interview and answered every question the NCAA asked. He also produced every document the NCAA requested,â lawyer Jason Bologna said in a statement. âHysier did these things because he wanted to play basketball this season, and he is devastated that he cannot.â Miller, a three-year starter from South Philadelphia, transferred to Virginia Tech this spring. However, the Hokies released him last month due to what the program called âcircumstances prior to his enrollment at Virginia Tech.â Bologna declined to confirm that a federal investigation had been opened, as did spokespeople for both the FBI and the U.S. Attorneyâs Office in Philadelphia. ESPN, citing unnamed sources, reported Thursday that authorities were investigating whether Miller bet on games he played in at Temple, and whether he adjusted his performance accordingly. âHysier Miller has overcome more adversity in his 22 years than most people face in their lifetime. He will meet and overcome whatever obstacles lay ahead," Bologna said. Miller scored eight points â about half his season average of 15.9 â in a 100-72 loss to UAB on March 7 that was later flagged for unusual betting activity. Temple said it has been aware of those allegations since they became public in March, and has been cooperative. âWe have been fully responsive and cooperative with the NCAA since the moment we learned of the investigation,â Temple President John Fry said in a letter Thursday to the school community. However, Fry said Temple had not received any requests for information from state or federal law enforcement agencies. He vowed to cooperate fully if they did. âCoaches, student-athletes and staff members receive mandatory training on NCAA rules and regulations, including prohibitions on involvement in sports wagering," Fry said in the letter. The same week the Temple-UAB game raised concerns, Loyola (Maryland) said it had removed a person from its basketball program after it became aware of a gambling violation. Temple played UAB again on March 17, losing 85-69 in the finals of the American Athletic Conference Tournament. League spokesman Tom Fenstermaker also declined comment on Friday. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here . AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketballUS homelessness up 18% as affordable housing remains out of reach for many peopleRams don't dominate, but they're rolling toward the playoffs with superb complementary football
The streets have been speculating about Ntando and Una Ramsâs relationship for months. Back in January, notorious blogger Musa Khawula had already posted on X (formerly Twitter), introducing Una Rams as Ntandoâs man. Ntandoâs spicy clapback? Itâs official, South Africa â Ntando Duma is a married woman! The not-so-talented actress and media personality is said to have tied the knot with Grammy-winning artist Urinane Rambani, better known as Una Rams, in a private traditional ceremony in Venda. After all the baby daddy drama with Junior De Rocka, sis has finally found her Mr. Right, and Mzansi is buzzing! According to ZiMoja, the intimate ceremony took place in Thohoyandou, Venda, surrounded by close family and friends. The event was invite-only (no crashers here!), and the invites themselves were nothing short of poetic. One read: âJoin us as we celebrate a beautiful union in the heart of Venda, where tradition meets joy in a gathering of love and family.â While Ntando and Una Rams havenât confirmed the news themselves, sources close to the couple are spilling the tea, and fans couldnât be happier for them. After all, weâve been watching sis recover and glow up since her split with Junior. The streets have been speculating about Ntando and Una Ramsâs relationship for months. Back in January, notorious blogger Musa Khawula had already posted on X (formerly Twitter), introducing Una Rams as Ntandoâs man. Ntandoâs spicy clapback? âEy nkosi yam. Wena Musa uyangâthanda shem đđđđ and Mina uyangâchaza cabanga!â If that wasnât confirmation enough, Ntandoâs recent social media posts have been full of love and admiration for her âman.â She even credited him for her fire Instagram pics, saying: âMy man took both, these pictures and my heart cabanga..â Yoh, talk about love in the air! Letâs not forget Ntandoâs messy breakup with Junior De Rocka back in 2017. The two share a child together, and their relationship ended on a sour note. On Real Talk with Anele in 2018, Ntando opened up about the heartbreak, saying: âI am glad that I can speak about it now because at first, I was so crazy and in denial. Because he was my first, I really thought he would be my last. I saw a future with Junior. Unfortunately, things didnât work out.â Well, fast forward to 2024, and Ntando has officially upgraded! No more dribbling, no more dramaâjust pure love and vibes with Una Rams. Mzansi, itâs time to pop the champagne and celebrate this beautiful love story. Hereâs to forever for Ntando and Una!
A little after 9am in Montequinto, Seville, and JesuÌs Navas walks past the JesuÌs Navas Stadium and up the little slope in the sunshine, gym to the left, training pitch to the right. The first to arrive and heâs moving OK this morning, which isnât something he can say every day, but still he comes. Soon, too soon, he wonât. âItâs my life,â he says, âwhat Iâve always done, who I am.â The stand bearing his name wasnât here when he first turned up, a quarter of a century ago. Most of this wasnât; the trophies at the Estadio RamoÌn SaÌnchez PizjuaÌn, three miles north, certainly werenât. Everything changes, except him. âIâm the same as the first day,â he says. That day, Navas was 15, a small, skinny, shy boy from Los Palacios, 15 minutes south. It was 2000 and he has been coming almost every morning since, apart from four seasons in Manchester which he enjoyed more even than you might imagine. He is still small, slight: 5ft 7in and 67kg. Still quiet, too: warm company, but not a man with any desire for the spotlight, any delusions of grandeur. Only he is the grandest footballer of all here at Sevilla FuÌtbol Club. Navas is the Spanish national teamâs most-decorated player and there is a reason his name is written large where he used to train and the B team play, however strange it feels to him passing each morning: because it is written all over Sevillaâs history too. The most significant player in their 119 years, symbol of their academy and their success, their entire model. Navas played a record 393 games for Sevilla â my Sevilla, he calls them every time â left because they needed him to, came back and played 311 more. He has just one left. On Sunday at the Santiago BernabeÌu, Navas will play his 982nd professional game; aged 39, it will be his last. There has been something comfortingly familiar about him, always there, but he will depart for the last time and on Monday morning he wonât be back at Montequino. âItâs hard,â he says sitting in the playersâ area, which hadnât been built back then either. âItâs difficult for me. I still canât imagine it. My whole life has been spent doing what I most love. And now ...â There is a pause, a look. âBut in the end, itâs a question of health.â Over four years, Navas has suffered. He has an arthritic hip which hurts when he plays, when he trains and when he walks, which some days he canât. He continued in silence, playing longer than anyone imagined and than he should have done, but can resist no more. âIâve put up with the pain for four years and this season has been even harder, madness,â he says. âThese last six months have been very, very hard. After games itâs difficult to walk. Itâs purely physical: Iâm stopping because I have to. Iâm happy with what Iâve achieved.â What he has achieved is everything, nostalgia and melancholy in the memories, gratitude in the long goodbye, announced last summer and concluding this weekend. Navas says his best battles were with Roberto Carlos and itâs not that the Brazilian has long since departed; itâs that his successor, Marcelo, has been and gone too. He says the footballer he most enjoyed playing with, his best friend, is Fredi KanouteÌ, and KanouteÌ retired 11 years ago. Asked for a moment from the many he has made, he chooses someone elseâs goal, which is like him: with the clock showing 100.07 in the semi-final of the 2006 Uefa Cup against Schalke, his cross reached Antonio Puerta, who scored the winner, changing their history and their future. Puerta, whose shirt number Navas wears, collapsed on the PizjuaÌn pitch in August 2007, dying three days later. When Navas made his Sevilla debut against Espanyol two days after his 19th birthday in November 2003, they had not won a trophy for 55 years; he has won eight of them. By the time he left for Manchester City in 2013, he had already played more games than anyone in the clubâs history, had scored in a Copa del Rey final and lifted two Uefa Cups, the competition around which Sevillaâs entire identity became built. And still he wasnât finished. He returned from Manchester with a new position at full-back â âidealâ, he calls it â a Premier League title and two League Cups. He had scored in the 2014 final and in the shootout two years later. He returned with a fondness thatâs clear too, continuing when the tape stops. Yet for Navas more than anyone, there was nowhere like home. âThe PizjuaÌn,â he says. Apart from the PizjuaÌn? âI, er ... I wouldnât know what to say.â So he came back and carried on doing what he always had; different position, same Navas. He lifted two more Uefa Cups, his crosses creating goals in the 2020 and 2023 Europa League finals. Captain in Cologne and Budapest, when he lifted the trophy for the last time it was 17 years since the first. Fourteen passed between his first and last with Spain. He won the Euros in 2012 and 2024, and the World Cup in 2010, the greatest moment in the countryâs history beginning at his feet. It is one he admits watching every two or three days but couldnât imagine even then. âAll I was thinking was getting to the other end as fast as I could.â Thatâs it? âThatâs it.â He smiles. âItâs what the manager asked,â he says; it is what he does too. Three opponents trail behind, defenders appear either side like a sequence from Captain Tsubasa, cartoonish and comic, and he just keeps running. âAnd then ... well, itâs the greatest thing that can happen to a kid who loves football.â The boy who had anxiety attacks, who literally couldnât leave home, went round the world and won it all. That he even set off was something; that he went to Manchester seemed impossible, it might as well have been Mars; that he was there in South Africa had taken care and conviction, support and strength. Navas had missed the Under-20 World Cup in 2005, had to abandon his first pre-season with Sevilla, coming and going to Huelva from home while the rest stayed in the hotel, and his full international debut was delayed until November 2009, when he had fought his way through and the conditions had been created for him to feel able to join them. Iâm proud of the trophies but the nicest thing is to take their love with me âThat first big leap came so fast,â he says. âI arrived at Sevilla at 15 and in two years I was playing in primera. For a simple kid from a small town, it was a drastic change. Weâre people. On the pitch, everything was OK. But I assimilated it all bit by bit. And I have been able to enjoy football: it has given me life.â Thereâs a toughness in the timidity. Youâre a hard man. Navasâs response is swift, definitive: âYes.â âItâs mental. Physical, too,â he says. âTo put up with all this pain. After games it is hard to walk but here I am. âManchester was wonderful. Going wasnât such a hard decision [as it seems]. Sevilla were in [financial] difficulty, that appeared, and I didnât doubt. I wanted the challenge, to be able to say: âI can. Iâm strong.â What I suffered back then tested me. I wanted to grow in every way. There was a human side, a tremendous growth. The Premier League is incredible: the speed is unique and I wanted to experience that. Also, the lifestyle didnât change really: I train, I go home. It was harder for my wife; our son had just been born and she came back every so often. But football was all I was looking for and it was incredible.â Navas returned from City in 2017 after four seasons, 183 games, and, aged 32, supposedly nearing the end. Pep Guardiola later admitted he had let him go too soon but he understands the decision and so did everyone else. He had a season left, maybe two. It has been eight. Two more Uefa Cups. A return to the Spain squad five years later, the only man from that generation playing with this new one. âThatâs the way I live; every day I want more. I never settle for anything.â Thereâs that edge again: there is something in Navasâs career, his style, that speaks above all of insistence, relentlessness. Quiet he may be, but he is a competitor. âA [then] 38-year-old who trains like an 18-year-old,â Spainâs captain, AÌlvaro Morata, said in 2023. Navas says: âWhen I was in Manchester I went four, five years without being called up. Every Friday the squad was named I would be watching, waiting, hanging on the announcement. That was really, really hard. But I always held on to that hope. You keep going, keep hoping. And in the end, I was there.â Right to the end, another winnerâs medal round his neck, nothing left to give. He deputised for Dani Carvajal against Georgia, playing 85 minutes with his ankle swollen out of shape. âIâm strong in that sense. With my hip, a knock wasnât going to force me off,â he says. âAnd what made us win was looking out for each other.â He faced Kylian MbappeÌ in the semi-final at 38, no pressure. âWell, Iâve been in football a long time and played lots of good players,â he says. And then on the eve of the final he finally revealed what he had been going through, admitting this was the end with Spain. There was no announcement, no noise, it just slipped out. He hurt, yet held on. Six more months. Why? âBecause itâs my life. I wanted to be here with my Sevilla during this transition, help the younger players. And making people happy is the most important thing.â Last Saturday he played his last game at the SaÌnchez PizjuaÌn. âThe moment I hope would never arrive has arrived,â he told his teammates before the game. As it ended, he sat on the substitutesâ bench alongside Manu Bueno, a portrait of the passage of time: the 20-year-old academy product who hadnât been born when Navas made his Sevilla debut and trained and played at the Estadio JesuÌs Navas with the B team scored the only goal, the pair departing together immediately after. Navas embraced everyone, knelt and kissed the turf, sobbing as the stadium stood as one. When he lifted his shirt, he folded it so the name couldnât be seen, only the number: Puertaâs 16. Yet the name chanted was Navasâs, a man who belongs to everyone, universally admired in part because he never tried to be anything other than himself. âItâs hard to understand so much love,â Navas says. âPeople thank you for everything youâve done, the way you are: the values my family showed me and I try to show my kids. Am I an unusual footballer? Could be. That might be why thereâs affection. Because Iâm normal. Because despite the pain Iâm here giving everything. Because I havenât changed. Thatâs what I hold on to. Iâm proud of the trophies but the nicest thing is to take their love with me. Every ground I go to, thereâs been applause; thatâs incredible.â A teammate tells me: âYou will not find a single person in football who has a bad word to say about him, still less anyone that has ever argued with him.â One more left: the BernabeÌu on Sunday. And then what? Coach? âNo. People say: âYou will because what you love is football,â but I donât see it. There is something I would like to do, something there in my mind,â Navas says. âI always followed Miguel Indurain. I love watching Pogacar and Vingegaard. It was always about football for me as a kid, but in the summer it would be the Tour de France. Iâd like to cycle, and do it properly. It will be something I try, for sure. I canât go out there just to pass the time, no. Iâm not like that. I compete, give everything. Cycling is hard and I like that. Iâve been competing all my life and I have that âitchâ.â Itâs almost time. Navasâs teammates start arriving, the last of hundreds he has had, all of them marked by him. Outside the sun is shining, once more into the fray. âFootball is everything, my life. Itâs what Iâve always done, every day,â he says. âIâll have to look for something else, keep doing sport. And the bike is non-impact, it doesnât hurt my hip. But today, I train. To the end. Thatâs what brought me this far.â The Guardian SportAP Trending SummaryBrief at 5:42 p.m. EST
Lisa Simpson once said during an episode of âThe Simpsons:â What could be more exciting than the savage ballet that is pro football? On Monday night, the entire Simpsons universe gets to experience it in a way not many could have imagined. The prime-time matchup between the Cincinnati Bengals and Dallas Cowboys will also take place at Springfieldâs Atoms Stadium as part of âThe Simpsons Funday Footballâ alternate broadcast. The altcast will be streamed on ESPN+, Disney+, and NFL+ (on mobile devices). ESPN and ABC have the main broadcast, while ESPN2 will carry the final âManningCastâ of the regular season. The replay will be available on Disney+ for 30 days. Globally, more than 145 countries will have access to either live or on replay. âWeâre such huge football fans, and the Simpsons audience and the football audience, I feel, are like the same audience of just American families and football. And the Simpsons are so much a part of the DNA of the American family and culture that for us to, like, mush them together in this crazy video game, itâs so fun,â said Matt Selman, executive producer of âThe Simpsons.â While the game is the focal point, the alternate broadcast, in some ways, will resemble a three-hour episode of âThe Simpsons.â It starts with Homer eating too many hot dogs and having a dream while watching football. Homer joins the Cowboys in the dream while Bart teams up with the Bengals. Lisa and Marge will be sideline reporters. âThatâs the beginning of the story, and the story continues through the entire game until Homer wakes up from his dream at the end of the game. It is like a complete story, and the NFL game will happen in between. Itâs just going to be an amazing presentation with tons of surprises,â said Michael âSpikeâ Szykowny, ESPNâs VP of edit and animation. This is the second year ESPN has done an alternate broadcast for an NFL game. It used the characters from âToy Storyâ for last yearâs Sunday morning game from London between the Atlanta Falcons and Jacksonville Jaguars. âThe Simpsonsâ has featured many sports-themed episodes during its 35 seasons. Even though âHomer at the Batâ remains the consensus favorite sports episode for many Simpsons fans, there have been football ones such as âBart Starâ and âLisa The Greek.â There also was a Super Bowl-themed one after Foxâs broadcast of Super Bowl 33 between Denver and Atlanta in 1999. Even though âThe Simpsonsâ remains a staple on Foxâs prime-time schedule, it is part of the Disney family after their acquisition of 20th Century Fox in 2019. All 35 seasons are on Disney+. The showâs creators have worked with ESPN and the NFL to make sure the look and sound is definitely Simpsonsesque. The theme song is a mash-up of âThe Simpsonsâ opening and âMonday Night Footballâsâ iconic âHeavy Action.â There have also been pre-recorded skits and bits to use during the broadcast featuring Simpsonâs legendary voices Hank Azaria, Nancy Cartwright, Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner, and Yeardley Smith. The telecast will be entirely animated, with the playersâ movements in sync with what is happening in real-time on the field. That is done through player-tracking data enabled by the NFLâs Next Gen Stats system and Sonyâs Beyond Sports Technology. While Next Gen Stats tracks where players are on the field with a tracking chip in the shoulder pads, there is skeletal data tracking and limb tracking data â which uses 29 points per player â to get closer to the playerâs movements. The other data tracking will allow Beyond Sports and Disney to add special characters to the game. For example, there might be a play where Lisa catches the ball and goes 30 yards instead of Cincinnatiâs Tee Higgins. âLisa is much smaller than the rest of the players. So, in real life, the ball would go over her head, but now, with data processing, we can take the ball and make it go exactly into her hands. So for the viewer, it still looks believable, and it all makes sense,â said Beyond Sports co-founder Nicolaas Westerhof. The other major challenge is making âThe Simpsonsâ two-dimensional cartoon characters into 3-D simulations. Szykowny and his team worked to make that a reality over the past couple of months. âThatâs a big leap of faith for them to say, hey, we trust you to make our characters 3-D and work with it. Our ESPN creative studio team has done a wonderful job,â Szykowny said. Lisa, Krusty, Nelson, Milhouse and Ralph will be with Bart and the Bengals; while Carl, Barney, Lenny and Moe join up with with Homer and the Cowboys. The broadcast will also feature ESPN personalities Stephen A. Smith, Peyton Manning and Eli Manning. ESPNâs Drew Carter, Mina Kimes and Dan Orlovsky will call the game from Bristol, Connecticut, and also be animated. They will wear Meta Quest Pro headsets to experience the game from Springfield using VR technology. For Kimes, being part of the broadcast and being an animated Simpsons character is a dream come true. She is a massive fan of the show and has a framed photo of Lisa Simpson â who she said is a personal hero and icon â as part of her backdrop when she makes appearances on ESPN NFL shows from her home in Los Angeles. âI didnât have any input, and I didnât see anything beforehand, so I wasnât sure if it would look like me, but it kind of does, which is very funny,â said Kimes, who drew Simpsons characters when she was a kid. âTo see the actual staff turn me into one was a dream.â Even though the Bengals (4-8) and Cowboys (5-7) have struggled this season, Selman thinks both teams have personalities that appeal to âThe Simpsonsâ universe. âWe were just so lucky also that the Cowboys are sort of like a Homer Simpson-type team, American team, and Mike McCarthy might be a Homer-type guy, one might imagine,â he said. âAnd then you have Joe Burrow on the other side who is a cool young, spiky-haired, blonde bad boy -- heâs like Bart. And that fits our character archetypes so perfectly. âIf Homer is mad at Bart and has a hot dog dream while watching âMonday Night Footballâ, and then itâs basically McCarthy versus Burrow, Homer versus Bart, and thatâs the simple father versus son strangling â Homer strangling Bart dynamic that has been part of the show for 35 years. I donât know if that would have worked as well if it was like Titans versus Jacksonville. We would have found something. We would have made it work.â AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nflORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) â Thereâs plenty of concern and second-guessing to unpack from how the Bills unraveled on defense, special teams and clock management in their loss to the Los Angeles Rams to wonder whether it was premature labeling Buffalo as Super Bowl contenders only a week earlier. But first, the good news. Thereâs very little wrong with after the quarterback strengthened his NFL MVP case. A week after a four-TD performance that included the statistical anomaly of him scoring two touchdowns on the same play in a 35-10 win over San Francisco, Allen became the NFLâs first player to throw and rush for three scores apiece in . That Allenâs latest superhuman-like effort ended in defeat is whatâs troubling for the five-time defending AFC East champions (10-3) in their bid to dispel questions of finding ways to fall short in the playoffs in each of the past five years. Buffaloâs defense had few answers in stopping the Ramsâ dynamic attack while allowing a season-high 457 yards. Worse still, the Bills allowed Los Angeles to go 11 of 15 on third down for a 73.3 conversion percentage â the third highest allowed by Buffalo and worst since allowing Miamiâs 75% conversion rate in 1986. If thatâs not bad enough, the Bills lost for the first time in 39 games in which they scored at least 42 points, while becoming the NFLâs second team to lose when scoring 42 or more and not committing a turnover. Special teams didnât help. Aside from allowing a blocked punt to be returned for a touchdown, the Bills couldnât muster an attempt to block the Ramsâ final punt from midfield with 7 seconds left because they only had nine players on the field. As coach Sean McDermott concluded after finally addressing reporters more than an hour after the game ended: âI thought we lost two of the three phases today.â He failed to mention yet another clock management misstep. Rather than have Allen spike the ball to stop the clock after a failed quarterback keeper from the Rams 1 with 62 seconds remaining, McDermott called timeout. That left Buffalo with two timeouts and essentially relying on the slim chances of recovering an onside kick after Allen scored on his next attempt. McDermott defended his decision by saying he feared too much time would elapse before the Bills aligned for another snap. And yet, it would not have matched the 45 seconds the Rams ran off on their final possession after Buffalo used its final two timeouts. Together, these are the types of miscues that have haunted the Bills in their recent playoff losses. The bright side is the loss to the Rams didnât end the Billsâ season, though they fell two games behind Kansas City (12-1) . And perhaps, the loss can be chalked up to a team riding a little too high off a playoff-clinching win and having to travel across the country to face a Rams team in the thick of its divisional race. If thatâs so, the Bills have a chance to address their flaws â and doubters â by how they respond in what still stands as a juicy showdown at the NFC-leading Detroit Lions (12-1) on Sunday. âTheyâre the top dog in football right now,â Allen said, looking ahead to Detroit. âWe have to have a good week, learn from this one, and put it behind us.â Whatâs working Scoring. The Bills topped 30 points for a team-record seventh consecutive game and ninth time this season. Buffalo entered the day ranked second in the NFL averaging 30.5 points per outing, behind Detroit (32.1). What needs help Run defense. Though the Rams averaged just 3.3 yards per carry, they stuck with it in finishing with 137 yards, helping them enjoy a 17-minute edge in time of possession. Stock up Allen. If not for him, the Bills wouldnât have been in position to nearly overcome a 17-point fourth-quarter deficit. His 424 yards (342 passing and 82 rushing) accounted for all but 21 yards of Buffaloâs total offense. Stock down With so many options, perhaps the focus falls on special teams coordinator Matthew Smiley. This is the second time in 13 months special teams personnel management became an issue. Buffalo was flagged for having too many men as time expired, providing Wil Lutz a second chance to hit a decisive field goal . Injuries Starting CB Rasul Douglas was sidelined by a knee injury. ... DE Casey Toohill injured his ribs. Key number 80-1-1 â The Billsâ record when scoring 38 or more points, including a 38-38 tie with Denver in 1960. Next steps Facing Detroit represents Buffaloâs final major test before closing the season with two games against New England and hosting the New York Jets. ___ AP NFL:
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Florida Gulf Coast 59, Cincinnati 52Britainâs leader Keir Starmer makes his first trip to the Gulf as prime minister from Sunday, seeking to attract investment from the regionâs oil-rich states, Downing Street announced. Starmer will first visit the United Arab Emirates and then travel to Saudi Arabia, before stopping off in Cyprus on his way back to London on Tuesday in a bid âto build closer ties and drive long term UK growthâ. The trip to Abu Dhabi and Riyadh comes as his Labour government pursues a free-trade deal with the Gulf Cooperation Councilâs six nations: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and UAE. âThere is huge untapped potential in this region, which is why, while here, I will be making the case to accelerate progress on the Gulf Cooperation Council Free Trade Agreement,â Starmer said in a statement released Saturday. The meetings will also aim to âdeepen our research and development collaborationâ and partner on projects in areas including defence and artificial intelligence, Starmer added. The British leader will land in the UAE on Sunday evening, ahead of Monday morning talks with its president Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. Later Monday, Starmer will fly to Saudi Arabia to meet Riyadhâs de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who last week hosted French President Emmanuel Macron. A Downing Street press release called the UAE and Saudi âsome of the UKâs most vital modern-day partnersâ. The regional tour will end on Tuesday with Starmer meeting President Nikos Christodoulides in Nicosia, the first bilateral talks between the leaders of Britain and Cyprus in over five decades. Starmer is also due to address British troops stationed in Cyprus. â Economic boost â Labour has staked its credibility on a promise to get Britainâs sluggish economy firing again. It says a GCC agreement could boost bilateral trade, currently accounting for ÂŁ55 billion ($70 bn) of UK trade, by 16 percent, âpotentially adding an extra ÂŁ8.6 billion a year in the long runâ. It hopes a deal would see Gulf sovereign wealth funds invest in a range of sectors, including energy and infrastructure, while also opening up lucrative markets to British firms. Starmerâs trip comes after Britain last week rolled out the diplomatic red carpet for Qatarâs emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani who enjoyed a state visit to the UK. Starmer discussed trade with the royal during talks in Downing Street that coincided with Qatar announcing it will invest ÂŁ1 billion ($1.3 billion) in British climate technologies. Discussing regional conflicts is expected to be âhigh up the agendaâ, including the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, the fragile ceasefire in Lebanon and renewed unrest in Syria. Starmer will also be looking to repair relations between the UK and UAE that soured under the previous Conservative government after an Abu Dhabi-backed bid to buy the Telegraph newspaper failed. The Gulf visit will be Starmerâs 15th international trip since he entered Number 10 on July 5. Opponents have criticised the amount of time he has spent out of the country but allies insist the trips have been vital to get to know other world leaders. Starmer, 61, has been insisting in capitals that âBritain is back on the world stageâ following rancour over its departure from the European Union. With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.
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