• So what is it like being the parent of a rock star? Dave Simpson of the British newspaper The Guardian asked some parents of rock stars just that question. 1) Roy Newman, a retired electrical power engineer, is the father of Colin Newman, a singer with the group Wire. Roy remembers that Colin was a very imaginative child - at age five, he used to walk behind his parents and hold his hand up while making clicking noises with his tongue because he was taking his imaginary horse for a walk. As you would expect, he liked music. His parents took him and Janice, his younger sister, to a store so that Colin could buy the most recent Beatles album. Quickly, Colin turned up missing. Two hours later, they found him. He had been so eager to listen to the album that he had run home, climbed in through a window, and started playing the album. 2) Meat Loaf's daughter is named Pearl Aday, the first name coming from the title of an album by Janis Joplin. Meat Loaf, who is himself a rock star, says, "Even though she's a woman in a very tough, male-dominated industry, the only time I was concerned was when she went on the road with Mötley Crüe." He attended the concert, and his daughter was wearing a tiny G-string. He says, "I went up to [bassist] Nikki Sixx and said 'I wanna talk to you NOW!' and scared the h*ll out of him. But it was a joke." 3) Ed Marnie is a retired Scottish Enterprise development worker and the father of Ladytron singer Helen Marnie. He admits, "It is weird being a pop star's parent. At one gig my pal and I were standing with our black Ladytron T-shirts on thinking we were cool and this kid looked at us and said, 'You must be parents.'" In addition, Mr. Marnie remembers, "I was once in a bar and this bloke said he was a big Ladytron fan and had a screensaver of Helen on his computer. I looked at him and said, 'That's my daughter!'"
• Sheila Escovedo, aka percussionist-drummer Sheila E., grew up around drums and percussive instruments. Her father is big-time percussionist Pete Escovedo, and her godfather is Latin percussion master Tito Puente. Sheila E. and two of her three siblings became percussionists. Sheila E. explains, "That's Pop's fault. We grew up listening to him play around the house. He practiced to records all the time. And if his band wasn't rehearsing, they'd have jam sessions in our living room all the time. So pretty much the percussion instruments - timbales, congas, bongos, hand toys - were set out in the house as part of the furniture most of the time." When Sheila E. was 16, a percussionist in her father's band, Azteca, became ill and unable to play, so she asked her father if she could sit in. He agreed, and at one point during a song he wanted her to take a solo. She remembers, "It was an overwhelming experience because I'd never been able to express myself in that way. To be onstage with 16 musicians in a band signed to CBS in front of 3,000 people, for me, it was as if there was an out-of-body experience. If this is what heaven was supposed to feel like, then I wanted to feel like this every day." Sheila E. received a standing ovation and the sight of her father looking at her with his jaw dropped open. Offstage, he told her, "I can't deny you what you already know. I don't even know how you know all the things you just did tonight." She replied that she didn't know how she knew all the things she had just done either. After this concert, her dream changed. She wanted to be a professional percussionist and not a sprinter in the Olympics.
Pittsburgh is a city in the state of Pennsylvania in the United States, and is the county seat of Allegheny County. A population of about 302,407 (2018) residents live within the city limits, making it the 66th-largest city in the U.S. The metropolitan population of 2,324,743 is the largest in both the Ohio Valley and Appalachia, the second-largest in Pennsylvania (behind Philadelphia), and the 27th-largest in the U.S.
Pittsburgh is located in the southwest of the state, at the confluence of the Allegheny, Monongahela, and Ohio rivers. Pittsburgh is known both as "the Steel City" for its more than 300 steel-related businesses and as the "City of Bridges" for its 446 bridges. The city features 30 skyscrapers, two inclined railways, a pre-revolutionary fortification and the Point State Park at the confluence of the rivers. The city developed as a vital link of the Atlantic coast and Midwest, as the mineral-rich Allegheny Mountains made the area coveted by the French and British empires, Virginians, Whiskey Rebels, and Civil War raiders.
Source
Mark. was first, and correct, with:
Allegheny River.
mj (whose family once had to evacuate when the Mon got too high) wrote:
The third river of the trio
Is the Allegheny, flowing almost due south. It meets the Monongahela,
flowing north north west (disastrously crossed by General Braddock near
the town that now bears his name) at The Point (or Golden Triangle) to
form the mighty Ohio that flows off to the south west to eventually join
the Mississippi.
Dave said:
Allegheny. Like Boston, the residents of Pittsburgh have their own way of speaking. Some Pittsburghian lingo includes words like Yinz (ya'll), Jagoff (stupid/inept person), Jumbo (baloney sandwich), Pop (soft drink), Slippy (slippery), Red Up (clean up), N'at (and that), Nebby (busybody/gossip), Sweeper (vacuum cleaner for carpet), Dahnthan (downtown), Pea Aye (State of Pennsylvania), Ruff (civic arena), Sheetz (brand name of a regional convenience store), Buggy (shopping cart).
"Hey Jagoff! Let's go dahnthan to Sheetz and get some pop and jumbos before we go to ruff."
Don't forget "d'jeet d'jet?" (did you eat, yet) and "dippy eggs" (sunnyside-up - so you can dip your toast in the yolk).
Alan J answered:
The Allegheny.
Cal in Vermont replied:
Allegheny. Tougher to spell than the Ohio. Has its own mountains which would regularly pluck airplanes big and small out of the sky. Not as funny to say as Monongahela. Yinz from Picksburgh should know of The Hill (properly pronounced "Heel"), an ethnic stewpot that helped shape Pittburgh's destiny as much as it's rivers. And lets not forget The Frizzleburger!
Be careful out there, folks, as our Great Nation is presently on fire. Way to go president Orange Gaping Asshole! (Cue Up "For what It's Worth". Buffalo Springfield knew!)
Jim from CA, retired to ID, responded:
It is located at the confluence of the Allegheny River and the Monongahela River whose joining forms the Ohio River.
DJ Useo responded:
The third one is the Allegheny river. It may look polluted, but it's actually 100% chocolate milk. Lol.
If it's chocolate, it'd be Hersheys.
Billy in Cypress U$A replied:
Allegheny
Mac Mac said:
Allegheny
Deborah, the Master Gardener, wrote:
Ah, the three rivers of Pittsburgh…the Allegheny is the answer you're looking for. I wish it was the Susquenhanna, or Schuylkill, because they're fun to say, but those rivers are closer to Philly than Pittsburgh.
The Pittsburgh Steelers football team once had on its squad a young man from Mt. Holly, NJ (my hometown), named Franco Harris. He graduated in 1970, IIRC. I was a freshman in '69-'70. I knew who he was but never formally met him.
Happy Saturday!
Barbara, of Peppy Tech fame answered:
The answer is Allegheny.
Randall took the day off.
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Info: Mike D (a fan) wrote, "Some really heavy, thick riffs. Almost sludge metal sounding. They combine pop hooks with that and change gears a lot. Slow to very loud. Lots of indie girls rocking hard. Favorite track: 'Boring Girls.'"
Price: $10 for six-track album; individual tracks cannot be purchased separately
Since the May Sumo basho was cancelled, NHK has been rerunning Sumo from 2017.
Works for me.
Tonight, Sunday:
CBS starts the night, as usual, with '60 Minutes', followed by the movie 'Indiana Jones & The Last Crusade'.
NBC opens the night with a RERUN'The Titan Games', followed by a RERUN'America's Got Talent'.
ABC begins the night with a FRESH'America's So-Called Funniest Home Videos', followed by a FRESH'Celebrity Family Feud', followed by a FRESH'Press Your Luck', then a FRESH'Match Game'.
The CW offers a RERUN'DC's Stargirl', followed by a RERUN'Supergirl'.
Faux has a RERUN'Last Man Standing', followed by a RERUN'Duncanville', then a RERUN'The Simpsons', followed by a RERUN'Bless The Harts', then a RERUN'Bob's Burgers', followed by a RERUN'Family Guy'.
MY recycles an old 'How I Met Your Mother', followed by another old 'How I Met Your Mother', then an old 'Big Bang Theory', followed by another old 'Big Bang Theory', then still another old 'Big Bang Theory', followed by yet another old 'Big Bang Theory'.
AMC offers the movie 'The Hangover', followd by a FRESH'Killing Eve', then a FRESH'Quiz'.
BBC -
[6:00AM] KILLING EVE - Still Got It
[7:00AM] KILLING EVE - Are You From Pinner?
[8:00AM] KILLING EVE - End of Game
[9:00AM] KILLING EVE - Beautiful Monster
[10:00AM] ENDER'S GAME
[12:30PM] ROBIN HOOD
[3:30PM] THE PATRIOT
[7:00PM] TAKEN
[9:00PM] KILLING EVE - Are You Leading or Am I?
[10:02PM] TAKEN
[12:02AM] ROBIN HOOD
[3:00AM] KILLING EVE - Are You Leading or Am I?
[4:00AM] STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE - Rules of Acquisition
[5:00AM] STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE - Necessary Evil (ALL TIMES EST)
Bravo has Married To Medicine: LA', another 'Married To Medicine: LA', followed by a FRESH'Married To Medicine: LA', and another 'Married To Medicine: LA'.
Comedy Central has the movie 'Blended', followed by the movie 'Grown-Ups 2', then hours of old 'South Park'.
FX has the movie 'Pacific Rim: Upraising', followed by the movie 'Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle', then the movie 'Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle', again.
History has all old 'The Cars That Made America' all night.
IFC -
[6:45A] Mission: Impossible
[9:15A] Full Metal Jacket
[12:00P] Run All Night
[2:30P] Point Break
[5:30P] Top Gun
[8:00P] The Departed
[11:15P] Homefront
[1:30A] Argo
[4:15A] That '70s Show
[4:45A] That '70s Show
[5:15A] That '70s Show
[5:45A] The Three Stooges - Woman Haters (ALL TIMES EST)
Sundance -
[6:00am] Law & Order
[7:00amLa] w & Order
[8:00am] Law & Order
[9:00am] Law & Order
[10:00am] Young Guns
[12:30pm] The Road Warrior
[2:30pm] Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
[5:00pm] Troy
[8:30pm] Troy
[12:00am] The Road Warrior
[2:00am] Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome
[4:30am] Hogan's Heroes
[5:00am] Hogan's Heroes
[5:30am] Hogan's Heroes (ALL TIMES EST)
SyFy has the movie 'Mad Max: Fury Road', followed by the movie 'Tomb Raider'.
The collective fury over the death of George Floyd, who was suffocated by a Minnesota police officer kneeling on his neck during an arrest in Minneapolis, has prompted the music industry to take a united stand on Tuesday, June 2.
A message circulated widely on Instagram and other social media platforms on Friday evening (May 29) calls for "a day to disconnect from work and reconnect with out community" and "an urgent step of action to provoke accountability and change."
Under the hashtag #THESHOWMUSTBEPAUSED, The sentiment of the post, taking responsibility as "gatekeepers of the culture," is one dozens of companies took to heart in the hours after violence broke out in Minneapolis and other cities across the U.S.
Columbia Records was the first to publicly decry injustices towards underserved populations, with chairman Ron Perry posting late on Thursday night (May 28): "We stand together with the Black community against all forms of racism, bigotry, and violence. Now, more than ever we must use our voices to speak up and challenge the injustices all around us."
Microsoft is laying off dozens of journalists and editorial workers at its Microsoft News and MSN organizations. The layoffs are part of a bigger push by Microsoft to rely on artificial intelligence to pick news and content that's presented on MSN.com, inside Microsoft's Edge browser, and in the company's various Microsoft News apps. Many of the affected workers are part of Microsoft's SANE (search, ads, News, Edge) division, and are contracted as human editors to help pick stories.
While Microsoft says the layoffs aren't directly related to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, media businesses across the world have been hit hard by advertising revenues plummeting across TV, newspapers, online, and more.
Business Insider first reported the layoffs on Friday, and says that around 50 jobs are affected in the US. The Microsoft News job losses are also affecting international teams, and The Guardian reports that around 27 are being let go in the UK after Microsoft decided to stop employing humans to curate articles on its homepages.
Microsoft has been in the news business for more than 25 years, after launching MSN all the way back in 1995. At the launch of Microsoft News nearly two years ago, Microsoft revealed it had "more than 800 editors working from 50 locations around the world."
Microsoft has gradually been moving towards AI for its Microsoft News work in recent months, and has been encouraging publishers and journalists to make use of AI, too. Microsoft has been using AI to scan for content and then process and filter it and even suggest photos for human editors to pair it with. Microsoft had been using human editors to curate top stories from a variety of sources to display on Microsoft News, MSN, and Microsoft Edge.
On Friday afternoon, Taylor Swift tweeted directly at Donald Trump (R-Churl) to criticize him for his tweet encouraging police officers to shoot protestors should they begin looting. Her tweet got more than one million likes in less than five hours and became her most-liked tweet ever.
"After stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism your entire presidency, you have the nerve to feign moral superiority before threatening violence?," she wrote. "'When the looting starts the shooting starts'??? We will vote you out in November @realdonaldtrump."
Swift, who was once guarded about her political opinions, began speaking out more than a year ago, when she posted on Instagram urging her fellow Tennessee residents to vote for Democrat Phil Bredesen over his opponent, Republican Marsha Blackburn, in the election for U.S. Senate.
In an interview with The Guardian, Swift described the political atmosphere Trump created as "gaslighting the American public into being like, 'If you hate the president, you hate America.'"
Of Trump's presidency, she said: "We're a democracy-at least, we're supposed to be-where you're allowed to disagree, dissent, debate. I really think that he [Trump] thinks this is an autocracy."
The Venice Film Festival has said they are bound and determined to do their event this year, even in light of the continuing Coronavirus pandemic. Now, the second wheel in the traditional Fall Festival Trifecta that launches awards season, Telluride, has sent an email to all, indicating that they intend to move ahead and hold their annual Labor Day weekend festival. The festival is adding a day (as previously reported here) by starting on Thursday September 3, rather than Friday, and by adding an extra charter flight from New York City to make it easier for East coasters.
"We are not ignorant of the devastation facing the world. We feel the fear and distress too. This is why we are committed to observing all guidance as suggested by the consensus of voices of the scientific community with whom we are consulting now. This will not be a business as usual event. Things will look and feel very different," the Festival said. "We're contacting you today to let you know we're hard at work to provide a safe and joyous environment that will include an extra day to allow more space within and between screenings, along with all of the necessary safety tweaks and adjustments you've become very familiar with, regardless of where you call home."
The question of which films, and just how many the festival can attract this year, is still out there. Word in recent weeks is that some studios and distributors who normally attend will not be doing so. Netflix, which has been a key presence in the last couple of years is sitting this one out, at least at this point.
A reporter for an NBC affiliate station in Louisville, KY was fired upon by police Friday night during a live broadcast covering street protests in that city.
Kaitlin Rust, a journalist at WAVE 3, was live on the air when a man wearing a mask and vest that said "police" began firing at her and a colleague.
The reporter's shooting was posted to Twitter by a viewer and exceeded 1.5 million views within an hour.
In the video, Rust is heard screaming, "I'm getting shot!"
Rust and photographer James Dobson were struck and suffered minor injuries. Both were standing behind the police line and were not interfering with law enforcement, a WAVE 3 statement said.
Donald Trump (R-Manbaby) is demanding a packed Republican national convention with "no face coverings and no social distancing", North Carolina's governor's office has said.
The US president spoke with Democrat governor Roy Cooper by phone, the office revealed, where they discussed the scheduled August convention in Charlotte.
Mr Trump insisted on the lack of Covid-19 measures because he does not want to see signs of the pandemic in his renomination audience, a spokesperson for Mr Cooper said.
The president this week threatened to move his formal renomination elsewhere if he does not get guarantees by next week of being able to hold a large-scale event.
The convention, set to begin on 24 August, is supposed to have events in Charlotte's downtown sports arena, capped by Mr Trump's nomination speech three days later.
Pope Francis on Saturday urged politicians to divert funds spent on weapons to research to prevent another pandemic, as he led the largest gathering in the Vatican in nearly three months.
Francis presided at an outdoor prayer service with about 130 people, including many directly affected by the pandemic.
They prayed the rosary in the Vatican gardens as tens of thousands of people in about 50 Catholic shrines around the world joined in. A large screen in the gardens showed video links with about 25 locations.
Among those who prayed were Italian doctors, nurses, and ambulance drivers, as well as people who had recovered from coronavirus or lost family members. More than 33,000 have died in Italy.
Most wore masks except for when they led prayers at the microphone. Francis, 83, sat several meters away from most people during most of the service and did not wear a mask.
When Ken Pimlott began fighting US wildfires at the age of 17, they seemed to him to be a brutal but manageable natural phenomenon.
"We had periodic [fire] sieges in the 80s, but there were breaks in between," said Pimlott, the former head of the California department of forestry and fire protection. But no longer. "That doesn't really happen any more. Now you can't even blink" between fires, he said. "We're seeing the kinds of fires we have never seen before."
A recent study published in the journal Science helps explains why, revealing that the south-western US is in the grip of a 20-year megadrought - a period of severe aridity that is stoking fires, depleting reservoirs and putting a strain on water supplies to the states of the region.
Researchers compared soil moisture records from 2000-2019 to other drought events from the past 1,200 years. They found that the current period is worse than all but one of five megadroughts identified in the record.
Unlike past megadroughts - brought on by natural fluctuations in the Earth's climate - this current drought has been heavily influenced by human-induced climate change, "pushing what would have been a moderate drought in south-western North America into megadrought territory", according to the study.
Scientists have spent three decades trying to locate half of all the "normal" matter that's supposed to exist in the universe. A new paper is claiming to have finally found this missing stuff, in a discovery made possible by measuring incoming fast radio bursts.
"We know from measurements of the Big Bang how much matter there was in the beginning of the Universe," explained Jean-Pierre Macquart, an astrophysicist from Curtin University and the lead author of the new Nature paper, in a press release. "But when we looked out into the present Universe, we couldn't find half of what should be there. It was a bit of an embarrassment."
By missing matter, Macquart is referring to baryonic matter - the kind of matter we can touch and see - as opposed to dark matter, which is another story altogether. Baryonic matter, composed of neutrons and protons, makes up all the stuff we can detect around us, from planets, people, and polar bears through to clouds and iPhones. Theoretical predictions suggest baryonic matter makes up between 4 to 5 per cent of all the stuff in the universe, yet scientists were only able to account for around half of this, in a bookkeeping anomaly of cosmic proportions.
The new paper is claiming to have solved this mystery, finding the missing matter in the depths of intergalactic space, at paltry densities.
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