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Electrify everything, California says — including trucks and trains

California just cracked down on pollution from transportation in two major moves, part of an effort to improve air quality and cut carbon emissions at the same time. 

On Friday, the California Air Resources Board unanimously approved a rule that would ban the sale of diesel big rigs in the state by 2036. The mandate, which will apply to about 1.8 million trucks — including those operated by Amazon, UPS, and the U.S. Postal Service —  is reportedly the first in the world to require trucks to ditch internal combustion engines. The news came one day after California became the first state to adopt standards to limit pollution from trains

The regulations are intended to improve air quality and trim carbon emissions from transportation, the source of about half the state’s greenhouse gases. Trucks and trains spew diesel exhaust, full of soot that contains more than 40 cancer-causing substances, responsible for an estimated 70 percent of Californian’s cancer risk from air pollution. 

The trucking rule requires school buses and garbage trucks to be emissions-free within four years. By 2042, all trucks will be required to be “zero-emission,” meaning there’s no pollution coming out of their tailpipes. The deadline comes sooner for drayage trucks, which transport cargo from ports and railyards to warehouses — typically short routes that require less battery range. New drayage trucks must be “zero-emission” beginning next year, with the rule applying to all drayage trucks on the road in 2035. 

Currently, medium and heavy-duty vehicles account for a fifth of greenhouse gas emissions statewide. In August, California clamped down on pollution from passenger vehicles with a plan to end the sale of new gas-powered cars in the state by 2035.

People breathing pollution from freeways and warehouse hubs have long called for stricter air standards. In the port cities of Long Beach and Los Angeles, some 6,000 trucks pass through every day, exposing residents to high levels of ozone and particulate matter, pollutants linked with a range of problems including respiratory conditions and cardiovascular disease. Long Beach residents who live the closest to ports and freeways have a life expectancy about 14 years shorter compared to people who live further away.

The trucking industry, however, argues that California is moving to electrify trucking too fast, and that the state’s strict rules could drive small operators out of business. Battery-powered trucks can cost up to half a million dollars including taxes and fees, more than twice what a diesel truck costs, although the federal tax credits and state rebates for electric big rigs  soften the blow. Rail operators also say the regulations on train pollution are coming too soon and could cause the price of goods to spike, with the industry arguing that “there is no clear path to zero emissions locomotives.”

According to the new rules, the state is banning locomotive engines that are more than 23 years old by 2030. It also bans trains from idling for more than 30 minutes, provided that they are equipped with an engine that can shut off automatically.

The stage for the rule was set by a single line buried in the Biden administration’s proposed auto emissions rules, in which the Environmental Protection Agency said it was considering allowing states to regulate locomotives. Still, California’s new rules may spark a legal battle with the rail industry, which argues that the state doesn’t have the authority to make such sweeping changes.

Though railroads only account for about 2 percent of the country’s carbon emissions from transportation, switching to trains powered by batteries or hydrogen fuel cells would provide some benefits in the effort to tackle climate change. The public health gains would be even bigger: The California Air Resources Board estimates its new rules for trains, passed on Thursday, would lower cancer risk in neighborhoods near rail yards by more than 90 percent.

“This is an absolutely transformative rule to clean our air and mitigate climate change,” Liane Randolph, the chair of the air quality board, said ahead of the vote on the trucking rules on Friday. “We all know there’s a lot of challenges, but those challenges aren’t going to be tackled unless we move forward … if not now, when?”

The new mandates represent a big change in California’s approach to climate policy from two decades ago, when most environmental groups treated global warming and air quality as separate problems that required separate solutions. Back then, the state’s climate policies actually diverted resources away from addressing local pollution to limit carbon emissions. 

Environmental justice advocates in California, among the first to use the phrase “climate pollution,” were some of the first to argue that the two problems were inextricably linked and needed to be addressed together. The new rules that limit pollution from transportation are a sign that the state has come to embrace their perspective.


This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/transportation/electrify-everything-california-regulations-trucks-trains/.

Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org

Stunning video shows alleged assassination attempt on Vladimir Putin

Russia on Wednesday accused Ukraine of attempting to assassinate President Vladimir Putin in a drone attack on his Kremlin residence, The Washington Post reports.

The Kremlin press service disclosed news of the alleged attempt Wednesday afternoon in a statement shared with Russian news agencies. 

“Tonight, the Kyiv regime attempted a drone strike on the Kremlin residence of the President of the Russian Federation. Two drones were aimed at the Kremlin,” it said.

“We regard these actions as a planned terrorist act and an attempt on the life of the president of the Russian Federation, carried out on the eve of Victory Day, the May 9 parade,” the statement continued. The Kremlin also said that Putin was not in the building during the alleged attack.

“Russia reserves the right to respond to an attempted strike on the Kremlin where and when it sees fit,” the statement concluded.

Though the assassination attempt could not be confirmed independently, Moscow residents reportedly heard two explosions go off behind Kremlin walls around 2 a.m. local time, according to The Daily Beast. Residents shared footage of a smoke cloud in the sky above the Kremlin to a local Telegram channel, uploaded to Twitter alongside another video of an explosion above the citadel by Eastern European media organization Nexta.

Serhii Nykyforov, a spokesman for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, denied the allegations in a statement Wednesday, Nexta reported.

“Separately surprised by the wording of the terrorist state. A terrorist attack is the houses destroyed in Dnipro and Uman, or the missile hit the train station in Kramatorsk and many other tragedies. And what happened in Moscow is obviously an escalation of the situation before May 9,” Nykyforov said.


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On Wednesday Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin banned flights of unmanned aerial vehicles without a special government permit in the city as Russia installs additional safety measures in preparation for its Victory Day festivities. The holiday commemorates the defeat of Nazi Germany in states of the former Soviet Union.

Russian officials had voiced concerns about attacks during the annual parade, calling for a limit on public events and, according to independent Russian media last week, prompting an order for utility workers to scour the city for drones and bombs ahead of the celebrations.

Victory Day events have reportedly been canceled across the country, the majority of them in Western Russia along the border with Ukraine.

Expert: Witnesses’ “detailed and unequivocal” testimony was “final twist of the knife” for Trump

Two witnesses intended to bolster E. Jean Carroll’s sexual assault allegations against former President Donald Trump testified in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday.

Carroll told the jury that she phoned a friend, author and journalist Lisa Birnbach, immediately after being raped by Trump at a Bergdorf Goodman department store fitting room in the 1990s. 

“I am here because my friend, my good friend, who is a good person, told me something terrible that happened to her, and, as a result, she lost her employment and her life became very, very difficult,” Birnbach said from the witness stand on the fifth day of the trial. 

“I want the world to know that she was telling the truth,” she added.

Birnbach’s testimony follows two days of Caroll’s cross-examination by Trump attorney Joe Tacopina. Tacopina on Tuesday told the judge that Trump would not be testifying in his own defense. Trump, who has denied Carroll’s accusations, has not been present in court for the trial.  

Birnbach testified that it was spring of 1996 when Carroll called her, and that she had been in her kitchen feeding her children dinner, per The New York Times. 

“She said, ‘Lisa, you are not going to believe what happened to me,'” Birnbarch recalled. 

Birnbach added that she went into another room so that she could whisper to her friend — who sounded “breathless, hyperventilating, emotional” — that she should contact the authorities. Carroll, Birnbach said, stated that she would not go to the police, and asked Birnbach to never speak of the alleged assault. Birnbach added that she had never spoken about the incident openly since then, until 2019. 

The New York Times reported that Trump lawyer W. Perry Brandt made a point to single out Birnbach’s political preference during cross-examination, calling the jury’s attention to the fact that Birnbach, a Democrat, made previous campaign donations to both Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden. 

Another witness, retired stockbroker Jessica Leeds, took the stand on Tuesday to recount her own experience of being groped by the ex-president on an airplane in 1979. 

The Washington Post reported that Leeds told jurors Trump groped her and tried to push his hand up her skirt after she was moved to first class on a flight. Leeds also claimed that Trump tried to kiss her and force her towards him against her will.

“There was no conversation,” she testified. “It was like out of the blue.”

Leeds said she ran into Trump and his pregnant wife Ivana during a Humane Society gala in 1981.

“I remember you. You’re that c**t from the airplane,” she recalled him saying.


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Former federal prosecutor Mitchell Epner wrote in a Daily Beast op-ed that Birnbach’s testimony was “detailed and unequivocal,” adding that the cross-examination “did not move her story, at all” as she pushed back on suggestions that she was politically motivated to testify against the former president.

Epner added that Leeds’ story about running into Trump years later was a “final twist of the knife.”

“In the end, this trial may be like ‘the sound of one hand clapping,'” Epner wrote. “E. Jean Carroll will have testified to being raped by Donald Trump. She will have presented numerous corroborating witnesses. Donald Trump will have presented no evidence on his own behalf, instead relying on the jurors to not believe the testimony of the plaintiff and her witnesses.”

New York Times reveals Tucker Carlson text message that “set off a panic” at Fox News

The New York Times on Tuesday published a text message that “set off a panic” at the highest levels of Fox ahead of its $787 million settlement with Dominion Voting Systems.

The discovery of the text “contributed to the chain of events” that ultimately led to the host’s firing, according to the report.

Carlson in the message sent to a producer hours after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot described his reaction to a video of Trump supporters beating an “Antifa kid.”

“It was three against one, at least,” he wrote. “Jumping a guy like that is dishonorable obviously. It’s not how white men fight.”

Carlson wrote that he “suddenly” found himself “rooting for the mob against the man, hoping they’d hit him harder, kill him.”

“I really wanted them to hurt the kid,” he wrote. “I could taste it.”

Carlson said that then an “alarm” went off in his brain that “this isn’t good for me.”

“I’m becoming something I don’t want to be,” he wrote. “The Antifa creep is a human being. Much as I despise what he says and does, much as I’m sure I’d hate him personally if I knew him, I shouldn’t gloat over his suffering. I should be bothered by it. I should remember that somewhere somebody probably loves the kid, and would be crushed if he was killed. If I don’t care about those things, if I reduce people to their politics, how am I better than he is?”

The Times report acknowledged that Carlson had spent years espousing white nationalist rhetoric but the text “revealed more about his views on racial superiority” and alarmed the Fox board, which saw the text a day before the Dominion trial was set to begin.

The board was concerned that the message would become public when Carlson took the stand and brought in an outside law firm to investigate Carlson’s conduct.

The message contributed to the “growing number” of internal issues related to Carlson that led the company to decide that he had to go, according to the report.

But it’s unclear why the text was not noticed earlier. Fox’s lawyers produced the text in discovery and were involved in redactions, according to the Times, and Carlson was even asked about it during his deposition.


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Critics of the network argued that it strained credulity that Fox executives were unaware of Carlson’s views before seeing the text.

“Fox was shocked to discover that the racial worldview Tucker expressed in his private texts was the same as the one he expressed on the air,” tweeted The Atlantic’s Yair Rosenberg.

“Incredible that NYT is taking Fox execs at their word that they were horrified to learn Tucker is racist,” wrote The Intercept’s Ken Klippenstein.

MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan played a supercut of Carlson’s racist rhetoric on his show.

“If you’re surprised or shocked by the Tucker text revealed by the Times tonight, then you really ought to see and hear what he was saying out in the open on his nightly show,” he tweeted.

Just on Tuesday, Fox News host Jesse Watters discussed how “you can tell” someone is “illegal” just by looking at them.

The segment came “on the air the same day the NYT reports on the racist Tucker Carlson text that supposedly helped prod Fox executives to fire him,” wrote former CNN host John Harwood, adding, “this is embedded in Fox’s DNA.”

Trump fatigue kicks in early: Polling shows growing GOP “exhaustion” ahead of 2024

The front runner for the 2024 Republican nomination for president, former president Donald J. Trump, is currently on trial in civil court in New York for rape (rape!) and it seems that none of his potential voters care that he is jetting off to a new golf course in Scotland instead of appearing in court to defend himself. Neither do they care that he’s also been indicted on felony charges in New York City for illegally paying hush money to an adult film actress or that he and his offspring are the subject of a massive civil fraud case filed by the state Attorney General last September.

And that’s just New York.

Trump’s also got investigations pending in Georgia over election fraud and two major federal probes being handled by Special Counsel Jack Smith regarding the stealing of classified documents and criminal liability for the insurrection on January 6.

But according to a new CBS/YouGov poll, the majority of Republican voters could not care less about any of that. This new survey shows Trump is the undisputed leader of the pack, besting his closest rival Florida Governor Ron DeSantis by 36 points and it delves into why GOP primary voters feel the way they do. 94% of those declared for Trump are voting for him because of his performance as president. (Apparently, they love chaos and incompetence.) 94% believe he “fights” for people like them and 82% love the way he deals with his political opponents. 65% believe that a good reason to vote for him is as a way to show support for his legal troubles which explains why they could not care less that he’s credibly accused of numerous crimes. It’s clear at this point that Trump’s trope that he could shoot someone on 5th Avenue and not lose any votes is literally true.

Meanwhile, 84% believe he can beat Biden and this is because nearly 70% believe that Biden is illegitimate and 75% see Trump’s “victory” in 2020 as a reason to vote for him again. Even worse, 61% believe that all candidates must say that Trump won. In other words, the Big Lie is a litmus test even after the 2022 election in which GOP candidates who ran on that were slaughtered at the polls.

They are feeling the exhaustion of having to keep up a false front.

If anyone thought that Trump’s celebration of the January 6 criminals might turn off GOP voters, they need to think again. Only 15% prefer a candidate who is a critic of the events that day while 24% want one who supports what they did. Most Republicans just want to sweep it under the rug and not talk about it at all and they certainly don’t seem to be holding it against Trump.

What about “the issues?” Well, here’s what GOP voters care about:

As you can see we are dealing with very serious people. Only 51% are in favor of a national abortion ban and a mere 44% believe that the government should rip up the Constitution and favor Christianity over all other religions. I guess that’s good?

CBS pointed out one interesting little finding that I suspect may have more of an effect in the general election should Trump win the nomination: Of the voters who say they aren’t going to vote for Trump, half of them name “exhaustion” as the reason why. 54% explain that he’s “too controversial” and 41% of those who won’t vote for him say it’s because of his legal woes. This doesn’t add up to a large number in the full primary pool, but it’s enough that he’s going to have to find a way to appeal to them if he hopes to beat Joe Biden. These are people who could just decide to stay home rather than vote for him again.


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Perhaps that’s why he’s decided to do mainstream media outreach and has agreed to appear on CNN for the first time since 2016 for a town hall next week in New Hampshire. CNN is desperate for ratings so I would imagine they’ll be happy to let Trump and his cult followers say pretty much whatever they want which may appeal to some of the disaffected Fox viewers who’ve stopped watching in the wake of Tucker Carlson’s firing. Vanity Fair spoke with CNN political director David Chalian, who acknowledged that Trump is “unique” what with all the impeachments and crimes and coups and all, but said they plan to treat him “just like any other candidate.” Great.

Maybe someone in the audience will broach the subject of his legal woes even if CNN declines to be so rude as to mention it. If there are some Fox defectors who tune in to see their idol, they might learn something. The Washington Post’s Philip Bump took a look at the coverage he gets on these issues on the right-wing networks and it’s pretty astonishing. For instance, regarding the rape trial that’s currently unfolding in New York, “this year CNN mentioned Carroll more than 230 times and MSNBC more than 440. Fox News has mentioned her seven times.”

Or how about the Georgia election investigation:

If charges emerge in Fulton County, Ga., as seems likely, it may actually surprise the network’s audience. Since Trump was first recorded cajoling state officials to overturn the results of the 2020 election in January 2021, Fox News has mentioned the county in the context of Trump less than 100 times. CNN has mentioned it more than 800 times and MSNBC twice as often as CNN.

This pattern holds for all the Trump legal scandals. It’s no wonder that Republican voters don’t care about them. If they’re aware of them at all they think they aren’t serious or dangerous to Donald Trump.

The results of this CBS poll are a testament to Trump’s insight that constant repetition of lies, no matter how preposterous, will convince people that the truth is in the eye of the beholder. Many of his followers certainly believe every word he says but just as many know he didn’t win the election and are at least somewhat aware that he is scandal-plagued for a reason. They admire him for refusing to acknowledge the facts and have willingly joined him in bending the truth to fit their desires. It must be a powerful feeling, almost like magic, to be able to live in an alternate reality and they have Trump’s historic audacity to thank for that. They won’t give it up easily.

However, for a few, it’s wearing off and they are feeling the exhaustion of having to keep up a false front — the veil is falling from their eyes and they can no longer look away. They are a small minority of the party but there are enough of them to deny Trump a second term if they decide they just can’t do it again. Let’s hope the mainstream media doesn’t convince them that he’s really “just like any other candidate” after all.

Maine court recharges plan for embattled transmission line

A stalled transmission line project that Maine voters tried to kill in 2021 has been brought back to life by a state court. The ruling gives climate-conscious state governments across New England a fresh chance to significantly decarbonize the region’s electrical grid, which is sustained by oil and natural gas.

Near the end of last month a jury unanimously ruled that the so-called New England Clean Energy Connect project could move forward after being stalled for more than a year, ending a legal limbo that began when Maine voters rejected the project in a 2021 referendum. 

The $1 billion project would deliver around 1,200 megawatts of power from hydroelectric dams in Quebec to the New England states, satisfying around 8 percent of typical demand on the region’s grid. The project has been progressing in fits and starts since 2018, when the Massachusetts state government backed it as the best way to reach that state’s ambitious clean-power goals. 

“At the end of the day, clean energy won,” said Joe Curtatone, president of the Northeast Clean Energy Council, a business association that represents renewable power companies, including those involved in Clean Energy Connect. “This makes [meeting our climate goals] a lot more likely and achievable. These are the kinds of big leaps we need to take after decades of minimal progress.”

The jury decision is the latest in a string of state and federal regulatory victories for the embattled project. Avangrid, the company building the transmission line, said on an earnings call last week that it will know by midyear when it can resume building the project, citing a need to renew permits. The company had just started clearing a path for the line at the time of the 2021 referendum, and it initially planned to bring the wires online by late 2022. The company hasn’t given a new timeline for finishing them.

Avangrid will also undertake about $200 million in upgrades to existing infrastructure in the New England grid, while adding customer incentives like rural broadband upgrades and ratepayer rebates, according to Curtatone. These upgrades, in addition to the cheap hydropower from Quebec, should mean widespread cost savings for New England residents.

“In addition to being reliant on fossil fuels, the grid is a bit of a fossil itself,” he told Grist. (Both Avangrid and Hydro-Quebec, which owns the hydropower dams, are members of the Northeast Clean Energy Council.)

Even though several New England states have passed ambitious climate laws in recent years, the region still relies on natural gas for about half its power needs. Unlike the rest of the country, the region also burns significant amounts of oil to generate electricity and heat. This tends to happen during periods of high demand, such as the cold snap at the end of December, which saw oil become the grid’s largest single fuel source for a period of a few days. (Fuel oil is around 30 percent more carbon intensive than natural gas.)

Like a nearby transmission project that runs from Canada through upstate New York, the Maine project has faced criticism on several fronts. Landowners and environmentalists have argued that it would destroy valuable acres of forest, and Indigenous activists have also argued against importing power from Hydro-Quebec, whose dam projects are on unceded First Nations land. The electrical utility NextEra, which owns multiple nuclear power plants in New England, also spent millions of dollars campaigning against the project during the 2021 referendum.

The trial in Maine’s Consumer and Business Court last month didn’t address any of these concerns. Instead, the jury considered only whether Avangrid had acted in good faith when it started constructing the project in 2021 or whether the company had only been trying to give itself a legal shield against the results of the referendum. The jury deliberated for only three hours before delivering a unanimous verdict in Avangrid’s favor.

Experts say that building more transmission capacity is one of the most essential steps toward decarbonizing the power sector, but new connection lines face significant obstacles. Among the most significant is a mismatch between benefits and costs. Residents across New England will benefit from a surge of cheap, clean energy, but only Maine residents will deal with the hassle of a new power line on their turf. This dynamic has played out all over the country as private landowners and federal agencies protest the rollout of new wires, citing a range of concerns from the plight of endangered species to aesthetic disgust.

The Maine project itself was a kind of Plan B for Massachusetts after New Hampshire regulators killed a transmission line from Quebec through the latter state’s White Mountains. And the Bay State only looked to Canada as a source of new imported power after ambitious offshore wind projects collapsed amid blowback from coastal homeowners and concerns about price.


This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/energy/maine-transmission-line-new-england-hydropower/.

Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org

How to weaponize Republicans’ words

“Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes the truth.” This is one of the primary rules of a successful propaganda operation. Today’s Republican Party and “conservative” movement and their propagandists across the right-wing echo chamber use that principle to great effect. To wit: the Republican Party is not in fact “the party of family values.” In reality, today’s Republican Party and “conservative” movement are the enemies of the American family and children.

The most recent example is the manufactured debt ceiling “crisis,” where House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and the other Republicans in Congress are holding the country hostage by threatening to default on the federal government’s financial obligations unless their austerity policies such as draconian cuts to healthcare, education, veteran’s benefits, Medicaid, food stamps, housing assistance, and other programs are forced into place. In all, if the Republicans get their way the country’s already weak social safety will be further gutted and even more money will be transferred from the American people and up to the moneyed classes and corporations. Ailen Arreaza, the Executive Director of ParentsTogether, explained how the Republican Party’s proposed budget cuts will hurt America’s families and children and is part of a much larger neofascist and anti-democracy campaign:

It’s important that we look at the actions of elected officials, not just their words. Republican politicians keep telling us that “parents matter”, but their actions tell a different story – one about a country that prioritizes the few over the many, and where the ultra-wealthy and corporations get all the breaks, while most families struggle to get by. They want us to think it’s our fault. But it’s not. It’s their systemic failure to champion policies that give families the tools they need to succeed – things like access to affordable child care and paid leave. 

Parents have myriad challenges, but if you look at Republicans’ actions and priorities, including in Speaker McCarthy’s recent budget proposal, they’re not trying to solve those challenges. They’re trying to create new ones. They’re trying to pit parents against each other, and parents against teachers, and restrict our children’s freedom to be themselves, and learn openly, and thrive. They’re trying to distract us with culture wars and budget arguments, while they strip away public goods and dismantle public education systems that enable children and families to succeed, and that feed a healthy multi-racial democracy.

Republicans talk about parental rights because they want to scare us into thinking our rights are at risk rather than doing anything to actually support our right to raise a family freely and with dignity. But the truth is that most parents support solutions that center the needs of families in this country – the types of policies that allow us to love and care for our children the way they deserve. If and when we advance these solutions, not only will families be better off for it, so will our country.

Today’s Republicans and “conservatives” show their contempt and hostility towards the American family – and in particular children and other vulnerable people – in many other ways as well.

As part of a nationwide plan, Republicans in states such as Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Wisconsin, Ohio, and elsewhere are trying to get rid of child labor laws. Such outcomes will leave children vulnerable to financial and all manner of exploitation and danger.

Democrats, centrist liberals and progressives consistently amplify the Republican Party’s branding and lies.

Republicans and the other neofascists and larger white right are also committing intellectual violence against children and other young people by enacting an Orwellian thought crime regime across the country that involves censorship and banning books, and harassing teachers, librarians, and other educators for not being sufficiently “patriotic” (i.e. “Christian” and “pro-white”) because they dare to teach the real history and real facts and real truth(s) about America’s complex past and present.

And of course, because today’s Republicans and so-called conservatives are authoritarians who are involved in a fascist project that is working to end multiracial pluralistic democracy and society, they deem some families (and children and parents) to be inherently more valuable and worthy of human respect and dignity than others.


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During a recent congressional hearing Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene recently said that adopted parents and other parents through marriage or other non-biological relationships are not real parents — and by implication families.

Republican Montana state Rep. Kerri Seekins-Crowe said during a debate in March that she would want her transgender child to commit suicide rather than live as her best true self by following through with gender-affirming surgery. Seekins-Crowe went so far as to publicly say that “One of the big issues that we have heard today and we’ve talked about lately is that without surgery the risk of suicide goes way up. Well, I am one of those parents who lived with a daughter who was suicidal for three years… “Someone once asked me, ‘Wouldn’t I just do anything to help save her?’ And I really had to think and the answer was, ‘No.'”

Under the Trump regime, a system of concentration camps was created as part of a larger regime of white supremacist terror where Black and brown migrants and refugees had their children stolen from them by the federal government through a program euphemistically described as “family separation”.

In Florida, Texas, and across other parts of red state America, the Republicans and their agents are enacting laws that allow for transgender children to be stolen away from their parents by the state and other “concerned” parties.

Unfortunately, instead of consistently confronting, exposing, and debunking the lie that the Republican Party represents “family values,” most Democrats, liberals, and progressives (and the mainstream news media and larger political class, more generally) simply repeat such claims without correction or other intervention.

There are many other examples of this error in strategy such as how the Democrats and centrist liberals and progressives consistently amplify the Republican Party’s branding and lies that they are “pro-life” and represent (and have a monopoly on) “patriotism”, “national security”, “real America”, “law and order”, “small business”, “entrepreneurship”, “opportunity” and “freedom.” Almost all of this right-wing branding is easily shown to not be true – even more so in the Age of Trump and ascendant neofascism.

On the power of correct language and framing, cognitive linguist and philosopher George Lakoff explained in an excellent 2018 interview with Sean Illing at Vox how:

I wrote a book called Don’t Think of an Elephant, which makes the point that if you negate a frame, you activate the frame. When Trump says something and people working in the media deny it, they’re helping him. But they don’t realize that they’re helping him.

There’s another possibility. Journalists could engage in what I’ve called “truth sandwiches,” which means that you first tell the truth; then you point out what the lie is and how it diverges from the truth. Then you repeat the truth and tell the consequences of the difference between the truth and the lie.

If the media did this consistently, it would matter. It would be more difficult for Trump to lie….

Well, not just talk about the truth he’s trying to suppress. The truth sandwich is more than that. It shows the difference between the truth and what he’s saying — putting the truth first, and then putting it afterward, and talking about its consequences.

People say, “Oh, well, here’s the real fact.” That doesn’t really matter because Trump is getting his frame out there first. What he’s trying to do in each of the tweets he sends out is to frame something first and then repeat it.

Notice that when you repeat something, you’re strengthening it in people’s brains. The more a neural circuit is activated, the stronger it gets. Trump is using certain communicative tactics that are very sophisticated and he doesn’t realize it….

[T]here’s still a question of what the media’s job is.

Many journalists still assume that language is neutral, that you can just repeat language and it’s completely neutral. In fact, language is never neutral. Language is always framed in a certain way, and it always has consequences.

If in the process of reporting, you simply repeat the language Trump is using, you’re missing what’s going on.

In a recent post on Twitter, Lakoff offered these insights as well:

When you repeat a lie, even to debunk it, you help to strengthen and spread the lie. When you negate a frame, you evoke the frame. Remember this when someone provokes you with an absurd lie. Are you falling into a trap?

When the Republicans and their spokespeople and other propagandists say that they are “pro-life,” Democrats should counter with “No, you are pro-forced birth and pro-forced pregnancy and pro-rape.”

When they say that, “They are the party of law and order and national security and patriotism” intervene with “No, you are the party of a traitor president who attempted a coup on Jan. 6 and that the Republicans and their media are still in thrall to him and helping his war on democracy.”

When the Republicans and their spokespeople and other propagandists say that they are “defenders of family values” counter with “No, you put in place polices that actually hurt families and parents and children and here are the many examples….”

To uncritically repeat the Republican Party’s and its forces and allies’ lies and other untruths is a choice. The Democrats, the mainstream news media and other opinion leaders and people with a public platform can easily decide to not do so. Unfortunately, most of them will choose to proceed with bad and lazy habits that only empower the Republican Party and its war on democracy, freedom, and a good and humane society – and reality itself.

Language helps to create reality as much, if not more so, than it just reflects it. In that way, the Republican Party and the larger right wing are very lucky to have their supposed opposition and enemies in the Democratic Party and on “the left” helping them in their decades-long campaign to create what is a new American fascist dream-nightmare.

Of course Steve Bannon and Alex Jones love RFK Jr. — he’s a great weapon for their war on reality

Let’s make one thing clear up front: There’s no chance that anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will win the Democratic presidential nomination.

Yes, the son of the assassinated 60s era leader is polling at an alarming 19% in the Democratic primary polls, causing Bill Maher, who is wrong about most things these days, to gush about how “surprised” he is by Kennedy’s supposed success. In truth, those polls are more an artifact of Kennedy’s famous name, coupled with ignorance about what a crank he is, than a robust show of support. Kennedy, whose infamous anti-vaccination articles have been retracted, will almost certainly fade swiftly once it gets closer to primary season. Still, just because Kennedy is not a threat to Biden’s primary chances doesn’t mean his campaign doesn’t have real potential to cause serious damage, both to public health and democracy. The former because, of course, Kennedy’s main reason for running is to convince more people to avoid vaccinations. The latter is evident by the alarming swell of support Kennedy is getting from the loudest, most famous fascists in the nation. 

As Alex Seitz-Wald of NBC News reported last week, some of the biggest names in MAGA world are cheering for Kennedy, who likes to call himself “RFK Jr.” to remind people of his fallen father. Alex Jones of Infowars, former Trump advisor Michael Flynn and Turning Point USA head Charlie Kirk have heaped praised on Kennedy. Both former Trump aides Steve Bannon and Roger Stone have suggested Kennedy as Trump’s running mate, calling the two a “dream ticket.”


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A lot of this is dogwhistling to the QAnon crowd, as many of them believe that John F. Kennedy Jr. did not die in a plane crash in 1999, but is in hiding and will emerge to be Trump’s running mate in 2024. This RFK-as-second-banana idea will tickle their delusional fantasies.

But what these fascist grifters are doing is even uglier than that. They believe they can weaponize Kennedy’s narcissistic run for two purposes: First, to reach into communities of “apolitical” or even liberal-leaning people, and radicalize them through conspiracy theories. Second, to aid their long-term goal of destroying the value of empirical truth, a necessary step in destroying democracy. 

A lot of this is dogwhistling to the QAnon crowd.

When it comes to the first goal, it’s important to understand how much success that right-wing conspiracists, especially QAnon, have already had in radicalizing people who previously had no relationship to conservative politics. In a strategy nicknamed “pastel QAnon,” conspiracy recruiters have become skilled at reskinning themselves as “wellness influencers” or “anti-trafficking activists,” appealing to large swaths of people who may have previously found Trump a repulsive figure. They target people on health and parenting websites with messages that seem apolitical, and once they hook them, they gradually start pulling them into the world of QAnon and vaccine denialism by framing it as “holistic” medicine and “concern” for children. A lot of female QAnoners, some who were even Democrats in their pre-conspiracy lives, are radicalized this way. 

It’s easy to see how a figure like Kennedy would aid this strategy. Because of his family and his misleading self-identification as a progressive, he appeals to people outside of the right-wing disinformation bubble. Kennedy’s goal may be “only” to convince people to embrace anti-vaccination conspiracy theories — though that is bad enough! — but as Bannon and other conspiracists understand, it rarely stops there. As Rachel Moran of the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public told Mother Jones, ‘It’s incredible how networked these conspiracy theories are. Once you’re involved in one of the buckets of misinformation, your likelihood to believe in others is far, far amplified.” People may start with anti-vaxx myths, but once they develop a taste for conspiracy theories, they often swiftly graduate to harder stuff, such as QAnon. 

Recruiting more Instagram addicts into QAnon is a big goal, of course, especially since the far-right needs to replenish its ranks after losing so many insurrectionists to prison sentences in the wake of January 6. But figures like Bannon and Jones see value in Kennedy even beyond that. They understand that as long as rationality, evidence, and facts retain widespread social value, it’s a threat to their goal of a total fascist takeover. But if they can devalue truth itself in the public eye, then it’s much easier for them to push their agenda. 

We saw this in the 2022 midterms. Huge numbers of Republican candidates explicitly ran on the Big Lie, rejecting reality in favor of Trump’s conspiracy theories about a “stolen” election. Because of this, Democrats were able to position themselves as sensible defenders of basic facts, and won elections they otherwise wouldn’t have. 


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A figure like Kennedy, who is as much a conspiracy nut as Bannon or Jones, can be used to undermine the reputation Democrats have as reality-based people. He’s not just running as a Democrat, but his family is the most famous one in Democratic politics. Right-wingers can point to him as proof that “both sides” are liars and cranks, thereby demoralizing voters who just want a chance to back a party that is bound by empirical reality. 

Figures like Bannon and Jones see value in Kennedy because they understand that as long as rationality, evidence, and facts retain widespread social value, it’s a threat to their goal of a total fascist takeover.

Kennedy’s run is already being exploited in just this way. Noah Rothman at National Review, who should know better as a Trump-skeptical Republican, wrote a “gotcha”-style column Monday trying to argue that a marginal figure like Kennedy is proof that Democrats are just as anti-science as Republicans. The whining tone leaps off the page early on:

Although the condescending affectation predates the Trump era, it became common in the closing years of the last decade to hear Democratic lawmakers explicitly position themselves as the last lonely defenders of free inquiry, dispassion, and rationalism — the “party of science,” as Washington governor Jay Inslee once put it. Only Democrats, they insisted, could be trusted to defer to experts in a crisis, restore empiricism to its proper place, and safeguard the environment and public health against the troglodytic masses. RFK Jr. shatters this presumption.

It would be too generous to call this argument a “stretch.” The anti-science views of the GOP are supported by the leadership of their party and regularly implemented into policy when Republicans have power. Republican leadership has rejected climate science for decades. They are currently banning abortion across red states by using false claims that abortion “harms” women as justification. Republican-controlled states are also in a frenzy of banning gender-affirming care, in another direct rejection of the overwhelming scientific consensus. The last GOP president and current frontrunner for their 2024 nomination suggested people inject bleach into their lungs to cure COVID-19, for heaven’s sake. Kennedy may have a famous name, but statistics clearly show that vaccine rejection is mostly a Republican phenomenon

There’s simply nothing like this on the Democratic side. Democratic leaders, across the board, consistently show not just respect for science but for basic reality. There’s no Democratic equivalent to the Big Lie, for instance. Kennedy is a crank, but importantly, he’s never held elected office. That’s because being an anti-science crank hurts you with the Democratic Party. Trump’s frontrunner status, however, is a reminder that anti-science views can help lift Republicans into the highest echelons of their party. When one institution punishes people for disinformation and another elevates them, it’s simply lying to equate the two in any meaningful way. 

Whatever Rothman’s intentions, he’s being a useful idiot for MAGA monsters like Bannon and Jones. There’s only one thing that could happen if you successfully convince people there’s no difference between Republicans and Democrats when it comes to the issue of basic adherence to factual reality: Discouraging good people from voting at all. And, as many a cliched reminder will tell us, when good men do nothing, evil has a better shot at prevailing. This is exactly what right-wing conspiracists are hoping for: A public that’s too cynical to stand up to them. Robert Kennedy Jr. is a useful tool for that goal, which is why they’re so eager to promote him. 

These brain scans of dying patients may reveal what happens when you die

What happens when you die only you will ever know — because once it happens, there is usually no coming back and telling anyone about it. For the very rare occasions in which someone technically dies and is resuscitated, their stories can be otherworldly: those who’ve seen the so-called “other side” report golden tunnels of light, encounters with angelic beings, echoing voices and even the appearance of deceased relatives. These reports intrigue scientists because they are common across multiple cultures, regardless of religious background; but given their nature, they aren’t easy to study. To do so, you would have to record someone’s brain waves right as they were about to die, and be ready for that moment. 

Which is exactly what researchers did in a new study. 

The whole experience of meeting Jesus or your dead grandparents could be explained by this strange brain activity.

Published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, the study describes the brain activity of four patients as they died in the neurointensive care unit at the University of Michigan. The researchers used an EEG, or electroencephalogram, a device that records the electrical activity of the brain using small, metal discs called electrodes that are affixed to the scalp. It translates the communication between neurons into squiggly lines, which can tell us something about what’s happening inside someone’s skull — although it’s also quite limited technology and not even close to mind reading.

Each of the patients was comatose with essentially no chance of recovery. Life support was removed with the approval of the patients’ family members. Three were women between the ages of 24 and 77 and one was an 86-year-old man.

So what actually happened upon death? Well, when ventilators were removed from two of the patients, their heart rates shot up accompanied by a surge in gamma waves, which are forms of high-frequency electrical activity in the brain.

Gamma waves are associated with waking consciousness, especially working memory processes and attention. Distortions in these neural ripples are associated with disorders like Alzheimer’s disease, as well as hallucinations and epileptic seizures. People with schizophrenia, for example, experience “spontaneous” bursts of gamma activity.

What’s more, the location of these waves in the dying patients’ brains are also intriguing. In both patients, these gamma waves were localized to areas of the brain — specifically regions where the temporal, parietal, and occipital (TPO) lobes meet — associated with processing auditory, sensory and visual information. But these brain waves were also “global” meaning they spread out to other parts of the brain, connecting different parts of the brain, including the prefrontal cortex.

All of these regions are considered important because they enable numerous cognitive functions associated with perception. In a sense, all of reality — or what we think it is — can be condensed to how these lobes interact.

“Because this posterior cortical zone activated in dreaming largely overlaps with that identified in waking, the TPO junctions are considered a ‘hot zone’ for the neural correlates of consciousness,” the authors write.

Of course, neuroscience is incredibly complicated and it’s not always easy to reduce what is happening in one part of the brain to actual consciousness. In other words, just because one part of the brain is lighting up doesn’t necessarily mean that a specific process is actually occurring. Our brains aren’t as neatly compartmentalized as popularly believed and any cognitive phenomena are incredibly complicated. We know far, far less about these relationships in a brain that is dying.

“How vivid experience can emerge from a dysfunctional brain during the process of dying is a neuroscientific paradox.”

Nonetheless, the fact that gamma waves were triggered during death in these regions is quite remarkable. However, what all this means isn’t exactly easy to tease out. It could indicate that near-death experiences are a result of this kind of brain chatter. The whole experience of meeting Jesus or your dead grandparents could be explained by this strange brain activity. After all, the brain does produce its own psychedelic drugs, though typically in trivial amounts — maybe a squirt of DMT is what people who have near death experiences receive.

Or these gamma waves could just be random signals or bursts of electrical energy that don’t mean much. The dying patients may not have been actually aware, or experiencing anything. They were already dead or dying. Either way, it’s a jump to say. It’s worth noting that both patients had a history of seizures, though there were no such episodes within the 24 hours leading up to their death and their bodies did not move in an epileptic-like fashion.

“How vivid experience can emerge from a dysfunctional brain during the process of dying is a neuroscientific paradox,” Dr. Jimo Borjigin, an associate neurology professor and the study’s lead author said in a statement. “We are unable to make correlations of the observed neural signatures of consciousness with a corresponding experience in the same patients in this study. However, the observed findings are definitely exciting and provide a new framework for our understanding of covert consciousness in the dying humans.”

Their research correlates with previous research published a decade ago by Borjigin in which rats were surgically implanted with electrodes, injected with anesthesia and a mixture of potassium chloride, which caused the animals’ hearts to stop. Similar to the dying humans, the rats experienced a “transient and global surge of synchronized gamma oscillations,” which are the same signals observed in the two patients.


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While this is a pretty small sample size of just two individuals — and notably, the other two patients didn’t experience such a surge in gamma waves — it isn’t easy finding someone who is about to die while also being able to scan their brain. A previous study published last year in the journal Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience was the first to ever describe the brain waves of a dying patient in any detail. It was also completely accidental. The researchers were studying the patient’s brain waves for an unrelated reason when he, an 87-year-old man, died unexpectedly from a heart attack.

The researchers were able to record what happened because the patient had a “do not resuscitate” order, meaning doctors weren’t allowed to try to revive him. They reported similar gamma wave activity, but also changes in other signals in the brain. The more recent study sheds more detail on what happens as people die, but it’s still quite a jump to say anything specific about what these individuals may or may not have been experiencing.

“Since it was observed in patients during the dying process,” Borjigin and her colleagues write, “we cannot rule out the possibility that the surge of gamma power is a sign of a pathological process unique to the dying stage and unrelated to conscious processing. Mechanism and function of the observed gamma power surge during the dying process warrant further investigation.”

Because of their rarity and association with death, it’s not easy to study this kind of thing, but as the researchers note, this may be the closest we ever get to answering this question. Unlike euthanizing rats, it’s very unlikely a similar study would ever be approved in humans. Of course, much more research is warranted, difficult as it may be and this study lays the groundwork for future research into the strange obscurity of consciousness and death.

“Unconscionable”: Uncle Sam spends just $3.99 on job safety as Black and Latino worker deaths soar

Despite decades of progress in worker safety since the creation of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration in 1970, there’s troubling evidence of deadly backsliding particularly for the nation’s Black and Latino workers, according to a comprehensive analysis from the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest labor federation.

In 2021, the fatality rate for Black workers spiked from 3.5 to 4.0 per 100,000 workers with more than 650 dying on the job, the most in nearly two decades,” according to the AFL-CIO’s 32nd annual report, Death on the Job: The Toll of Neglect

“Latino workers have the greatest risk of dying on the job, with a fatality rate at 4.5 per 100,000 workers that has grown by 13 percent over the past decade,” according to a press release that accompanied the report released to mark Worker Memorial Day on April 28.  “There was also a slight uptick in deaths for Latino workers in 2021” with the overwhelming majority of the 1,130 who died being immigrants.

Overall, in 2021 nearly 5,200 workers were killed on the job, with close to 500 of those having been murdered. Another 120,000 workers died prematurely from a disease they had contracted as a consequence of their employment.

The AFL-CIO’s annual 240-page research report is a national and state-by-state profile of worker safety and health data points from 2021 but has very limited COVID data because very little was collected by the agencies tracking workplace deaths. 

The only government data on occupational COVID deaths was kept by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for nursing homes. Since June 2020, 3,009 nursing home workers have died from COVID with the country averaging 18 nursing home worker COVID deaths per week, according to the AFL-CIO research report.

“The true impact of COVID-19 infections due to workplace exposures is unknown,” the AFL-CIO asserted. “Limited data show that more than 1.5 million nursing home workers have been infected.”

“Every American should be alarmed and outraged by the tragic data unearthed in this report,” said AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler. “It is unconscionable that in the wealthiest nation in the world, Black and Latino workers are facing the highest on-the-job fatality rates in nearly two decades. This report is more than a wake-up call, it is a call to action. No one should have to risk their lives for their livelihoods. There is no corporate cost-benefit analysis that should put human life and worker safety on the wrong side of the ledger.”

According to an investigation by the Guardian Newspapers and Kaiser Health News, 453 New York state healthcare workers died in the first wave of the COVID pandemic which came amidst a national shortage of N-95 masks. In New Jersey 268 perished. Nationally, over 3,600 healthcare workers perished in the first year of the pandemic. Close to two-thirds of them were people of color.

Currently, the federal government spends just $3.99 per worker on workplace safety compliance and “underreporting is widespread” with fewer than 2,000 state and federal inspectors to inspect and monitor the country’s almost 10.8 million workplaces. As a consequence, the AFL-CIO reports, with only one inspector for every 77,334 workers, it would take 190 years for OSHA to inspect each site over which it has jurisdiction once.

“The cost of job injuries and illnesses is enormous — estimated at $174 billion to $348 billion a year,” the national confederation of unions estimated.

“I read through the report and the clear takeaway that worker safety is simply not funded adequately enough in this country,” said Vincent Alvarez, president of the New York City Central Labor Council. “What’s particularly glaring to me is that when you see there are over ten million workplaces under OSHA’s jurisdiction — the fact that there are over 900 at the federal level and 971 at the state level — as well as the funding issues we’ve had over the years — the only takeaway is that this country does not take worker safety as seriously as is needed and we have seen that playout with too many deaths in the workplace.”

Alvarez told Work-Bites that there’s a direct connection between enhancing workplace safety and protecting the public health of the broader community in sectors like construction and healthcare.

“There is a direct connection in the healthcare industry between protecting healthcare worker safety and the impact on patient safety with safe staffing levels and PPE during the pandemic — it’s just a question of our priorities,” Alvarez said. “We have seen at different times over the years in our country there being greater attention and focus on this, yet other times when we unfortunately slide back. The results are what we are seeing now — the highest rate of death for Black workers in two decades and the greatest risk for Latinos dying on the job as well.”

Alvarez continued, “We have to deal with the fact that when we see workers deaths taking place and when there has been direct negligence on the part of an employer, we have to make sure that those people are held accountable and criminally prosecuted when that it proven, and we have seen far too little of that over the years as well.”

Dr. Edward Zuroweste is a physician and the founding director of the Migrant Clinicians Network, an international non-profit that serves migrant and immigrant workers. He’s concerned that there’s not been sufficient study done on the impacts on the health of the essential workforce that didn’t have the option of working remotely during the COVID pandemic.

“It is interesting that the country seems to have moved on — everybody’s just so tired of hearing about COVID that they don’t want to do a deep dive into looking at how we can prevent this from happening the next time and that’s really my biggest concern right now,” Zuroweste said. “This is not the last pandemic. So, what have we done to make ourselves more resilient for the future? And unfortunately, I don’t see what we’ve done to do better next time…it seems like the workers are dispensable like a commodity, especially essential workers.”

Zuroweste notes that in working with migrant farm workers as well as with itinerant natural disaster cleanup crews he’s flagged lack of access to basic healthcare as a major occupational health risk. “We are a country that is showing that without having universal affordable healthcare available causes deaths in the people that can’t get it,” Zuroweste said.

John Samuelsen is the international president of the Transport Workers Union, which includes TWU Local 100, which operates the MTA buses and subway and lost over a hundred members to COVID. He told Work-Bites that early on in the pandemic the union sought out the independent scientific expertise of New York University School of Global Public Health to survey the union workforce.

In October of 2020, the NYU research flagged that nearly 25 percent of Transport Workers Union Local 100 members had contracted the coronavirus and 90 percent of them feared getting it at work.

“Our research aims to identify and better understand the individual and workplace factors that put this essential workforce at risk for COVID-19, in an effort to protect their health and wellbeing,” said Robyn Gershon, clinical professor of epidemiology at NYU School of Global Public Health, in a statement announcing the project. “We need to address this important gap in our knowledge about occupational exposure to coronavirus and use these findings to determine what additional protective measures are needed going forward.”

Samuelsen said that the takeaways from the research were “invaluable” not just in New York City but had application in all the other jurisdictions where his 150,000-member union represents transit workers, a sector particularly hard hit by COVID.

“That research gave us a framework, a methodology, with the key being decompressing the worksites. So, like if 100 people were supposed to report to a bus depot we would have 50 report at one time — to spread it out over time with that kind of thing — and we saw a decline in COVID,” Samuelsen recalled. “And it helped us fight that huge fight over trying to keep our bus drivers separated from the riding public had a profoundly positive effect as well.” 

Samuelsen added, “Talking about Worker Memorial Day — one of the most important elements of it is to be prepared for the next pandemic and not to be taken by surprise again. We need to see the federal and state governments linking money to performance measures for properties like SEPTA in Philadelphia, Houston Metro, or New York City Transit, where the government orders them to invest in preventing outbreaks of infectious disease by using performance metrics like how much PPE stock they have on hand.”

The FCC is supposed to protect the environment. It doesn’t

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In a mountainous forest in southwest Puerto Rico, workers cleared a patch to make room for a 120-foot cellphone tower intended for use by AT&T and T-Mobile. The site, as the tower company later acknowledged, destroyed some of the nesting habitat of the Puerto Rican nightjar, a tiny endangered songbird. Fewer than 2,000 are believed to be alive today.

In the northwestern New Mexico desert, a company called Sacred Wind Communications, promising to bring broadband to remote Navajo communities, planted a cell tower near the legally protected Pictured Cliffs archaeological site, which contains thousands of centuries-old tribal rock carvings.

And in Silicon Valley, a space startup pursued plans to equip thousands of satellites to use mercury fuel in orbit, even as an Air Force official at one of the possible launch sites voiced “extreme concern” that the toxic element could rain back down to earth.

You may be surprised to learn that these potential harms fall under the jurisdiction of the Federal Communications Commission. Few people think of the FCC as an environmental cop. It’s known for regulating television and radio and overseeing the deployment of communications technology. But the agency also has a broad mandate to ensure that technology doesn’t damage the environment. The task includes everything from protecting wildlife and human health to preserving historic sites and even preventing aesthetic blight.

This role is particularly critical now, as the FCC presides over a nationwide buildout for 5G service, which will require 800,000 new “small cell” transmitters, those perched on street poles and rooftops, often near schools, apartments and homes. But even with this massive effort underway, as ProPublica previously reported, the FCC has refused to revise its radiation-exposure limits, which date back to the era of flip phones. In addition, the agency has cut back on the environmental reviews that it requires while also restricting local governments’ control over wireless sites.

And as the satellite-fuel example reflects, the FCC’s ambit extends even into space. The agency is licensing thousands of commercial satellites at a moment when the profusion of objects circling the planet is raising concerns about collisions in space, impediments to astronomy, pollution, and debris falling back to earth.

To call the FCC’s environmental approach hands-off would be an understatement. The agency operates on the honor system, delegating much of its responsibility to the industries that it regulates. It allows companies to decide for themselves whether their projects require environmental study. And if the companies break the rules, they’re expected to report their own transgression. Few do. In the rare instances in which the FCC investigates, even brazen illegality is often met with a minor fine, a scolding “admonishment” or no action at all. (The FCC declined to make officials available for interviews for this article or to respond to questions sent in writing.)

The FCC’s inaction can have dire consequences. For years, the agency refused to take action even as millions of birds died by flying into communications towers. Only after a federal appeals court castigated the agency for its “apparent misunderstanding” of its environmental obligations did the FCC take steps that addressed some, but not all, of the problem.

In most instances, the scale of damages is relatively small: a half-acre of demolished habitat, a mound of damaged Native American artifacts, an ugly tower looming over a national scenic trail. But the FCC authorizes thousands of projects each year, and the effects add up.

These days, the FCC’s laissez-faire approach is sparking resistance. Hundreds of conflicts have erupted across the country, triggered by citizens fearing risks to their health from wireless radiation, harm to their property values, damage to the environment and the destruction of treasured views. Fights are raging from rural Puerto Rico, where protesters have been arrested for blocking roads used by cell-tower-construction crews, to New York City, where a dozen community boards protested the appearance of visually jarring three-story 5G poles on neighborhood sidewalks. In New York, state officials got involved, then a local congressman. Finally, in late April, the furor grew intense enough that the FCC was forced to act; it belatedly ordered a company to halt construction — after more than a hundred poles had been built — and begin the type of reviews that are supposed to be completed before breaking ground.

Environmentalists are routinely infuriated by the FCC’s stance. The telecommunications industry, which is eager to avoid the costs and delays of reviews, is considerably happier. In 2014, the FCC hired its first full-time environmental lawyer, Erica Rosenberg. Her mission was an afterthought at the agency, she told ProPublica: “Everybody was set on deployment. These environmental laws just got in the way.” Rosenberg finally quit in frustration in 2021. “It was just the culture of the place,” she said. “Nobody cared.”

The FCC’s ecological role originated in the National Environmental Policy Act, passed in 1969 at a moment of fervor for protecting the earth. The law requires federal agencies to assess whether projects they’ve authorized will cause harm. The goal is to “assure for all Americans safe, healthful, productive and aesthetically and culturally pleasing surroundings.”

The law mandates an exhaustive environmental impact statement for big federal projects, such as a new dam or highway. Smaller agency actions that are judged to pose a risk of significant harm, either individually or cumulatively, require a less detailed environmental assessment. Any finding of significant impact is supposed to trigger an effort to avoid or minimize the damage.

Since the anti-regulatory era under President Ronald Reagan, the FCC has largely abandoned direct environmental oversight. Using a provision of the law that allows agencies to grant themselves “categorical exclusions” — exemptions from any review — for actions they deem risk-free, the FCC removed review requirements for the vast majority of its actions. The only FCC actions still requiring review are those that fall into one of eight categories, including construction in protected habitat or wilderness areas, building in or near historic or Native American sites, projects that would significantly alter a site’s “surface features” and towers taller than 450 feet. Aesthetic harms were dropped from routine consideration, even though NEPA required federal agencies to consider them.

Stricter rules were a “waste of time,” according to comments cited by the FCC. In the decades since, the agency has never required a single environmental impact statement.

The FCC’s blanket exemption for its actions went unchallenged by a White House office, called the Council on Environmental Quality, that was set up to review agency NEPA rules. Dinah Bear, who joined the council under Reagan and served as general counsel there for 23 years, told ProPublica that “never should have happened. … It’s completely abysmal.”

By the time Republican Michael Powell took office as FCC chairman in 2001, the agency had yet to fine a single company for violating environmental rules. (At the FCC, he told ProPublica, environmental regulation is “chronically unattended to.”) Powell vowed to get “serious” about enforcement, telling a congressional committee, “When you cheat, I’m going to hurt you and hurt you hard.”

Powell took aim at a major obstacle to punishing violators, urging Congress to extend the FCC’s unusually short one-year statute of limitations for prosecuting misconduct, which starts running from the date of an alleged offense, not when the violation is discovered. Congress refused; the rule remains in place today. Powell, who now heads NCTA, a Washington trade association representing the cable industry, calls the rule “ridiculous. You don’t have a real statute if the offense can hide in the woods and by the time you know about it, it’s too late.”

Under Powell, the FCC proposed its first environmental fine against a company, citing a 180-foot cell tower built without approval near five historic sites in North Dakota, including a cabin where Teddy Roosevelt lived while hunting bison. The agency promptly dropped the matter after the company fought back.

Of the technologies the FCC oversees, broadcast and cell towers have long generated the most environmental controversy. They’re mammoth eyesores. They emit wireless radiation. Their construction requires clearing the ground of trees and vegetation, pouring concrete and building fences, access roads and support structures.

Yet for decades, the FCC refused to address their most gruesome impact: dead birds. Drawn by red nighttime lights intended to warn aircraft, migrating birds were slamming into communications towers, crashing into their support wires or tumbling to the ground in exhaustion after circling the lights for hours. As far back as 1974, the agency had identified this as “a matter of concern.”

Experts would later estimate the annual toll from North American towers at around seven million birds. In one much-cited tale of carnage, a researcher reported in 1996 that a 1,000-foot TV tower in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, had claimed more than 12,000 birds on a single stormy night.

“We don’t have the resources to investigate or monitor sites,” FCC attorney Ava Berland said at a 1999 workshop convened to discuss the bird issue. “What the FCC does is delegate our environmental responsibilities to our licensees and our applicants.” Consideration of bird mortality, she noted, wasn’t required.

The FCC resisted pleas to require environmental assessments of new towers as industry groups insisted that the bird-mortality estimates were grossly overstated. (“Not one member has witnessed more than a few dead birds at one time,” wrote the National Association of Tower Erectors.) In 2008, following a lawsuit by the American Bird Conservancy, a U.S. Court of Appeals panel scolded the agency’s “refusal to take action,” noting that the environmental law required agencies to assess the risks of their actions up front, “rather than wait until it is too late.” It ordered the FCC to examine the problem.

As the agency slowly moved to do so, Joelle Gehring, then a biologist at Michigan State University, published a study suggesting that switching from steadily burning to flashing lights could cut bird mortality by as much as 70%. In January 2013, she joined the FCC as its first staff biologist, focused on reducing the toll.

In December 2015, the agency, with the FAA’s concurrence, finally approved a requirement for all new towers over 150 feet to use flashing lights. But the FCC rejected pleas to mandate that the tens of thousands of existing towers be retrofitted. Gehring quietly launched a personal persuasion campaign, emailing tower operators individually with a plea to voluntarily make the shift. Just a third of the tallest towers, the ones most lethal to birds, have been switched over to date.

Erica Rosenberg was shocked by the FCC’s approach to environmental oversight when she arrived at the agency in 2014. Then 53, Rosenberg had spent most of her career doing environmental work, with stints at the EPA, on the staff of congressional committees, as a consultant for nonprofits and as director of a public policy program at Arizona State University.

Part of her new job involved reviewing submissions involving broadcast and cell towers. Most could be built without any notice to the FCC. Environmental assessments were required only when companies volunteered that their project would be built on a sensitive site, one that fell into any of the eight categories on the FCC checklist. Projects near historic or Native American sites also required prior reviews by state and tribal officials to avoid or minimize any “adverse impacts.”

But as Rosenberg and Gehring, the FCC’s biologist, reviewed the reports, which were supposed to be submitted for FCC approval before construction started, they sometimes discovered photos revealing that the tower had already been built or trees and vegetation removed in preparation for building. It happened frequently enough that they even coined a term for it: “premature construction.”

Such rule-breaking was rarely penalized. Companies were simply instructed to perform their own after-the-fact reviews; unless the companies confessed that they expected to cause harm, they were granted permission to build their tower.

In one rare instance in which a tower was blocked, it happened only because of the FCC’s inaction — and only after the tower’s developer had already damaged a sensitive site. In that episode in Puerto Rico, a developer had cleared scarce habitat of the endangered nightjar in 2014 before completing any environmental review. An uproar ensued, including a hearing in Puerto Rico’s Senate. In 2017, FCC officials finally drafted an order denying the developer the usual no-impact finding, citing the habitat destruction. But the denial was never issued, leaving the project on terminal hold. Even in this case, Rosenberg said, the FCC simply didn’t want to set a precedent of formally rejecting a tower approval.

Much has escaped the FCC’s notice. In 2020, Alabama’s historic preservation office alerted the FCC about a 160-foot TV tower in downtown Montgomery, which had already been built and was operating within blocks of the state Capitol and the Selma to Montgomery civil rights trail, in violation of requirements to assess harm (including aesthetic impact) to any national historic site within a half-mile. Because the structure had been built more than a year earlier, the company was immune from any enforcement action.

Self-reporting is rare, according to FCC officials speaking on condition of anonymity. As one put it, “It’s a game that gets played. A very small percentage of actual violations come to our attention.” Industry executives seemed to confirm that indirectly in a 2017 Government Accountability Office report on FCC enforcement (which addressed all forms of agency enforcement, not just environmental). Nine stakeholders offered the seemingly improbable explanation that they had “lost the incentive to self-report potential violations” because they felt they’d be treated too harshly.

There was little evidence of harsh consequences in that same GAO report: Just 10% of FCC enforcement cases between 2014 and 2016 resulted in a monetary penalty, while 40% ended with a warning and the rest resulted in no action. In a 2018 email, the agency’s federal preservation officer commented, “Industry treats our environmental rules like a joke.”

A year into her time at the FCC, Rosenberg started keeping a color-coded enforcement cheat sheet listing the status of apparent violations crossing her desk, which was then happening at a pace of about one a week. Among them was the case of Sacred Wind Communications, the New Mexico company that had built a 199-foot cellphone tower without undergoing any cultural review near a site containing Native American rock carvings. (In an interview with ProPublica, Sacred Wind co-founder John Badal blamed the violations on an outside consultant and the company’s failure to properly oversee him.)

Frustrated to see that the FCC’s enforcement team wasn’t pursuing many of these cases, Rosenberg began promoting the idea of sending violators public “admonishment letters” to deter future violations. After months of internal debate, a half-dozen letters finally went out in June 2016. But the agency declined to issue a press release publicly shaming the offenders, and it abandoned the effort months later.

The arrival of the 5G era stirred the FCC to make things even easier for the telecom industry. In September 2016, five senior agency officials met with 20 representatives from wireless and cell tower companies, including AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile, who were eager to press their agenda. Jon Wilkins, chief of the FCC’s wireless telecommunications bureau, began by stating that “there is bipartisan support among the Commissioners for doing all that they can to help the industry with infrastructure deployment,” according to a summary of the session obtained through a public records request.

The industry delegation laid out a wish list of changes aimed at making the 5G rollout cheaper and faster. After Trump appointees assumed majority control of the agency in 2017, the FCC would seek to give the industry virtually everything it wanted. The agency passed new rules limiting what local governments could charge for access to utility poles and restricting the aesthetic requirements they could put in place. In 2018, with one commissioner blaming “outdated NEPA procedures” for slowing 5G deployment, the FCC exempted most small cell sites from environmental, historic-preservation and tribal reviews. In 2019, the commission shut down reconsideration of whether its wireless-radiation limits adequately protect people and the environment.

Federal appeals court challenges overturned most of these actions. Citing the vast scale of the 5G deployment, one court rejected the FCC’s claim that deregulating small cell sites would have “little to no environmental footprint.” It wrote that the FCC had “dismissed the benefits of historic-preservation and environmental review in a two-sentence paragraph.” A second appeals court later ordered the FCC to revisit the adequacy of its wireless-radiation safeguards, excoriating the agency for its “cursory analysis” of human health and environmental risks.

The FCC doesn’t release the totals, but, according to current and former agency employees, companies overseen by the FCC now submit just a few dozen environmental assessments a year, down from several hundred in 2016.

The FCC’s biggest environmental penalty ever — $10 million imposed on Sprint Corp. — stemmed from an investigation prompted not by the FCC, but by a wireless industry website called Event Driven. In May 2017, it published an internal Sprint memo detailing a “trial” aimed at speeding small cell deployment. The memo authorized Mobilitie, a Sprint infrastructure contractor, to start construction on scores of sites “without fully completing regulatory compliance.” The FCC’s consent decree in the Sprint case, made public in April 2018, noted that ignoring review requirements displayed “contempt” for regulatory authority. A spokesperson for T-Mobile, which purchased Sprint in 2020, said the violations occurred “long before” T-Mobile acquired it and “Sprint took steps to address their procedures at the time.” Mobilitie, which paid $1.6 million in a separate consent decree, said the episode involved “less than 1%” of the small cell sites it has constructed and that the company has subsequently developed “a robust compliance program.”

The latest environmental threat that falls under the FCC’s jurisdiction is in the heavens. Because the agency has broad authority over communications, it also licenses commercial satellites. And under the FCC’s watch, space is rapidly becoming a far more crowded place. Five years ago, there were fewer than two thousand satellites in orbit. Last December, the FCC approved the deployment of 7,500 satellites by a single company, Elon Musk’s SpaceX, that is building an extraterrestrial broadband network called Starlink. By 2030, experts project that as many as 60,000 satellites will be orbiting the Earth. In January the FCC approved the creation of a new Space Bureau to “better support the needs of the growing satellite industry.”

The FCC has approved Musk’s space armada, and many other satellite constellations, without requiring an environmental assessment, on the premise that, even cumulatively, they present no serious risk. (Musk has also argued that NEPA rules don’t apply to space.)

The agency has rejected fears from multiple quarters that tens of thousands of satellites pose worrisome threats. These include toxic emissions from rocket fuels that could pollute the earth, deplete the ozone layer and worsen global warming; increased radio congestion and space traffic that could destroy other satellites and impede critical astronomy used for weather tracking, national security and science; and a growing threat of human casualties and property damage from falling bits of satellite debris. The GAO inventoried the concerns in a September 2022 report.

For more than a year, the FCC did nothing to stop a more imminent environmental threat that emerged in 2018. It involved a Silicon Valley startup called Apollo Fusion, which was developing a low-cost satellite thruster system that uses a secret, proprietary fuel: liquid mercury. Mercury has big advantages as a fuel, but it’s also a toxic heavy metal that causes an array of harms to humans and the environment. NASA discarded it as a fuel option decades earlier. Ten years ago, the U.S. was among more than 140 countries that signed a United Nations treaty aimed at cutting global mercury emissions. But the restrictions didn’t apply to space.

Apollo was engaging in discussions with multiple big companies interested in purchasing its mercury-fueled thruster for their satellites. Its website claimed the company had a signed contract with at least one customer, with plans for a trial launch by the end of 2018.

That November, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, a nonprofit that had been tipped off by a whistleblower, revealed Apollo’s plans, warning that they could create an “eco-catastrophe.” The group accused the FCC of abdicating its responsibility to protect the public and petitioned the agency to halt the use of mercury. Two experts voiced concern in a Bloomberg Businessweek article that much of the toxic mercury emitted in space would descend back to earth.

At least two companies in 2019 sought FCC approval to launch satellites using Apollo’s mercury-fueled thrusters, FCC documents show. One later withdrew its request. The second, Astro Digital, applied in April for an experimental satellite license.

At what was then known as Vandenberg Air Force Base, a California site for the planned launches, an environmental reviewer in 2019 voiced “extreme concern” about flight “anomalies” that could allow mercury “to enter the terrestrial or ocean environment,” according to documents obtained from a public records request.

In August, Astro Digital and Apollo executives insisted to FCC officials that the mercury they’d release in space would remain there and cause no harm. They pressed to move forward with the planned launch.

In mid-September, the FCC finally ordered Astro Digital to submit an environmental assessment covering Apollo’s thruster system. Astro Digital agreed to comply, but asked the FCC to reconsider whether it had the authority to order such an assessment, noting that it was “not aware that the FCC has ever requested such information from other satellite operators.”

The FCC never responded, either to grant Astro Digital’s request or to deny it, according to Apollo co-founder Mike Cassidy. “We spent a year and a half waiting,” he said. (Cassidy defended his company’s fuel while acknowledging that “you obviously have to be really careful with mercury from an environmental perspective.”) Astro Digital eventually withdrew its application and Apollo switched to another propellant.

In March 2022, a United Nations conference in Indonesia did what the FCC wouldn’t: It banned the use of mercury to propel spacecraft.

What to expect with TV writers on strike: First late night will go dark. Then comes the fall

The prevailing maxim of the so-called Golden Age of Television is that TV is a writer’s medium. Everybody says so: Longtime film stars explain their jump to the smaller screen by hailing the richness of the storytelling and expanded opportunity to inhabit a character and their stories. Viewers pore over scenes and dialogue with a level of attentiveness once reserved for great literature. Streamers and channels are constantly on the hunt for the next great prestige project.

All this elevated praise comes back to the writing, but from the perspective of Writers Guild of America members, those high compliments aren’t translating to economic returns that TV scribes can live on. This is why as of 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, May 2, the WGA is officially on strike against the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.

The AMPTP negotiators represent Netflix, Amazon, Apple, Disney, Discovery-Warner, NBC Universal, Paramount and Sony.

Since the two sides did not reach a new minimum bargaining agreement by the May 1 deadline, more than 11,500 WGA members who work in film and television have stopped writing and have either joined or are observing WGA picket lines.

“Here is what all writers know: the companies have broken this business. They have taken so much from the very people, the writers, who have made them wealthy,” says the WGA in an official statement. “We had hoped to do this through reasonable conversation. Now we will do it through struggle. For the sake of our present and our future, we have been given no other choice.” (Salon’s unionized employees are represented by the WGA East.)

This is the first entertainment industry writers’ strike since the stoppage that began in November 2007 and ended in February 2008, lasting for 100 days. For people who remember that season, that strike resulted in shortened TV seasons for shows like “Heroes” and “The Big Bang Theory” and delayed debuts for other shows, including “24.” It is estimated to have cost the industry $2.1 billion.

It also precipitated a surge in reality TV as networks turned to unscripted formats – competitions, game shows, and sports – to fill the void.

For the most part, and depending on your viewing habits, many people may not notice the strike’s impact straightaway. While the WGA’s agreement covers writing for feature film, television and scripted projects for streaming services, along with writing for network news magazine programs, not every TV sector will be impacted immediately or equally. From the consumer’s viewpoint, it will be a rolling effect.

SNLKenan Thompson as Funky Kong and anchor Colin Jost during SNL Weekend Update on Saturday, April 15, 2023 (Will Heath/NBC)

The sticking points

Before getting into that, it’s helpful to understand the barest of basics of why the WGA is striking now. The short answer is the same as the ones that drive nearly every industry work stoppage, in that it comes down to improved working conditions and compensation.

Contrary to what the average person may believe about TV writers, they are not rich. Testimonials that WGA writers have posted on social media in the weeks leading up to the strike include stories of struggling to pay their rent or afford groceries. The gap between the compensation at the top of the studio food chain and the writers creating content that yields profits for a studio has always been massive. The age of streaming has only widened that chasm.

Contrary to what the average person may believe about TV writers, they are not rich.

WGA member and “Adam Ruins Everything” star Adam Conover spelled it out more precisely today in a CNN interview. “I’d point out the fact that David Zaslav, the CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery [and CNN’s parent company] was paid $250 million last year. A quarter of a billion dollars. That’s about the same level as what 10,000 writers are asking him to pay all of us collectively,” he explained, adding that Netflix’s Ted Sarandos made about $50 million last year.

“These companies are making enormous amounts of money. Their profits are going up,” Conover continued. “It’s ridiculous for them to plead poverty when the writers who are making their shows some of them are not able to pay their rent or their mortgages.”

Relatively new industry practices have only made writers’ ability to make a living more untenable. Among the top issues WGA members are fighting for is an overhaul of the residuals model, which the age of streaming has rendered all but obsolete.

To explain how residuals work, when a writer is credited on an episode of TV, in the yesteryear of broadcast dominance, whenever that episode would encore, the writer would receive a portion of the ad revenue generated by its repeat airing. Since most streaming services don’t have ads or show them in reduced amounts, and most writers aren’t included in back-end deals, that has translated to paltry-to-negligible returns for those content creators.

And worse, if a streamer decides to cut costs they’re just as likely to simply remove a series from their catalog completely.

Related to this is the rise of what’s known as “mini rooms,” in which smaller teams of writers are hired to flesh out episodes of a show before a studio decides to put it in production. These writers typically aren’t hired to staff that show, leaving it to the showrunner to handle all rewrites by themselves, and starving the writers who worked on those episodes from a slice of any future profit those shows may generate.

“Swarm” (Amazon Studios)

One of the most astonishing examples of this occurred behind the scenes of “Swarm,” Amazon’s recently released critically acclaimed hit Donald Glover produced with “Atlanta” collaborator Janine Nabers, its showrunner. As Nabers shared in a New Yorker article spelling out the TV writer’s dilemma, “Swarm” is the product of a 14-week mini room entirely conducted on Zoom that ended in early 2021:

But it wasn’t green-lighted until the second episode was shooting, a year later. Nabers was pregnant during the interim, and she was left to finish the season alone. “So that’s a year of me by myself, writing scripts and begging the people that I was working for to allow me to bring in more help,” she said.

The WGA contends that the current system mimics a gig workers economy, with writers hired for temporary work with no guarantees of stability, little chance of advancement – even for some seasoned showrunners – and no reliance on that residual income that once enabled them to pay their bills between TV seasons and jobs. And with studios threatening to further expand profits using AI to write scripts, the situation was not going to improve organically.

What you (won’t) see on your screen

Circling back to the original question, how might the strike impact the ordinary TV viewer? That will depend on how long it lasts. It could be resolved quickly, but with tech companies such as Amazon, Netflix and Apple in the mix, none of which are particularly union-friendly, it could drag out for weeks.

And that’s before factoring in the directors’ and actors’ guilds negotiations (i.e. DGA and SAG-AFTRA) with the AMPTP. Their contracts don’t expire until June 30.

In the short term, the first productions to stop will be late-night TV shows. The hosts of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and “Late Night with Seth Meyers” announced their solidarity with the WGA on recent episodes of their shows and have indeed paused.  

“I also feel very strongly that what the writers are asking for is not unreasonable. And as a proud member of the guild, I’m very grateful that there is an organization that looks out for the best interests of writers,” Meyers says. “So if you don’t see me here next week, know that it is something that is not done lightly.”

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” “Jimmy Kimmel Live!“Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” and “Real Time with Bill Maher” have all gone dark as of Tuesday.

The Daily ShowDulce Sloan at “The Daily Show” desk. (Photo courtesy of Comedy Central.)

Comedy Central also confirmed that “The Daily Show” has temporarily halted production, according to sources close to the show. It, along with the broadcast late-night talkers, will air repeats until further notice. This shortchanges for Dulce Sloan, the latest correspondent to rotate behind the desk. Her sole episode as host so far aired Monday.

Saturday Night Live” is also out of commission, meaning that Pete Davidson‘s hosting gig has been put on hold too. But then, like most broadcast shows, its season finale was set to air on May 20. That episode’s host had not yet been announced, so if the strike is resolved by then, Davidson may yet be slotted in to make his “SNL” hosting debut.

 “The View” announced that it will remain in production. So will “Gutfeld!” which, if you’ve experienced what passes for joke writing on that show, isn’t surprising.

The next sector that may be tangibly impacted will be the broadcast fall TV season. Network schedules are set to be announced at upfronts within the next few weeks, but if the strike drags on through the summer, productions will be delayed along with premiere dates. This is where unscripted content may creep into primetime with more frequency.

Streamers, on the other hand, have their content banked well in advance, so the extent of the strike’s impact on them will depend on how deep their benches are. We may well see a slower episodic release pace for popular shows, an increase in true crime productions, and more liberal elevations of foreign content.

But as with any strike, what we don’t know far outweighs what we do. For example, the 2007-2008 writers strike did reach a point at which a few late-night shows returned to the air without their writers, yielding mixed results.

“The survival of writing as a profession is at stake in this negotiation,” says the WGA in a statement to its members. Viewers who value high-quality television should bear that in mind and hope for a fair resolution that improves conditions for the medium’s storytellers as opposed to a swift one that favors our convenience.

What a pending Supreme Court ruling could mean for Biden’s new clean water protections

Before a bipartisan Congress passed the Clean Water Act in 1972, cities pumped raw sewage into lakes, mining companies discharged acid waste into streams, and factories poured chemicals into rivers, which occasionally caught on fire. The Clean Water Act made such pollution illegal and expanded the federal government’s authority to regulate waterways across the country. 

But if you haven’t gotten around to perusing the bill’s 112,000 words, you might not know that it doesn’t clarify which waterways federal agencies have the power to protect. Can factories dump waste into seasonal streams without the Environmental Protection Agency’s oversight? Wetlands? Ponds? The Clean Water Act doesn’t provide clean answers; it merely tasks the federal government with keeping toxic chemicals and other pollutants out of “navigable waters,” which it defines as “waters of the United States, including the territorial seas.” 

Late last year, the Biden administration tried to clear up the half-century of confusion with a new definition of “waters of the United States.” The rule, which went into effect in March, restored protections lost in the Trump era for thousands of streams and wetlands across the country. But it faces major headwinds: States and national special interest groups have sued to reverse it; a federal judge has already halted it in 24 states; and the drama is sure to escalate any day — when the Supreme Court rules in a crucial case, Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency. Environmental advocates worry the justices will gut the Clean Water Act by imposing a narrow reading on what counts as one of the “waters of the United States.” That is, the court’s conservative majority could decide the federal government doesn’t have the authority to protect something like half the country’s wetlands. 

“The potential impact of the case is hard to overstate,” said Jon Devine, director of federal water policy at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “If the Clean Water Act can’t protect wetlands under those circumstances [in the Sackett case], we have a huge problem in trying to achieve our water quality goals.”  

Ever since the Clean Water Act became law, legislators, regulators, and judges have offered various, and sometimes conflicting, ideas about how to tell if a body of water is among the “waters of the United States.” There is general agreement that the Environmental Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers have authority over coastal waters, lakes, rivers, and other obviously “navigable” waterways. But there’s no small amount of controversy when it comes to marshes, mires, fens, bogs, vernal pools, prairie ponds, pocosins, sloughs, small streams, seasonal streams, and rain-dependent streams.  

The definition could determine the fate of millions of acres of wetlands, which are vital to healthy ecosystems across the country. One-third of the threatened and endangered species in the United States live only in wetlands such as marshes, swamps, and bogs. Those waterways also make nearby towns more resilient to disasters, acting as flood barriers by sucking up, slowing, and spreading water out. Seasonal and rain-dependent streams, which make up about 60 percent of the country’s streams, also might lose protections if the court issues a narrow Sackett ruling. Pollution in those streams could wind up in larger bodies of water that flow through towns.

“Several key programs in the Clean Water Act are linked directly to whether or not a ‘water of the United States’ is present,” Devine said. That includes programs that regulate industrial and municipal wastewater, hazardous materials, oil spills, pipeline and dam construction, and more.

The new Biden rule says that a body of water — whether a stream or pond or swamp — is subject to Clean Water Act regulations if it “significantly affects the integrity” of a waterway that indisputably falls under the federal government’s jurisdiction, like a big river. It protects a range of waterways — like some ephemeral streams and isolated wetlands — that weren’t covered by a narrower definition adopted by the Trump administration. President Donald Trump’s rule effectively said “waters of the United States” must be waterways that are navigable, such as rivers and lakes, reversing an Obama-era rule that was even more stringent than Biden’s and could have limited pollution in 50 percent of the country’s wetlands. Federal judges took issue with President Barack Obama’s rule for being too restrictive and Trump’s for being too lenient.

Biden’s new rule could soon become moot, too, if the Supreme Court conjures up a contrary “waters of the United States” definition when ruling on Sackett. In that case, a couple building a house in a boggy area near Idaho’s Priest Lake sued the EPA in 2008 after the agency told them they needed a Clean Water Act permit. The EPA said the wetlands on the property were important for the health of the lake and thus fell under the Clean Water Act’s protections. The Sacketts argued that if a wetland doesn’t have a continuous surface connection to a navigable waterway, it’s not protected by the federal law. A road between the Sacketts’ property and a tributary to the lake disrupts a visible connection between the waterways, although they are linked beneath the surface

The Sackett case isn’t the only obstacle to cementing the Biden administration’s broader definition. Last month, a federal district judge in North Dakota, Daniel Hovland, halted the rule in 24 states, saying it was too broad and poses a threat to the states’ “sovereign rights and amounts to irreparable harm.” The Clean Water Act has created a “litany of chaos” and caused an “endless stream of lawsuits and legal challenges,” Hovland wrote

Opponents say the new protections create permitting hurdles and add significant costs to construction projects, resource extraction, and agriculture. The new rule would make it harder for mining companies to meet the “exponential increase in demand” for minerals, National Mining Association president Rich Nolan said in a statement. The National Mining Association is one of 18 special interest groups — including the American Farm Bureau Federation, the American Petroleum Institute, and the National Association of Homebuilders — that have teamed up with the 24 states suing the Biden administration over the rule. “Farmers and ranchers should not have to hire a team of lawyers and consultants to determine how we can farm our land,” American Farm Bureau Federation president Zippy Duvall said in a statement after the group joined the suit.  

Supporters say Biden’s rule generally won’t prove a burden for farmers. It retains long-standing exemptions on farming and ranching activities, like plowing and seeding, and excludes a few key agricultural features from the “waters of the U.S.” definition, like wetlands that have been converted into active farm fields, waste-treatment ponds, and some drainage ditches. 

Congressional Republicans, with support from some Democrats, led a successful vote to overturn Biden’s rule, a move that Biden then vetoed. “The overreach, basically, it’s unreal,” Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia told the Associated Press. Manchin was one of four Democrats in the Senate (along with one independent, Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona) who voted to reverse the rule. An attempt in the House to override Biden’s veto failed. 

Meanwhile, a range of waterways hang in the balance, from the prairie potholes — a vast collection of isolated marshes in the Midwest, half of which have already been destroyed by commercial activity and agriculture — to Georgia’s Okefenokee Swamp. Under the Trump-era definition of “waters of the United States,” a mining company, Twin Pines Minerals, didn’t need a Clean Water Act permit to destroy hundreds of acres of wetlands near the swamp. But those wetlands almost certainly would count as “waters of the United States” under the Biden rule, much as they did prior to the Trump rule, and should be protected, said Kelly Moser, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center. The Supreme Court’s ruling on Sackett — expected by June — could change that.

“In the South, we rely on our wetlands,” Moser said. “We have some optimism that the court will do the right thing and follow the objective of the Clean Water Act, just like they did a few years ago in the County of Maui case.” In that 2020 ruling, the Supreme Court determined that polluting groundwater—which isn’t considered among the “waters of the United States” — is subject to federal regulation if that groundwater substantially feeds into a body of water protected by the Clean Water Act. 

Anthony Moffa, an environmental law professor at the University of Maine and a former EPA attorney, said he suspects the court’s Sackett opinion will undo the Biden rule, even though it aligns with decades of regulatory precedent. 

Still, no matter how the court rules, Moffa thinks lawyers, regulators, and policymakers will continue arguing over “waters of the United States” and interpreting the law in contrasting ways. Fifty years of fighting over a definition is unlikely to come to an end so quickly. 

“If the EPA is concerned about a wetland, they will try to find a way to regulate it,” Moffa said. “I don’t think that there’s one version of this that’s going to [let] everyone avoid paying lawyers in cases that are close.”


This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/politics/supreme-court-ruling-biden-clean-water-act/.

Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org

You’ll be amazed that you can make this super-crispy, amazingly fresh nigiri at home

Okay, controversial take here: I used to think that the rice served with nigiri, or raw slices of fish, was a waste of stomach space. But when those same balls of sweet sushi rice are pan-seared until crispy and golden, then brushed with a harissa sauce—genius and necessary. And it makes me that much more grateful to think of how the Marshall Islanders are making sure that our tuna populations stay happy and healthy. 

Valentine ThomasValentine Thomas (Tyler Sharp)

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Valentine ThomasValentine Thomas (John Kowitz)

Tuna Nigiri with Rice Cakes and Harissa     
Yields
06 servings
Prep Time
25 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes

Ingredients

2 cups cooked sushi rice 

1/2 cup rice wine vinegar 

1 tablespoon harissa paste 

1 teaspoon ras el hanout (see Note) 

1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar 

1/4 cup vegetable oil, for cooking 

12 ounces raw tuna, sliced sashimi-style 

1 dried nori sheet, minced, for garnish

 

 

Directions

  1. In a medium bowl, add the sushi rice and the rice wine vinegar, then gently mix to combine. 

  2. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Press the sushi rice onto the sheet to form a 1-inch by 1 1/2 -inch-thick rectangle. (You may need a tiny bit of water on your hands to prevent the sushi rice from sticking.)

  3. Using a wet knife, cut out bite-size rectangles that are about 2 inches long by 1/2 inch wide. 

  4. In a small bowl, add the harissa paste, ras el hanout, and apple cider vinegar, then whisk until well combined. 

  5. Line a large plate or a platter with paper towels. In a medium sauté pan set over medium-high heat, add the vegetable oil. Once the pan is hot, add a couple of pieces of the rice cutouts to the pan, being careful not to crowd the pan. Fry until golden brown on both sides, 1 to 2 minutes per side. Transfer the fried rice cakes to the paper-towel-lined plate. Repeat with the remaining rice cutouts, refreshing the oil as needed.

  6. To serve, place the crispy rice cakes on a serving platter and use a pastry brush to brush some of the harissa mixture onto each cake, then top each with a slice of sashimi and garnish with the minced nori sheets.

Reprinted with permission from Good Catch: A Guide to Sustainable Fish and Seafood with Recipes from the World’s Oceans by © 2023 Valentine Thomas. Published by Union Square & Co. 

Valentine ThomasValentine Thomas (Brandon Wahlers)


Cook’s Notes

Ras el hanout is a Moroccan spice blend that you can find in some grocery stores and most specialty shops or Middle Eastern markets. However, if you can’t find it, just substitute equal parts ground coriander, ground ginger, and paprika.

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Ex-prosecutor: Trump lawyer “violated most of the rules of good cross-examination”

Donald Trump’s defense lawyer, who resorted to personal attacks and repetitive questioning in his cross-examination of E. Jean Carroll in the trial over her rape allegation against the former president, only bolstered her case, according to legal experts.

Carroll sued Trump for battery and defamation, alleging that he damaged her reputation by calling her a liar and repeatedly denying her accusations that he raped her in a Bergdorf Goodman department store dressing room in the mid-1990s. Trump’s attorney Joe Tacopina, who has previously represented an NYPD cop accused of on-duty rape of a woman, struggled to defend his client while questioning Carroll and only reinforced her testimony, former prosecutors say.

“[He] violated most of the rules of good cross-examination – tightly focus on just a few key issues, ask only questions to which you know the answer, don’t let the witness simply repeat the compelling parts of her own testimony, and, most importantly, don’t re-victimize the victim,” said former U.S. Attorney Barb McQuade, a law professor at the University of Michigan. “Still, as they say, even a blind squirrel sometimes finds an acorn. If any jurors bite on his boorish line of questioning, he may have succeeded in casting doubt on Carroll’s story.”

At one point, Tacopina asked Carroll about old Facebook posts in which she said she was a “massive” fan of Trump’s reality show “The Apprentice.”

“I had never seen such a witty competition on TV, and it was about something worthwhile, competing,” Carroll said, adding that she posted to Facebook about the show because she wanted to “boost” two friends who were appearing on it.

Tacopina also pressed Carroll about a 2012 Facebook post where she had asked people whether they would have sex with Trump for $17,000 and could keep their eyes closed during it.

She responded by saying she had “made several jokes about Donald Trump” and later testified under questioning from her lawyer that she wrote the post because “it’s much better to laugh than cry,” according to NBC News

His cross-examination of Carroll tried “to suggest something that he could never say explicitly: that Carroll’s life was better not worse because of her violent encounter with Donald Trump,” former federal prosecutor Faith Gay told Salon.

“Tacopina sought to suggest that Carroll’s life had not been destroyed by the incident – as she testified on direct – but, rather, that her life was full of fun, joy and celebrity after Trump assaulted her,” Gay said. 

Carroll’s lawsuit alleges that since she revealed her claims of rape against Trump in a 2019 book, his derogatory comments have caused her “emotional pain and suffering at the hands of the man who raped her, as well as injury to her reputation, honor, and dignity,” according to NBC.

During his cross-examination, Tacopina asked Carroll whether her life “has been fabulous” since her book came out.  

“I like my life. I say it quite a bit,” Carroll said, adding that while she’ll often describe her life as “fabulous,” she puts up a front. 

“I don’t want people to know I suffer. I would be ashamed if people know what’s actually going on,” she said.


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Carroll delivered a powerful testimony in the trial’s opening days last week and stood her ground when Trump’s lawyer pressed her about the validity of her claims. At one point, she even corrected him saying: “Not supposedly. I was raped, those are the facts.”

On Monday, as he continued to cross-examine her, Carroll’s testimony remained unshaken.

“Carroll noted repeatedly and persuasively that women of her generation were taught to carry on with elegance no matter what life-shattering tragedies were inflicted on them,” Gay said.

Throughout the cross-examination, Carroll remained calm and collected whereas Tacopina’s cross-examination blew up a few times. 

When he asked Carroll why she didn’t sue former CBS CEO Leslie Moonves, who allegedly assaulted her in an elevator, Carroll responded that Moonves did not rape her and then call her a liar in public, Gay pointed out.

Judge Lewis Kaplan also repeatedly sustained objections to blatantly improper and repetitive questioning including about Carroll’s intimate life and sexual history.

“The idea is to make the witness lose her cool and start to hurt her own case,” said former federal prosecutor Kevin O’Brien.

If the alleged victim comes across as “sympathetic, candid and reflective,” then “the lawyer loses the jury almost from the opening bell,” and the judge’s reactions reinforce the problem, he added.  

“There is a good chance that is what happened to Tacopina here,” O’Brien said. “Carroll was a remarkable witness.”

Carroll’s friend, who she had told about the assault moments after it happened took the witness stand on Tuesday and corroborated her testimony. 

“I am here because my friend, my good friend, who was a good person, told me something terrible that happened to her and as a result she lost her employment and her life became very, very difficult,” said Lisa Birnbach, an author and journalist, The New York Times reported.

Birnbach testified that Carroll called her about five to seven minutes after the attack happened, around 6 p.m. one evening in the spring of 1996. 

“I want the world to know that she is telling the truth,” Birnbach said.

Wild-caught seafood is often untraceable — and some industry players don’t want that to change

The wild-caught fish you buy was landed far away from cameras or scrutiny. So how do you know it really is what the label says? How do you know it was caught in a sustainable fishery? Even in regulated fisheries like Australia’s, the answer is, broadly, you don’t.

That’s because most wild-caught seafood is untraceable. Yes, it could have been caught sustainably by pole and line fishers. But it could have been relabelled as a different fish altogether. Worldwide, seafood fraud is rampant. That’s why conservationists ask fish buyers to use apps like GoodFish to check.

And while technologies now exist to solve this problem and make opaque supply chains transparent, our new research suggests many players in the Australian industry are not interested in change — particularly large wholesalers, processors and fish markets.  

 

What did we find?

We interviewed people who work in seafood supply chains in Australia — from fishers and aquaculture companies to seafood traders and restaurants.

These insiders believed bigger supply chain actors were often not doing the right thing, by concealing trade information, manipulating prices and with little concern about product origin.

Fishers and fish farmers explained that once their catch departs for the big seafood markets, they “lose control of the supply chain”, have “no idea where they go” and that it’s “impossible to keep track of any of it”.

Our interviewees told us a degree of food fraud still exists. This is when a species is incorrectly labelled by name, origin or how it was caught.

This can be accidental or done deliberately to mask certain information or to justify selling it at a higher price. For example, critically endangered species such as the school shark are being mislabelled as gummy shark — which is sustainably caught in Australia.

Chefs told us about regularly seeing species labelled as locally caught when they knew they were out of season in their state.  

Fish farmers told us cheap overseas fish of questionable quality would often be sold as their fish. As one barramundi farm representative told us:

 

It honestly really frustrates and upsets me because you do all this work and your barramundi is happily substituted.

 

Fishers, fish farmers and restaurants were largely supportive of traceability technologies. But they feared a backlash from the wholesalers on which their sales relied. Some interviewees reported experiences of threatening, bullying and cajoling from some wholesalers.

As one interviewee told us:

 

I know that these guys [wholesalers], right or wrong, can hold me to ransom. If they don’t buy my fish, we don’t have ability to send [high volumes] to anyone else.

 

 

How would traceability improve the situation?

At present, tracking where fish, prawns, shellfish and other seafood come from relies on largely paper-based systems. These are prone to human error, negligence or manipulation.

In an effort to fix the problem, several traceability platforms have been developed in Australia. These tend to rely on blockchain, where encrypted “blocks” of product, trade and price data are stored along a digital “chain” which is publicly visible.

This data is linked to a QR code on individual fish or boxes of fish. Data added include the species name, time of catch, product weigh and the time of each physical handover point — with new data being verified against preexisting data in the chain. Traders and consumers can scan these QR codes to access information on the seafood product in front of them.

In short, digital tracing of seafood would create a transparent trading environment by making public how the market operates, from buyers and sellers to the prices paid and the ability to track seafood from ocean to plate.

A system like this would also give fishers more power. At present, wholesalers are often able to name a price that fishers simply have to accept.

Fishers would much prefer to be able to set their own prices. Traceability technology could help here too, to give fishers a sense of which seafood products are in demand right now and allow them to price their products accordingly.

 

            seafood tracing
What if seafood was trackable from ocean to plate? Sascha Rust, Author provided
           

 

Australia should embrace greater seafood transparency

Estimates of food fraud in global fisheries range widely, from 20% up to 90%. That is to say, we know there’s a real problem here — we just don’t know exactly how large. But we do know there are very real problems in the world’s wild-caught fisheries.

Australia could have a role here to demonstrate what good fisheries can look like. At present, our fishing authorities are primarily concerned with catch regulations at sea.

There’s not enough focus on what happens next. Our label-based traceability systems are weak compared to the European Union which has the strict import laws and seafood labelling standards that conservationists in Australia are pushing for.

But digital technology could offer something even better. While the EU’s solution is positive, it’s been criticised by scholars for being overly bureaucratic and not delivering the same depth of information.

Could it happen? Yes — but it would have to happen over the protests of those who would be disadvantaged, such as some seafood wholesalers.

One way it could happen is if the government adds more information disclosure requirements to laws governing fair competition. This would give the market the nudge required to see traceability technologies more rapidly adopted.

If nothing is done, Australia’s seafood industry could become less viable since illegal fishing practices would remain difficult to identify, putting strain on fish stocks. But we are optimistic that innovators will eventually succeed in bringing together enough actors across the supply chain to make the shift to digital traceability happen.

While many academics, disruptors and commentators often laud blockchain as a way to rapidly drive sustainable change, our research suggests this will only occur if the most influential supply chain actors see value in using it.

Benjamin Thompson, Lecturer in Human Geography, Monash University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

“Mrs. Davis” star Betty Gilpin on her risk-taking acting style: “I like playing high stakes”

“It is scary,” admits Betty Gilpin. “It freaks me out.” The Emmy-nominated actor and author (“All the Women in My Brain“) is talking about the real-world inspiration for her critically acclaimed — and strikingly relevant — new Peacock series “Mrs. Davis.”

“I definitely saw OpenAI or ChatGPT as just a corner of the world and news that I don’t understand and I don’t want to engage with,” she said on “Salon Talks.” But now, “I’m rapidly realizing we may not have a choice.”

And while she’s not as zealous about the threat of technology as her fictional counterpart Sister Simone, the former “GLOW” star does admit that “I can’t pee without watching a YouTube video. I’m completely addicted to that poison.” During our conversation, Gilpin (who appears next in the Starz series “Three Women“) talks about why she was never a mumblecore heroine, how “GLOW” changed her career trajectory, and why she’s still figuring out her own relationship with AI. “Are you our savior,” she asks, “or are you our downfall?” 

Watch Betty Gilpin on “Salon Talks” here, or read our conversation below.

This conversation has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

Tell me who Mrs. Davis is.

“Mrs. Davis,” the show, takes place in a world not unlike our own. It’s present day, but it’s a society where a Siri or Alexa-type algorithm called Mrs. Davis has taken over and purports to be benevolent, is in everyone’s ear in a fancy-looking AirPod thing and seemingly has all the answers and has fixed all the problems in the world. But, there’s a small faction of society, myself, Simone the nun included, that believe she is evil and don’t trust her. 

I like how you’re just casually, “Simone the nun.” 

“This is 100% of what I want to do. It’s like the ultimate acting cat toy.”

Simone the nun. 

You get to go through a lot of different versions of yourself in this as well. I know this character was basically conceived with you in mind.

I don’t know that that’s true.

I’ve read interviews with Damon Lindelof where he said it was! And then you were, very early on, brought in on the collaboration of creating this show and talking about the character. 

I wonder if that’s a kid glove, “You’re a very special poodle” thing that they tell actors to sedate them when they enter a job. To be like, “This was conceived with you in mind. We offered it to 10 other people before you.” That’d be so nice if it was. I had worked with Damon Lindelof on “The Hunt” prior to this. He and the genius Tara Hernandez wrote this insane script, and I read the pilot and had never read anything like it.

In true Damon fashion and Tara Hernandez fashion, it really hides your vegetables in a hundred different genres. I feel like oftentimes, when we’re faced with what to watch at the end of the day, it’s either joyful and mindless or important and depressing. They have a way of writing something that’s important and joyful. I had never really read anything like this, obviously, so it was a dream.

Watching this character made me think about the title of your book.

All the Women in My Brain.” 

Simone is all these women, all these different characters. I’m wondering if that’s something that you drew on when you were playing her, knowing that she has so many sides to her?

Yeah, she has so many different sides. Also, the script has so many different tones. I find that more like life than when you’re doing a script or a character where you have to keep it one genre, one feeling, one color. I also think I oftentimes play or read characters that are either sarcastic, wry, arms folded, eyebrow raised, have all the answers before you do, or super vulnerable, arms open, hopeful, gullible types.

Maybe not gullible, but I think that Simone is both of those things. We see that she maybe started as the former and then her faith has really exploded her into this other side, where maybe she does love aspects of the world and have childlike hope. I relate to that as a mom. I feel like I was an eye-rolling, middle-finger-in-the-air person until I had a baby. Then suddenly I’m crying at a butterfly, like, “Ugh.” Never done that before.

One of the descriptions I read of the show was that it’s about AI versus faith, but I feel like it’s about AI and faith. It’s about the ways in which we put our trust into something.

And even when we were filming it six months ago, we didn’t know how prescient and of-the-time our show would be. ChatGPT wasn’t as much a part of the headlines, at least as it is right this second and OpenAI. I think, even though our show is super out there and bonkers sometimes, it is very of this exact moment where we’re going to OpenAI, “Are you our savior or are you our downfall?”

“I was an eye-rolling, middle-finger-in-the-air person until I had a baby. Then suddenly I’m crying at a butterfly.”

I think a lot of the questions that my character is asking of this thing is a question I’m asking, which is, “What do we lose when we have all the answers in our pocket? Do we stop asking the big questions? Are we gambling with access to the intangible and inexplicable, which are the things that make us human and shape us as individuals?” If we have a robot puppy telling us who we are and what to do at all times, do we stop becoming interesting, well-rounded, good people?

I wonder what it must have been like for you as an actor, going from where this was much more speculative to being in this moment in our reality now. One of the reviews called it “the eerily timely ‘Mrs. Davis.'”

It is scary, it freaks me out. I definitely saw OpenAI or ChatGPT when I first started reading about it, as just a corner of the world and news that I don’t understand and I don’t want to engage with. I’m rapidly realizing we may not have a choice. Also, my daughter, her generation, will be far more interactive and have a different language with it than I do, so I can’t shut it out totally.

But it is nice to be doing something that asks big questions. I don’t want to give away any spoilers, because part of the joy of the show is the twists and turns and shocking things that you can’t believe you didn’t figure out an episode before, and going back and seeing Easter eggs you may have missed. There are so many aspects to this show that it was a joy to play, even if OpenAI is absolutely terrifying.

You’ve been very public about your journey as an actor, starting as someone who may have been typecast because of the way you look. Then you have “GLOW,” which is this enormous breakthrough role for you. How did Debbie change your career and you as a person?

In so many ways. Liz Flahive and Carly Mensch, who created “GLOW” were writers and producers on “Nurse Jackie,” which was my big first TV job. Really, up until then I had done mostly off-Broadway theater and episodes of cop and hospital shows here and there.

Died on “Criminal Intent” and then came back within the same year as an alive person. I went to the producers and was like, “People are going to be taken out of it.” They’re like, “It happens all the time, no one cares.” 

“There are so many aspects to this show that it was a joy to play — even if OpenAI is absolutely terrifying.”

I got this job on “Nurse Jackie.”  I came on in Season 5 and the character’s purpose was, “Let’s have a ditzy doctor who takes off all her clothes all the time to get viewers back in there.” I think Liz and Carly were the writers that realized, “Oh, that’s a weird person, that’s a character actor,” and started shaping the character to my strangeness. 

[With] Debbie, the character on “GLOW,”  they wrote about that experience a little bit, of playing a certain thing aesthetically and then wanting to do these other things or Trojan Horse those things into characters. Debbie finds that through wrestling.

Liz and Carly literally wrote out that map for me and gave me the opportunity to do all the things that I wanted to do on screen, which is such a gift. So many actors, or maybe any creative person, feels like, “Oh, I’m only being asked to do 10% of what I can do. This is so frustrating. It’s not that I’m not good, it’s that I’m not given the opportunity.” “GLOW,” in so many ways, gave me that opportunity and totally changed my life. “Mrs. Davis,” even though it’s a thousand different genres per episode, this is 100% of what I want to do, completely. It’s like the ultimate acting cat toy, and it’s the jobs that ask you to do 5% that are the ones that you lose sleep over.

It’s not like the industry has completely changed. It’s not like everything’s all better now for females in Hollywood. Both of your parents are actors. Did they give you advice? 

My dad is an actor and an Episcopalian priest, so we talked more about nuns and religion in preparation for this part. It’s funny, my parents are two very different actors. My dad, I call him Atticus Finch, he’s gravitas incarnate, plays solemn butlers and the lawyer you can trust . . . or can you? My mom is farce incarnate, is like Lucille Ball basically. 

“It’s the jobs that ask you to do 5% that are the ones that you lose sleep over.”

This part is very much a love letter to both of them. Simone can be very serious, she’s both a gravitas butler and Lucille Ball, or that’s what I’m striving for. It was very strange trying to categorize this show as a comedy or drama. I think they landed on drama just because it’s hour-long. I’m like, “I fall on a lot of banana peels for a drama.” Some of the hardest laughs of my life were on this set. We just had so much fun together.

Now you have a daughter. What do you want to tell her, if in a few years she’s got her 1.2 million followers on whatever version of TikTok there is?

I’m hoping that we’re the generation just driving without seat belts. I just worry, really approaching this part, thinking about the internet and the church, two very different things. It made me think, “OK, these are both institutions that we created as a reaction to the human need for connection and asking big questions, so we made the internet and church.” 

“I like playing high stakes, playing to the mezzanine, making a thousand choices.”

I often think that we sometimes misuse those institutions to do the opposite of connecting and asking. It’s like tunnel vision and disconnecting and echo chamber. Maybe, hopefully, we’re the generation using this thing to disconnect and make us dumber when maybe my daughter Mary’s generation can figure out how to use it to actually connect us and make us smarter. Some people are using the internet for that. I am using it to make me dumber.

She’s two and a half. I’m snatching screens away from her like they’re poison and then I can’t pee without watching a YouTube video. I’m completely addicted to that poison, so I better get right with my relationship with it before I try to preach to her about what her relationship with it should be.

Is that part of why you left social media? 

I had Twitter for a second and then ran away. I have a private Instagram. I’m addicted like everybody else is. I’m sending people falling down videos to my various group chats. I need to get un-addicted to my private Instagram.

You’re playing all these interesting, complicated women, so I have to ask about another complicated role you have coming up, in “Three Women.” 

I was obsessed with that book by Lisa Taddeo. For those who don’t know, she is an author who followed three real women in their lives, and it’s about their personal lives, their sex lives, their relationship to desire. I play Lina, who is a woman who lives in Indiana, has two kids and has an affair with her high school flame.

Maybe part of the reason that I didn’t work a lot in my 20s is mumblecore was king and being cool and having low stakes and minimalism – and I’ve never been good at that. I like playing high stakes, playing to the mezzanine, making a thousand choices. Whether it helps or hurts the piece, I don’t know. Lina is such a character who, even though she’s in a minivan in Indiana, is playing to the mezzanine. The stakes are so high for her. One of my favorite characters I’ve ever played. I adored that experience, and I’m so happy it found a home in Starz.

The artistic allure of Waffle House, America’s most surprising culinary muse

“Martin Luther King had a dream, and I think Waffle House was in it,” musician John Mayer once apparently said in an interview with the restaurant’s corporate magazine. 

He isn’t the only artist to regard the 24-hour diner chain as a kind of creative muse. Hootie and the Blowfish released a 2000 cover album called “Scattered, Smothered and Covered,” while Clint Eastwood and Bradley Cooper meet there in the 2018 film “Mule.” As Eater pointed out, at least one rap music video has been filmed in a Waffle House parking lot and, in the track “Welcome to Atlanta,” Jermaine Dupri raps, “After the party it’s the Waffle House/If you ever been here you know what I’m talkin’ about.”

And now, the Jonas Brothers have a new album coming out this month (called “The Album,” their first since 2019) that was supported by the single, “Waffle House.” It’s a frothy, slick song made for summer that champions hot nights and “deep conversations at the Waffle House.”

‘”Waffle House” was born from a simple but powerful idea: When you sit down with the people that matter most, anything is possible,” the group wrote on their social media. “This song isn’t about a restaurant, it’s about coming together with the people you love and making your dreams come true.'” 

I would argue that the statement should actually read “this song isn’t just about a restaurant” because there’s obviously something creators find alluring about it. So, what makes Waffle House such fertile ground for inspiration and why do we, as audiences, find ourselves drawn to art that’s smothered and covered in the allure of America’s favorite road trip stop?

A lot of it, I think, can certainly be attributed to the relative ubiquity of Waffle House — at least in certain parts of the country. Waffle House is headquartered in Norcross, Georgia, in the Atlanta metropolitan area, so the bulk of its 1900 locations are scattered across the American South, where the chain itself has become something of a cultural icon. 

The best demonstration of this is actually one of my favorite photography books, “Waffle House Vistas” by Micah Cash. The book itself was born from an essay Cash had written in 2019 for The Bitter Southerner. It begins like this: 

Let me get the most important thing out of the way first: I like my hash browns scattered and covered. My preferred accompaniment to that crispy mass of potatoes is a two-egg breakfast, scrambled, with wheat toast, a side of bacon, crispy, and black coffee. Now, let me address the other question: What compelled me to spend the better part of 2018 traveling throughout the southeastern United States with the sole purpose of visiting Waffle House restaurants?

Cash wrote that the project was, in part, inspired by his own affinity for the restaurant, but also because Waffle House served as the ideal vantage point to capture scenes across the region. In total, Cash sat in the booths of about 125 Waffle Houses and took photos of the environment outside of their windows, asking viewers to “look up from their hash browns and acknowledge the institutions and structures that create real, yet rarely acknowledged boundaries that feel impossible to break through for much of this country.” 

Why do we find ourselves drawn to art that’s smothered and covered in the allure of America’s favorite road trip stop?

The restaurant is the perfect place to hold that discussion, Cash said, because it’s for everyone.

“Waffle House does not care how much you are worth, what you look like, where you are from, what your political beliefs are, or where you’ve been,” Cash wrote in the opening to his book, “so long as you respect the unwritten rules of Waffle House: Be kind, be respectful, and don’t overstay when others are waiting for a table.”

In addition to its ubiquity, Waffle House’s sheer lack of pretension is another of its greatest virtues. I’m particularly fond of the episode from the sixth season of “Parts Unknown” when South Carolina chef Sean Brock takes Anthony Bourdain to Waffle House. 

While there, Brock explains to Bourdain — who is slathering syrup-drenched pecan waffles with butter from flimsy plastic packets — that this was the only restaurant he’d ever visited as a kid where we could actually watch the food being made. 

“You don’t come here expecting the French Laundry,” Brock said. “You come here expecting something amazing.”

“This is better than the French Laundry,” Bourdain replied. 

In his narrated description of the restaurant, Bourdain went on to say that it “is indeed marvelous — an irony-free zone where everything is beautiful and nothing hurts. Where everybody regardless of race, creed, color or degree of inebriation is welcomed.” 

Now, that wry “degree of inebriation” line underscores something that any true Waffle House aficionado knows: Anything can happen at a Waffle House. It is this liminal space that feels both incredibly familiar, yet a little devoid of time and place. Its staff are tough enough that they have taken on an almost folk hero-like status; for instance, the Waffle House closest to the University of Kentucky was rumored to have a line cook who put six rowdy frat boys in their place with a frying pan — and didn’t drop the cigarette out of her mouth to do it. 


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It’s no surprise that with every new video-sharing platform — from YouTube to TikTok — a genre of “Wild Waffle House” videos quickly forms. 

The writers at “Saturday Night Live” recently played with this idea in a sketch starring “Wednesday” star Jenna Ortega who plays a high school senior. She is ready to break up with her boyfriend, played by Marcello Hernandez, and this very serious, emotional conversation takes place in the parking lot of a Waffle House. 

Behind the glass windows, however, it’s a different story: Waitresses are fighting. A dog has somehow gotten on top of the diner counter. A shirtless man (Mikey Day) is tased by cops, but is unaffected by the shock. Meanwhile, a woman who has been dancing on top of the counter alongside the dog swipes the taser and makes a run for it. Then, someone walks in with a torch. The chaos continues. 

Put another way, Waffle House is the wild west of chain breakfast restaurants. Craig Fugate, the former head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, once famously said of disaster areas: “If you get there and the Waffle House is closed? That’s really bad.” 

You might have to flip on a generator or two, but you can’t keep a Waffle House down — and as long as its doors are open, people will stream in. 

It’s not all just drunk mayhem, however. 

“Whether you like it or not, Waffle House is your neighborhood diner, replicated thousands of times over.”

Waffle House has had its real problems. As Cash wrote for The Bitter Southerner, he began his “Waffle House Vistas” project in the spring of 2018, amid a string of racially charged incidents that occurred at Waffle Houses throughout the South. The weight of those incidents even prompted the Rev. Bernice King, CEO of the King Center in Atlanta, to call for a boycott of the beloved chain at the time. 

However, Waffle House remains enmeshed in our physical environment and continues to appear in our art; its unique combination of ubiquity and unpretentiousness imbues the restaurant with a kind of accessibility that results in people feeling a kind of creative ownership over it. 

As Cash wrote, “Whether you like it or not, Waffle House is your neighborhood diner, replicated thousands of times over.” 

That’s why when the Jonas Brothers sing the line “deep conversations at the Waffle House,” many listeners are probably left thinking about the moments they’ve shared over cheap hash browns and a decent cup of coffee — from the sticky, hot summer party nights to the early road trip mornings. 

Sounds like the beginning of a new song to me.

Leaked video: Tucker Carlson caught talking about his “postmenopausal” fans and “yummy” woman

Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson discussed his “postmenopausal” fans and “sexual technique” in new leaked video published by Media Matters

Carlson, whose show was axed last month, discussed someone’s girlfriend with someone who was off-camera in the Fox studio.

“I thought his girlfriend was kind of yummy,” Carlson said in the clip, before adding that he was “just kidding” in case his comments were being recorded.

“I don’t even know what his girlfriend looks like. And if I did, I would not find her yummy,” he said.

In another video, Carlson discussed his appearance while getting his hair fixed.

 “I can never assess my appearance. I wait for my postmenopausal fans to weigh in on that,” he said.

In another video published by Media Matters, Carlson speak to Piers Morgan as Morgan is readying to interview him.

“If we’re going to talk about sex, I’d love to hit some of the fine points of technique, but, you know, but it’s your show. It’s totally up to you,” Carlson said.

Morgan, referring to Carlson’s hawking of testicle tanning to bolster testosterone levels, replied, “We can certainly talk about your sexual technique, especially after your tanning testicles last week.”

“Not mine,” Carlson said. “We’ll speak in more general terms, but I’ve got something to add.”


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Media Matters on Monday published other leaked footage showing Carlson bashing his ex-employer’s perceived “failings.”

Speaking to an unknown person, Carlson in the video says, “I don’t want to be a slave to Fox Nation, which I don’t think that people watch anyway.”

“Nobody watches Fox Nation because the site sucks,” he said. “So I’d really like to just put the — dump the whole thing on YouTube. But anyway, that’s just my view. OK. I’m just frustrated with it. It’s hard to use that site. I don’t know why they’re not fixing it. It’s driving me insane. And they’re like making, like, Lifetime movies. But they don’t, they don’t work on the infrastructure of the site. Like what? It’s crazy. And it drives me crazy because it’s like we’re doing all this extra work and no one can find it. It’s unbelievable, actually.”

“We’re like working like animals to produce all this content,” Carlson added, “and the people in charge of it, whoever that guy’s, whatever his name is, like, they’re ignoring the fact that the site doesn’t work. And I think it’s like a betrayal of our efforts. That’s how I feel. So I, of course, I resent it.”

Pornhub blocks access for entire state of Utah over new verification law

Pornhub has disabled its site for all Utah-based users following the implementation of a law that requires porn sites to verify users’ ages.

Starting on May 1, Utah-based IP addresses will be barred from accessing the site’s sexually explicit content, and will instead be greeted with a video of adult film star, Cherie DeVille, who explains why users cannot log on.

The message is in opposition to SB287, legislation recently signed into law by Republican Gov. Spencer Cox that puts porn sites that make their content available to minors at legal risk.

“As you may know, your elected officials in Utah are requiring us to verify your age before allowing you access to our website,” DeVille says. “While safety and compliance are at the forefront of our mission, giving your ID card every time you want to visit an adult platform is not the most effective solution for protecting our users, and in fact, will put children and your privacy at risk.” 

She continued, “In addition, mandating age verification without proper enforcement gives platforms the opportunity to choose whether or not to comply. As we’ve seen in other states, this just drives traffic to sites with far fewer safety measures in place. Very few sites are able to compare to the robust Trust and Safety measures we currently have in place. To protect children and user privacy, any legislation must be enforced against all platforms offering adult content.”

“The safety of our users is one of our biggest concerns. We believe that the best and most effective solution for protecting children and adults alike is to identify users by their device and allow access to age-restricted materials and websites based on that identification. Until a real solution is offered, we have made the difficult decision to completely disable access to our website in Utah.”

“Please contact your representatives before it is too late and demand device-based verification solutions that make the internet safer while also respecting your privacy.”


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Pornhub’s parent company, MindGeek, has blocked web browsers to all of its other adult film sites, as well.

CNN reported that Pornhub “declined to comment on its actions in Utah beyond the message it posted to users in the state, and it also declined to address the likelihood of attempts to circumvent the IP address filtering.”

Dr. Nicole Prause, senior statistician at the University of California, Los Angeles, posted a tweet arguing that blocks “have never worked.”

“Utah passes anti-porn bill, and searches for VPN (to continue to access porn by appearing to be accessing from a different state) jumps on Google.”

Celebrate May flowers with Giada De Laurentiis’ 5 most budget-friendly spring recipes

As the age-old adage goes, spring showers bring May flowers. But with the new season also comes a slew of new recipes, all filled with brightly-colored produce, zesty flavors and spritzy beverages. Think caramelized lemon cacio e pepepotato-leek soup with spiced chickpeasspring pea salad or shrimp and corn “clambakes.”

Spring is all about enjoying all the fresh foods your heart desires — and sharing them with good company!

It’s also all about feasibility and affordability. A good spring recipe doesn’t come at the expense of your bank account. And if anyone knows that to be true, it’s Giada De Laurentiis, the queen of simple homemade meals. The lauded chef and television personality shared a few of her favorite spring recipes online. And to make things easier, she even filtered them based on their prices.


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From lemony pastas to refreshing salads and floral cakes, here are Giada’s five most budget-friendly spring-themed recipes. All the listed recipes range anywhere between $10 to $25.

01
Sorrento Lemon Spaghetti

“Just a few stellar ingredients yields a light and creamy pasta with all the brightness of Amalfi Coast lemons, and the sweetness of Italian basil,” Giada wrote. “This is Italian simplicity at its very best. Buon appetito!”

 

The spaghetti takes 15 minutes to whip up and calls for only five ingredients: Tuscan sea salt, one pound of spaghetti chitarra pasta (plain ol’ spaghetti will do too), lemon infused olive oil (or you can add fresh lemon juice into olive oil), Parmigiano Reggiano cheese and basil leaves.     

 

To start, boil a large pot of water over high heat before adding the pasta. Cook the pasta until it’s just barely al dente. In a separate bowl, mix the lemon oil, parmesan cheese and ½ cup of pasta water. Add the cooked pasta to the bowl and coat it in the light sauce. Stir in the basil and add more cheese — and enjoy. That’s it! 

02
Caprese Frittata

Nothing screams spring like a homemade frittata filled with fresh mozzarella, basil and cherry tomatoes! Giada’s caprese frittata is a beautiful celebration of all things spring. Bonus? It also doesn’t skimp on color or classic frittata flavors.

 

This recipe calls for extra virgin olive oil, cherry tomatoes, kosher salt, eggs (at room temperature), heavy cream, basil and mozzarella cheese. If you want, you can also add Prosciutto di Parma, additional cherry tomatoes and micro basil.

 

First, heat an oven-proof, nonstick skillet over medium heat and add olive oil and cherry tomatoes. Sprinkle in the salt and cook the tomatoes until they are soft, for about four minutes. In a large bowl, whisk the eggs, heavy cream, basil and remaining salt until smooth and airy. Pour the mixture over the tomatoes, sprinkle with mozzarella and cook for two minutes. Loosen the cooked eggs from the sides of the pan using a rubber spatula, in order to allow the raw egg to cover the bottom of the pan. Let the frittata sit for another minute before placing it under the broiler and cooking for five to six minutes. Once finished, top the dish with prosciutto slices, halved tomatoes and micro basil.

03
Lavender Honey Cake

Looking to spruce up your vanilla cake recipe? Well then, look no further than Giada’s recipe for Lavender Honey Cake. “The honey’s light citrus notes followed by a slight floral element work really well with the lavender and lemon,” Giada wrote. “The semolina adds a nice texture that makes this cake a little more substantial than usual.” Our mouths are already watering.

 

This recipe begins with preparing the lavender syrup, which calls for water, lavender and sugar. Simmer the ingredients in a small saucepan over medium-high heat before turning the heat off and steeping for three minutes.

 

In the meantime, prepare the cake batter by whisking together flour, semolina, baking powder, baking soda, salt and lavender in a large bowl. In a separate medium bowl, whisk together the lemon zest, vanilla, olive oil, honey, eggs, lemon juice and cooled lavender syrup. Combine the wet and dry ingredients, pour into a prepared pan and bake for 30 to 35 minutes. Once the lavender syrup is cooled, pour it over the cake and finish it off with a dollop of fresh vanilla cream.

04
Orecchiette with Cauliflower and Bread Crumbs

What’s so unique about orecchiette pasta is its ear-like shape, which allows for sauces, vegetables and meats to easily cling onto the pasta. Not only is this a budget-friendly spring pasta dish, it’s also an easy weeknight meal that is perfect for beginners in the kitchen!

 

In addition to cauliflower, the pasta includes toasted breadcrumbs, parmesan cheese and anchovy filets for added umami flavor. To prepare, toss the chopped cauliflower in olive oil and salt before roasting for 20 to 25 minutes. Cook the orecchiette pasta until al dente and separately toast the breadcrumbs in a large sauté pan over medium heat. Remove the breadcrumbs and sauté garlic and anchovies in olive oil. Add chili flakes and cauliflower, making sure to coat it in the anchovy-infused oil. Mix in the pasta, remaining cheese and parsley. Toss in the breadcrumbs and more cheese before serving.

05
Honey Lavender Gin Spritz

The addition of lavender honey elevates this classic gin spritz into the perfect spring drink. All you need is lavender honey, gin, lemon juice, vanilla bean club soda and fresh or dried sprigs of lavender.

 

First, add the honey, gin and lemon juice to a tall glass. Stir it all together, making sure the honey dissolves completely. Add ice and finish it off with vanilla bean club soda. Top it with lavender sprigs and enjoy!

Here’s why your freezer smells bad — and what you can do about it

Most people would expect a freezer can keep perishable food fresh and safe from spoilage for many months. Unfortunately, this is not always the case.

Have you ever noticed a funky smell in your freezer? Where does it come from and what can be done to fix the problem?

 

Hardy microbes and pungent chemicals

There are several causes for bad smells coming from your freezer. Typically, the culprits are microbes — bacteria, yeasts and molds.

Although a freezer dramatically slows down the growth of most common spoilage microbes, some can still thrive if the temperature rises above -18℃ (the recommended freezer temperature). This can happen if there is a power outage for more than a few hours or if you put something hot straight in the freezer.

Food spills and open containers provide an opportunity for microbes to get to work. It’s also worth noting that many microbes will survive freezing and start growing again once conditions are favorable — for example, if you remove the food, partially thaw it and return it to the freezer.

Two things happen when food breaks down. First, as microbes start to grow, several pungent chemicals are produced. Second, the fats and flavors that are part of the food itself can and will be released.

These are generally referred to as volatile organic compounds (VOCs). They are the pleasant aromas that we sense when we eat, but VOCs can also be produced by bacteria.

For example, many of us would be familiar with the smells that come from fermentation — a microbial process. When fermenting a food, we intentionally contaminate it with microbes of known characteristics or provide conditions that favor the growth of desirable microbes and subsequent production of aromatic compounds.

By contrast, uncontrolled food spoilage is problematic, especially when the contaminating microbes can cause disease.

 

Freezing changes the food

It is not only microbial growth that can lead to undesirable odors. There’s a suite of chemical processes happening in the freezer, too.

Freezing causes physical changes to foods, often enhancing their breakdown. Many of us would be familiar with “freezer burn” on meats and other foods, as well as ice crystals on frozen food.

This phenomenon is called “salt rejection“. Depending on how rapidly something is frozen, salts can sometimes be concentrated, as pure water freezes at a higher temperature than water with things dissolved in it — like sugars and salts. On a large scale, this happens to icebergs in the ocean. As the sea water freezes, salt is removed. Thus, the iceberg is composed of fresh water and the surrounding sea water becomes a saltier and denser brine.

In a similar way, as water in food freezes, organic molecules are concentrated and expelled. If these are volatile, they move about the freezer and stick to other things. Where they end up depends on what else is around.

Some of the volatiles like water. We call them “hydrophilic” or water loving; those are the ones that will make your food taste bad. Other are more water-hating or “hydrophobic” and they stick to things like silicone ice cube trays, making them go smelly.

Domestic freezers are commonly attached to a refrigerator and this provides another opportunity for smells to move through the systems. The two units share a single cooling source and airflow channel. If your fridge has foul odors from the food inside (natural or after microbial spoilage), it is very likely they will migrate to your freezer.

 

Help, my freezer smells!

There are some simple steps you can take to stop your freezer from smelling.

First, try to prevent odors from developing in the first place by covering the food. If you place food in an airtight container (glass is best), it will dramatically slow the release of any aromatic compounds produced by bacteria or the food itself. Covered food is also less likely to absorb smells and flavors from other foods around it.

If the smells have already developed, you can eliminate them by following a few simple steps, including a thorough clean.

  • Remove all items from the freezer and inspect the foods for any spoilage, freezer burn or unpleasant odors.

  • Discard anything that has developed ice crystals and store the rest in a cooler box while attending to the freezer itself. You should also inspect the fridge and discard any bad-smelling foods.

  • Once you have removed all items, take out the shelves and clean up spills or crumbs.

  • Wipe down all surfaces using warm soapy water or a mix of two tablespoons of baking soda with warm water.

  • Wash all the shelves and ice compartments and let them dry completely.

If the smells are not removed with these simple cleaning steps, the freezer may require a deep clean, which involves turning off the unit and letting it “breathe” for a few days.

Placing some baking soda inside the freezer before adding food can help to absorb any residual odors. For serious smells where crevices or insulation are contaminated, you may need a service technician.

In short, even though we think freezers keep things “fresh”, microbes can still proliferate in there. Make sure to clean your freezer now and then to keep your food safe and healthy.

Enzo Palombo, Professor of Microbiology, Swinburne University of Technology and Rosalie Hocking, , Swinburne University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Never say die: The fantasy that “Succession’s” Roys and Disney’s Celebration sells isn’t princesses

Waystar Royco, the powerful media conglomerate of HBO’s “Succession,” led by the late, great Logan Roy, has always resembled Fox News with its conservative corporate leanings and bombastic news channel, ATN, and its behind-the-scenes family dynasty drama. But in the most recent episode, it was all Disney.

In the episode, the sixth one of the final season, titled “Living +,” the surviving Roys launch a product to a meeting of their investors. It’s a “land cruise” experience, a planned community with all the perks, an emphasis on staying young and more than a passing resemblance to Celebration, the Florida master-planned community developed by the Walt Disney Company in the 1990s. A suburb of Orlando, Celebration was meant to be an extension of EPCOT, expanding Walt Disney’s vision of an Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow, and giving the people what they wanted: a way to never die. 

My family toured Celebration when I was quite young and the developing community itself was new, hawking dreams to vacationers. Mostly I remember the free ice cream Disney employees plied me and my little sister with while salespeople tried to haggle with my parents. But I also remember the freedom. While the grownups talked, my sister and I were alone in the ice cream room, a parlor with red vinyl swivel chairs and a marble counter, which looked so much like the 1975 film “Escape from Witch Mountain,” I wondered when marionettes would start dancing. No one was really watching us. This was a fake town, after all, a collection of fake villages, so how much real trouble could we get into? 

The work of living? Other people did it. Celebration was summer all the time.

The sales pitch didn’t work. And for child me, this was a huge disappointment. Goodbye, forever Disney. Goodbye, free ice cream. Goodbye, the idea of riding my bike alone through a town where all the houses looked archaic and the same. For teen me — for any teenager — this kind of faux Norman Rockwell conformity would have been a nightmare. But for adults, it was a chance to stay young forever, to make the magic of the happiest place on earth last, to live there in a constant, manufactured cheerfulness.

Celebration promised a throwback quaintness, the way towns allegedly were. ThoughtCo. describes it as “intended to look and feel like middle America between the Wars. It is the Disney version of ‘Our Town.'” Think Neo-Victorians with gingerbread trim and front porches, cozy cottages and bungalows. 

An HOA on performance-enhancing drugs, trash cans would be hidden from view in Celebration. So would cars. We didn’t need to think about those unsightly necessities, certainly didn’t need to see them. The work of living? Other people did it. Celebration was summer all the time with free classes at the town center in gardening, art, cooking. Everything you needed was within walking distance — post office, movie theater, stores, banks, cafés —why ever leave? And why not remember how things used to be, whether or not they were ever actually that way?

If Disney made adults feel like kids again, maybe Disney Town could recapture that feeling of safety, of other people looking out for you — no danger allowed. 

One method to staying forever young, or telling yourself you are? To remain stagnant, rooted in the past. Or the fake past Celebration promised. If Disney made adults feel like kids again, maybe Disney Town could recapture that feeling of safety, of other people looking out for you — no danger allowed behind these picket fences. More than implied in this 1950s-esque idealization of Americana is the segregation and bigotry that actually dominated the time. Disney apparently worked to recruit families of color for their planned community, targeting ads in magazines, but in 2000, the racial makeup of Celebration was 88% white

SuccessionSuccession (David M. Russell/HBO)Kendall’s (Jeremy Strong) multimedia presentation of their planned community carefully uses stock footage of multiple family units, including families of color. He describes Waystar’s Living + as “a sanctuary” from the “tough” outside world. “Crime-free, hassle-free and respectful,” he says as an image appears behind him of an elderly white couple smiling as they tap an electronic screen by their door. “Security plus entertainment,” he promises.

It’s reminiscent of classic Disney films and TV specials combining live action with animation: Dick Van Dyke winking at cartoon penguins (Logan is the penguin in this scenario).

Also appearing on stage with Kendall? His deceased father. Thanks to some Deepfake-like editing, Kendall interacts with footage of Logan (Brian Cox), the late Waystar patriarch. It’s creepy. It’s also reminiscent of classic Disney films and TV specials combining live action with animation: Dick Van Dyke winking at cartoon penguins (Logan is the penguin in this scenario). But eternal life is a key selling point in Waystar’s condos. “How about I told you it was all going to last forever?” Kendall teases. Is he selling timeshares to the moon ? To cryogenic chambers? 

The party never ends at Living +, in part because you’re constantly bombarded with distracting media (early film releases! Directors sharing their rough cuts! Character breakfasts!), in part because you can relive your pretend childhood and in part because Kendall promises excellent, life-preserving healthcare, the kind only rich people get. Cutting-edge technology has always been central to Disney too, not simply in EPCOT; as of 2021, Celebration has plans to put in a medical school


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It’s fitting that Kendall describes the planned community as a land cruise. Because I can’t think of anything more terrible: trapped with the same drunk people, forced fun and not even an ocean view. But cruises – also a mainstay of Disney, furthering the connection — are another way to escape real life. You sail away from it, leaving other people high and dry on land. 

Maybe the “plus” of Living + is another nod to Disney and its streaming service, Disney +. Maybe it’s a way for those wealthy enough to afford a Waystar community to distance themselves from ordinary humans, those non-plus-ers just “surviving” as Kendall scoffs, like Dr. Suess’ Sneetches. But one thing is certain. For most people: whether it’s a dream or nightmare, Living + would be unreachable. As Shiv says, “Now we’re leaving planet Earth.”

Federal lawsuit aims to protect Texas from “exploding rockets” of Elon Musk

In the wake of a SpaceX explosion that coated coastal Texas in ash, environmental organizations on Monday filed a federal lawsuit intended to safeguard local wildlife from more “exploding rockets” and ensure residents’ access to regional beaches and parks.

“It’s vital that we protect life on Earth even as we look to the stars in this modern era of spaceflight,” declared Jared Margolis, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Federal officials should defend vulnerable wildlife and frontline communities, not give a pass to corporate interests that want to use treasured coastal landscapes as a dumping ground for space waste.”

The Center for Biological Diversity, American Bird Conservancy, Surfrider Foundation, Save RGV, and the Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas are suing the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) — and Billy Nolen, the acting administration planning to leave the post this summer — for permitting billionaire Elon Musk’s space company to conduct 20 rocket launches over the next five years.

“For the sake of future generations, let’s protect the healthy habitats we have left instead of treating them as wasteplaces for pollution and fuselage.”

The Starship spacecraft and Super Heavy rocket, collectively called Starship, is “the world’s most powerful launch vehicle ever developed,” according to SpaceX — which conducted the first test flight on April 20, an event ending with an explosion that sent debris raining down miles away from the launch site.

The green groups’ complaint argues that the FAA “has authorized the SpaceX Starship/Super Heavy Launch Vehicle Program at Boca Chica, Texas, without complying with bedrock federal environmental law, without fully analyzing the significant environmental and community impacts of the SpaceX launch program — including destruction of some of the most vital migratory bird habitats in North America — and without requiring mitigation sufficient to offset those impacts.”

American Bird Conservancy president Mike Parr pointed out that “by now, most people know that birds are in serious declines — and shorebirds like those that rely on Boca Chica are among the fastest-disappearing.”

“Overall, we’ve lost nearly 3 billion birds from the United States and Canada since 1970. At what point do we say, ‘Space exploration is great, but we need to save habitats here on Earth as a top priority?'” Parr asked. “For the sake of future generations, let’s protect the healthy habitats we have left instead of treating them as wasteplaces for pollution and fuselage.”

The region is vital to not only bird species such as piping plovers and northern aplomado falcons but also Gulf Coast jaguarundi, ocelots, and critically endangered Kemp’s ridley sea turtles. The launch site is located near state and federal conservation, park, and recreation lands.

“The administration’s failure to fully analyze the dangers of a rocket test launch and manufacturing facility mere steps from the Lower Rio Grande National Wildlife Refuge and two state parks is an astonishingly bad decision,” said Mary Angela Branch, a board member at Save RGV. “So many threatened and endangered species are counting on the agency to get this right.”

The SpaceX project will shut down a roadway used to access spots such as the Boca Chica Beach for up to hundreds of hours per year. Sarah Damron, senior regional manager for the Surfrider Foundation, said that “800 hours of closure fly in the face of the Texas Open Beaches Act, the state constitution, and Texans’ rights to free and unrestricted access to Texas beaches.”

“That’s the equivalent of 20 40-hour work weeks every year that Texans and visitors will be deprived of access to Boca Chica Beach,” Damon explained. “What’s worse is that these closures can happen at almost any time with little to no notice to the public, so the beach, park lands, and refuge lands are ostensibly closed to anyone who needs to make plans. This is an unacceptable loss to area residents and to the people of Texas.”

Juan Mancias, tribal chair of the Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas, highlighted how the SpaceX project also impacts the ability of his people to hold ceremonies and leave offerings for their ancestors.

“The Carrizo/Comecrudo people’s sacred lands are once again being threatened by imperialist policies that treat our cultural heritage as less valuable than corporate interests,” said Mancias.

“Boca Chica is central to our creation story. But we have been cut off from the land our ancestors lived on for thousands of years due to SpaceX, which is using our ancestral lands as a sacrifice zone for its rockets.”