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World News

Your Wednesday Briefing – The New York Occasions

Regulators could soon issue their first formal warnings about AstraZeneca’s vaccine and rare blood clots, which threaten to tarnish the critical global rollout of a cheap and easy-to-store vaccine after a senior European Medicines Agency vaccines official apparently announced it was a link .

The agency said it would meet this week to consider updating its guidelines, but hasn’t changed its formal advice issued last week that the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine outweigh the risks.

By the numbers: The blood clots are exceptionally rare, with 44 cases of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, 14 of which are fatal, in 9.2 million people who received the vaccine – a risk for one in 100,000 people under the age of 60 who were given the vaccine has been.

Amazing emails detailing the intricate efforts of Ikea executives in France to gather information about employees, applicants and even customers are now at the center of a criminal case that has caught the public eye in France.

Prosecutors accuse the French arm of Ikea, the Swedish furniture giant, and some of its former executives, of having developed a “spy system” from 2009 to 2012. A former military employee was hired to perform some of the more elaborate operations.

The deputy prosecutor of Versailles is seeking a € 2 million fine on Ikea France, a minimum of one year imprisonment for two former company officials and a private investigator, and fines for some business executives and police officers. A total of 15 people were charged. A jury judgment is scheduled for June 15th.

Background: The case aroused outrage in 2012 after the emails leaked to the French news media and Ikea promptly fired several executives in its French unit, including the former CEO. There is no evidence that similar surveillance has taken place in other countries.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu now has a possible way to stay in office despite being on trial on corruption charges after Israel’s president Reuven Rivlin gave him 28 days to try to form a new coalition government.

Netanyahu, a political survivor and Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, has served the past 12 years. After four inconclusive elections in two years, however, he and his allies have not received enough support to ensure a parliamentary majority that could decisively end the country’s political deadlock.

“The results of the consultations, which were open to all, led me to believe that no candidate has a realistic chance of forming a government that has the confidence of Parliament,” said Rivlin in a televised address. But he added, “The law obliges me to appoint one of the candidates to form a government.”

Next Steps: To put together a right-wing government, Mr Netanyahu needs both the support of another small right-wing party and the far right flank of his potential coalition to rely on the support of a small Arab Islamist party that has become a potential kingmaker. The other possibility is that Mr. Netanyahu is wooing defectors from the camp across the street.

  • Honduras has barely begun to recover from two hurricanes that occurred late last year. With relatively little disaster aid from the USA, many Hondurans head for the border.

  • Aleksei Navalny, the jailed Russian opposition leader who has been on hunger strike in a penal colony for almost a week, showed signs of a respiratory illness and was transferred to a prison hospital, according to prison doctors.

  • Negotiations are ongoing in Vienna trying to bring both the US and Iran back into line with the 2015 nuclear deal. The talks are designed to restore Iran’s strict nuclear enrichment controls to ensure the country cannot build a nuclear weapon. In return, the US would lift the sanctions imposed by President Donald Trump.

  • Prince Hamzah bin Hussein employees and staff of Jordan were still in custody Tuesday, their relatives said, doubting the royal court’s claims it had solved an unusually public rift.

Millions of people displaced from their homes during the ten year civil war in Syria are crowding an area in the northwest of the country controlled by a rebel group.

Our reporter made a rare visit to Idlib Province above, where shocked and impoverished Syrians are trapped in a bleak and often violent limbo.

After a year of delay, the Tokyo Olympics appear to resume this summer, albeit under the most unusual of circumstances. Here’s what we know about the games. And here is an event schedule.

Will the 2021 Olympics be canceled?

No. After a one-year delay due to the pandemic, the Summer Games are currently taking place from July 23rd to August 8th. The Paralympics will take place from August 24th to September 5th.

Polls show that 70 to 80 percent of people in Japan think the Games shouldn’t be this summer.

But is it still called Tokyo 2020?

Yes, although I’m a year late. Branded items will reflect this.

Will there be someone in the stands?

Japanese fans can now take part in events. However, most international visitors are not allowed to come to Japan for the Olympics. Getting the ticket money back may take a while.

Who is the mascot

Miraitowa is the mascot of the Games and Someity is the mascot of the Paralympics. The name Miraitowa is derived from the Japanese words for “future” and “eternity”. Someity’s name comes from a type of cherry tree. You have to judge for yourself what animals or creatures they resemble.

Where will future games be held?

Beijing will host the Winter Games in 2022, making it the first city to host the Summer and Winter Games. The Summer Games will take place in Paris in 2024 and in Los Angeles in 2028.

How often did Tokyo host the Games? Pandemic aside, is the city ready?

Once before, in 1964. In Japan, the 1972 Winter Games also took place in Sapporo and in 1998 in Nagano.

Unlike other hosts, particularly Rio de Janeiro in 2016, it appears that Tokyo has its stadiums and infrastructure in order, although there are sometimes surprises when athletes arrive.

What are the new sports and events?

Baseball and softball return after 13 years of absence. The new sports are karate, surfing, sport climbing and skateboarding. (Participants will be surfing in the ocean off Shidashita Beach, approximately 60 km from Tokyo.)

Making croissants at home is difficult – but it brings miraculous results. Here is our guide.

In “Peaces” by award-winning British-Nigerian author Helen Oyeyemi, young lovers and their pet mongooses take a Wes Anderson-style train to nowhere.

Tarot cards are less about predicting the future and more about thinking about your life. Here’s how to get started.

Here’s today’s mini crossword puzzle and a hint: Food that can be ordered: “Anything with Nothing” (five letters).

You can find all of our puzzles here.

That’s it for today’s briefing. Thank you for coming to me. – Natasha

PS Frank Bruni resigns from his post as Times Opinion columnist and joins Duke University in June. He will continue to write his newsletter.

The latest episode of The Daily is about online revenge.

Reach out to Natasha and the team with comments, questions, and croissant success stories at briefing@nytimes.com.

Categories
Business

China’s Anger at Overseas Manufacturers Helps Native Rivals

Tim Min once drove BMWs. He considered buying a Tesla.

Instead, Mr. Min, the 33-year-old owner of a Beijing cosmetics startup, bought an electric car made by Tesla’s Chinese rival, Nio. He likes Nio’s interior and voice control functions better.

He also sees himself as a patriot. “I have a very strong affinity for Chinese brands and very strong patriotic emotions,” he said. “I loved Nike too. Now I see no reason for it. If there’s a good Chinese brand out there to replace Nike, I’ll be very happy about it. “

Western brands like H&M, Nike and Adidas have come under pressure in China for refusing to use cotton from the Xinjiang region, where the Chinese government has waged a widespread campaign to suppress ethnic minorities. The buyers vowed to boycott the brands. Celebrities dropped their advertising contracts.

However, foreign brands are also increasingly pressured by a new generation of Chinese competitors who manufacture high quality products and sell them through clever marketing to an increasingly patriotic group of young people. There is a term for it: “guochao” or Chinese fad.

HeyTea, a $ 2 billion milk tea startup with 700 stores, plans to replace Starbucks. Yuanqisenlin, a four-year low-sugar beverage company valued at $ 6 billion, aims to become China’s Coca-Cola. Ubras, a five year old company, wants to replace Victoria’s Secret with the non-Victoria’s product: non-wired, athletic bras that emphasize comfort.

The anger over Xinjiang cotton has given these Chinese brands another chance to win over consumers. When celebrities severed ties with overseas brands, Li-Ning, a Chinese sportswear giant, announced that Xiao Zhan, a boy band member, would become its new global ambassador. Almost everything Mr. Xiao wore in a Li-Ning advertisement sold out online within 20 minutes. A hashtag about the campaign was viewed more than a billion times.

China is experiencing a consumer brand revolution. The younger generation is more nationalistic and is actively looking for brands that can adapt to this confident Chinese identity. Entrepreneurs are rushing to build names and products that resonate. Investors are turning to these startups as tech and media companies’ returns decline.

When patriotism becomes a selling point, Western brands are put at a competitive disadvantage, especially in a country where global corporations are increasingly forced to follow the same policies as Chinese corporations.

China’s consumer protests are “a historic turning point and will have a long-term impact on Chinese consumers,” said Min. “Chinese consumers don’t want to eat the same crap that foreign brands have given them. It is important that foreign brands respect Chinese consumers as much as they respect Chinese brands. “

Foreign brands are far from finished in China. Its drivers helped make a jump into Tesla deliveries. IPhones are still very popular. Campaigns against foreign names have come and gone, and local brands that put too much emphasis on politics risk unwanted attention when the political winds change quickly.

However, the interest in local brands shows a clear shift. After Mao, the country produced few consumer goods. The first televisions that most families owned in the 1980s came from Japan. Pierre Cardin, the French designer, reintroduced fashion in 1979 with his first show in Beijing, bringing color and flair to a nation that wore blues and grays during the Cultural Revolution.

Chinese people born in the 1970s or earlier remember their first sip of Coca-Cola and their first bite of a Big Mac. We saw movies from Hollywood, Japan and Hong Kong for both the cabinets and makeup and the plot. We hurried to buy Head & Shoulders shampoo because the Chinese name Haifeisi means “seaworthy hair”.

In business today

Updated

April 6, 2021, 7:10 p.m. ET

“We’ve gone through the European and American fad, the Japanese and Korean fad, the American streetwear fad, and even the Hong Kong and Taiwan fad,” said Xun Shaohua, who founded a sportswear company in Shanghai that competes with Vans and Converse.

Now could be the time for the fad in China. Chinese companies make better products. China’s Generation Z, born between 1995 and 2009, do not share the same attachment to foreign names.

Even People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s traditionally incumbent official newspaper, relies on branding. With Li-Ning, the company launched a streetwear collection in 2019. In the same year it published a report on Baidu, the Chinese search company called “Guochao Pride Big Data”. They found that when searching for brands in China, more than two-thirds were looking for native names, up from only about a third ten years ago.

As with so much in China, it can be difficult to say how much the Guochao Movement involves in politics. Building homemade brands fits in perfectly with the Communist Party’s desire to make the country more independent. The officials also want the Chinese to buy more: private household consumption only accounts for around 40 percent of Chinese economic output, much less than in the US and Europe.

Patriotism aside, entrepreneurs argue that their ventures are built on solid business foundations. There were similar trends in Japan and South Korea, where strong brands are now based. Local actors know better the capabilities of the country’s supply chains and how to use social media.

Mr. Xun’s sports brand has half a million followers on Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace and sells at the same prices as Vans and Converse, or even slightly higher. He said his brand competed by making shoes that would better suit Chinese feet and offering locally preferred colors like mint green and fuchsia. He sells exclusively online and works with Chinese and overseas brands and personalities, including Pokemon and Hello Kitty. At 37, he is the only one in his company who was born before 1990.

Guochao fashion has also revived older Chinese brands like Li-Ning. For many years, discerning city dwellers considered the brand, created by a former world champion gymnast of the same name, ugly and cheap. The characteristic red and yellow color combination after the Chinese flag was derisively referred to as “eggs fried with tomatoes”, an everyday Chinese dish. Li-Ning lost money. The shares lost.

Then the company presented a collection at New York Fashion Week in early 2018. Its angular look, combined with bold Chinese characters and embroidery, caused quite a stir at home. Shares have increased nearly tenfold since then. Now, Li-Ning’s high-end collections average between $ 100 and $ 150, just like Adidas’.

As ambitious as these businessmen are, almost everyone I’ve spoken to admitted that the Chinese brands still couldn’t compete with mega-brands like Coca-Cola and Nike.

Alex Xie, a marketing consultant who works with companies in China, used the sportswear industry as an example. Nike has a long lead over Chinese brands in research and development. It has a deep network of relationships in the sports world. It works closely with athletes to develop better shoes, sponsors many events and teams, including China’s national soccer, basketball and athletics teams.

“It just has a much closer relationship with its customers than any Chinese brand,” he said.

But for these western megabrands, the cotton dispute in Xinjiang is a major challenge that could help their Chinese rivals. While previous outrage over Western brands like the National Basketball Association and Dolce & Gabbana passed pretty quickly, this battle could go on, many people said.

“In the past, some Western brands have failed to understand or disregard Chinese culture, mainly due to a lack of understanding,” said Xun. “This time it’s a political problem. You have violated our political sensitivities. “

Then, like any savvy Chinese entrepreneur who knows which issues are sensitive, he asked, “Couldn’t we talk about politics?”

Categories
Health

Covid Victims Remembered By Their Objects

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do, and provides a behind-the-scenes look at how our journalism comes together.

As the art director of the Well Desk, I’ve spent the last year looking for images that reflect the devastation the pandemic has caused and the distress it has caused. As the crisis spread, I thought of all of the people who lost their loved ones to Covid-19 – not to mention those who lost their loved ones, period – and how they liked the usual ways of collecting and collecting Foreclosure cut off were grief. As the numbers grew every day, it was easy to lose sight of the people behind the statistics. I wanted to find a way to humanize the death toll and restore visibility to the deceased.

To help our readers honor the lives of those lost during the pandemic, we asked them to submit photos of objects that will remind them of their loved ones. The reactions were overwhelming and captured love, heartache and memory. We heard from children, spouses, siblings, grandchildren, and friends – people who had lost loved ones not just to Covid-19, but for all sorts of reasons. What united them was their inability to personally mourn together.

Dani Blum, Wells’ chief news assistant, spoke to each individual by phone for hours. “It’s the toughest reporting I’ve ever done, but I’m really honored to be able to tell these stories,” she said. “What impressed me most about hearing all of these stories was how much fun it was to remember the people who died, even in so many tragedies. Many of these conversations started in tears and ended with laughter as they told me a joke that the person they lost would tell or their favorite happy memory with them. “

The photos and personal stories, which were published digitally as an interactive feature, were designed by Umi Syam and are entitled “What a loss looks like”. Among the stories we uncovered: A ceremonial wedding lasso is a symbol of the unbreakable bond between mother and father, both lost to Covid-19 and mourned by their children. A ceramic zebra figure reminds a woman of her best friend who died after they had finally said goodbye. A gold bracelet that belonged to a father never leaves his daughter’s wrist because she is desperate for a connection to his memory.

For those who are left behind, these items are a tangible daily reminder of those who have departed. These possessions hold a space and tell a story. As you spend time with them, you will feel the weight of their importance, the impact, and the memory of what they represent.

Museums have long shown artifacts as a link to the past. This also applies to the New York Times, which in 2015 published a photo essay about objects collected on September 11th at the World Trade Center and the surrounding area. When we started this project, we heard from several artists who were investigating the relationship between objects and loss in their own work.

Shortly after Hurricane Sandy, Elisabeth Smolarz, an artist in Queens, began working on the Encyclopedia of Things, which examines loss and trauma from personal objects. Kija Lucas, an artist living in San Francisco, has been photographing artifacts for seven years and is showing her work in her project “The Museum of Sentimental Taxonomy”.

“Saved: Objects of the Dead” is a 12-year project by artist Jody Servon and poet Lorene Delany-Ullman, in which photographs of personal items of deceased loved ones are paired with prose to explore the human experience of life and death Memory. And the authors Bill Shapiro and Naomi Wax have interviewed hundreds of people for years and asked them about the most telling single object in their lives and summarized their stories in the book “What We Keep”.

As the pandemic continues to grapple the nation, the Well desk will continue to wrestle with the great grief it leaves behind. Additional features on this topic include resources for grievers, the grief associated with minor loss, and the effects of grief on physical and mental health. Regarding “What a Loss Looks Like”, we’re keeping the callout open and inviting more readers to submit important items, expand and expand this virtual memorial, and create a shared mourning space.

Categories
Politics

U.S. backs away from boycott

Chinese citizens walk past a sign for the Beijing Winter Olympics in Zhangjiakou, Hebei Province, China.

Lintao Zhang | Getty Images

WASHINGTON – The State Department on Tuesday evening denied considering a joint boycott with allies of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

“Our position on the 2022 Olympics has not changed. We have not and are not discussing a joint boycott with allies and partners,” wrote a senior State Department official in a statement emailed to CNBC.

The department’s spokesman, Ned Price, had initially suggested during a press conference earlier on Tuesday that a boycott of the Olympic Games was one of the ways to combat China’s human rights violations.

The Olympic Games will take place between February 4th and 20th.

Any discussion of a diplomatic boycott of the Olympics would come when the Biden government works to rally allies to push China back internationally. While there is broad support from both parties for a tougher political stance on China, there is little consensus that a boycott would be the most productive route.

Continue reading: Calls for a boycott of the Beijing Olympics are getting louder – and analysts are warning of reprisals from China

A former senior tax officer, who asked anonymity to describe previous considerations on the matter, suggested that such a move would reflect a “Cold War Declaration” on behalf of the United States.

“It’s better to go there and dominate,” the official told CNBC. “It’s better to be Jesse Owens than the 1984 Soviets.” (Owens, a black American sprinter, won four gold medals at the Summer Olympics in Nazi Berlin in 1936. The Soviet Union boycotted the 1984 Los Angeles Games after the US rejected the 1980 Moscow Games in protest against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan .)

Last month, the United States sanctioned two Chinese officials citing their role in serious human rights violations against ethnic minorities in Xinjiang. The Biden government’s sanctions complement those of the European Union, the United Kingdom and Canada.

Beijing previously denied US allegations that it committed genocide against the Uyghurs, a Muslim population native to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in northwest China. The State Department called such claims “malicious lies” to “smear China” and “thwart China’s development.”

The sanctions followed a controversial meeting between Foreign Minister Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and China’s top diplomats Yang Jiechi and State Councilor Wang Yi in Alaska.

Before the Alaska talks, Blinken slammed China’s widespread use of “coercion and aggression” on the international stage, warning that the US would push back if necessary.

“China is using coercion and aggression to systematically undermine Hong Kong’s autonomy, undermine democracy in Taiwan, abuse human rights in Xinjiang and Tibet, and assert maritime claims in the South China Sea that violate international law,” said Flashing at a press conference in Japan.

Biden, who spoke to Chinese President Xi Jinping in February, previously said his stance on China would differ from that of his predecessor in that he would work more closely with allies to secure a knockback against Beijing.

“We will face China’s economic abuse,” said Biden in a speech at the State Department, describing Beijing as America’s “most serious competitor.”

“But we are also ready to work with Beijing if it is in the US interest. We will compete from a position of strength by improving at home and working with our allies and partners.”

Tensions between Beijing and Washington increased under the Trump administration, escalating a trade war and helping to ban Chinese tech companies from doing business in the United States.

Over the past four years, the Trump administration blamed China for a variety of abuses, including intellectual property theft, unfair trade practices and, most recently, the coronavirus pandemic.

Categories
Business

Vaccines are Singapore’s precedence however will not be silver bullets, minister says

SINGAPORE – Singapore needs a “range of measures” beyond Covid vaccinations to open up its economy and allow international travel, said S Iswaran, the country’s minister of communications and information.

Some of these measures could include testing for Covid-19, he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday at the World Economic Forum’s Global Technology Governance Summit.

“The way we see it, this has to be a series of measures. Vaccinations are essential, but not silver bullets,” he said. “We need this to be complemented by a strong, robust test regime and effective safe management measures.”

He said such solutions are important in the future, “whether they open up the economy further” or enable cross-border activities or travel, Iswaran said.

People wearing protective masks prepare to enter a mall in the Orchard Road shopping district in Singapore.

Suhaimi Abdullah | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The minister said vaccines were a “national priority” and would help Singapore return to pre-Covid economic activity. However, this process would involve small steps over time rather than large and sudden change.

“It’s going to be more of an evolutionary than a revolutionary process,” he said.

That should be the case worldwide, he added. “The way we move forward … is measured and calibrated to allow for cross-border flows of people.”

Digital passport

We see that ultimately you need an effective vaccination program and then you need to develop mutual recognition of those vaccination programs.

S Iswaran

Singapore Minister for Communication and Information

Iswaran said vaccination records are open to interpretation and “maybe even misinterpretation”.

“The way we see it, ultimately you need an effective vaccination program, and then we need to develop mutual recognition of those vaccination programs,” he told CNBC.

This needs to be done bilaterally and multilaterally so that countries can remember to open their borders, he added.

The overall situation in a country or region will also be a factor as it affects risk perception, the Singapore minister said.

According to the Ministry of Health, transmission in the Singapore community has been low and has stabilized at around two cases per week over the past two weeks.

The Southeast Asian nation has reported 60,495 confirmed cases and 30 deaths as of April 5.

As of March 29, more than 1.3 million doses of the vaccine had been administered in the country. Around 375,605 people are fully vaccinated.

Categories
Business

PG&E Charged With Crimes in 2019 California Wildfire

Pacific Gas & Electric, the troubled utility company that started some of the most devastating forest fires in California, is being prosecuted for its role in starting a 2019 wildfire that burned 120 square kilometers in Sonoma County north of San Francisco.

The district district attorney charged PG&E, which emerged from bankruptcy protection last year, of five crimes and 28 misdemeanors, including recklessly causing a fire and causing serious injury related to the Kincade fire. The fire damaged or destroyed more than 400 buildings and seriously injured six firefighters.

This is the third set of criminal charges against PG&E, California’s largest utility company. A jury convicted PG&E in 2017 on charges of five deaths in a gas pipe explosion seven years earlier. And the utility pleaded guilty last year to 84 cases of involuntary manslaughter related to the 2018 bonfire triggered by its equipment. That fire destroyed the town of Paradise and helped bankrupt PG&E, where it helped clear an estimated $ 30 billion in forest fire liabilities.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection concluded that the Kincade fire had started after high winds knocked a cable from a PG&E tower on the Geysir geothermal field. It took 15 days to contain the fire, and District Attorney Jill Ravitch described the evacuation required in some cities as the largest ever carried out in Sonoma County, a California wine center.

If convicted, PG&E could face fines and additional penalties for violating a federal parole resulting from the pipeline explosion case. The company has paid billions of dollars to governments, families, insurance companies, and others for disasters caused by its equipment. The regulators have indicated that these have often been very poorly maintained.

In a statement Tuesday, PG&E pledged to continue improving equipment and implementing safety practices to protect Californians. The company accepted the findings that its equipment caused the Kincade fire, but did not believe it was criminally liable.

“We are sorry for the loss and personal impact on our customers and communities in and around Sonoma County as a result of the Kincade fire in October 2019,” the company said. “We don’t think there was any crime here. We continue to strive to do it right for all concerned and to work to further reduce the risk of forest fires in our system. “

The company went bankrupt last summer and agreed to pay $ 13.5 billion to a fund set up to compensate tens of thousands of individuals and families killed in forest fires struck by PG&E started, lost their homes.

The bankruptcy allowed the utility to participate with the other California utilities in a $ 20 billion state wildfire fund to help cover the costs of future forest fires.

The utility has been working to upgrade its equipment by adding weather stations, cameras, microgrids, and more stable transmission towers and wires. Patricia K. Poppe, who became CEO of PG & E’s parent company in January, said she took the job “to make sure we care for anyone who has been injured and that we get it back to California safely” .

“We will work around the clock until this applies to all the people we are allowed to serve,” she added.

Categories
Health

The CDC ought to have up to date its surface-cleaning tips a lot sooner, Dr. Ashish Jha says

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should have their home surface cleaning guidelines updated in good time before this week, the dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health said Tuesday.

“It’s incredibly frustrating,” said Dr. Ashish Jha on CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith”. “I think I started saying in April and May that a lot of us in public health are quitting wiping surfaces.”

“I really don’t understand why it took CDC so long to get really clear. This virus is spreading through the air,” Jha said.

The CDC said Monday that a thorough soap-and-water scrub is enough to prevent the spread of Covid-19 around the home. However, the use of disinfectants is recommended in schools and private homes where a suspected or confirmed virus case has appeared within 24 hours.

“In most situations, regular cleaning of the surfaces with soap and detergent is enough to not necessarily disinfect these surfaces to reduce the risk of the spread of COVID-19,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky in a meeting at the White House on Monday.

Jha noted that the CDC’s public health news was part of a larger pattern of bad government news when it comes to Covid.

“I would say the first few months were confusing, but by April and May of last year it was clear that this was in the air,” Jha said. “It was frustrating that our federal officials didn’t always get this out consistently.”

The CDC did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Host Shepard Smith also asked Jha about the highly contagious variant B.1.1.7 after Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Research and Policy on Infectious Diseases, warned on Sunday that the variant could infect children more easily than previous strains.

Jha said he was “concerned” about the B.1.1.7 variant in children, particularly because they have not yet been vaccinated.

“We don’t see a lot of infections in older people because we get them vaccinated and that makes young adults and children really susceptible to B.1.1.7,” noted Jha. “One of the reasons we can’t fully relax right now is because we really need to cut those numbers of infections.”

Every state in the country has reported at least one case of variant B.1.1.7, which was first discovered in the UK, CDC data shows. Walensky said Wednesday that the variant is becoming the predominant strain of Covid in many regions of the United States

Categories
Business

Males’s down 14%, girls’s up

Baylor Bears ‘MaCio Teague # 31 wins a basket against Gonzaga Bulldogs’ Drew Timme # 2 in the National Championship game of the 2021 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 5, 2021 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Andy Lyons | Getty Images

Gonzaga’s chance for history was dashed in the final game of the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s men’s basketball tournament in 2021 when the Bulldogs lost their first game of the season to the Baylor Bears and audience numbers suffered.

The 2021 NCAA men’s basketball championship game drew an average of 16.9 million viewers to CBS Sports on Monday, a 14% decrease from the 2019 game. The 2020 competition was canceled due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Baylor kept Gonzaga from going undefeated, beating the Bulldogs 86-70. A win would have crowned a perfect season for Gonzaga and would be the first time since the Indiana Hoosiers in 1976 that a men’s program has remained undefeated.

This year’s game was the least-watched championship to air on CBS since the network began broadcasting the games in 1982. It’s also the lowest since WarnerMedia owner Turner Sports’ broadcast of the game in 2018, after CBS and Turner began rotating every two years in 2016. The game between Villanova and the University of Michigan drew around 16.5 million viewers.

CBS had approximately 19 million viewers for the championship game between Virginia and Texas Tech in 2019. That was a decrease from the 2017 game with the University of North Carolina and Gonzaga, which drew approximately 22 million viewers.

In the men’s Final Four games in 2021, an average of 14.9 million viewers saw the Gonzaga UCLA Summer Beater on Saturday, and that game peaked at 18.8 million viewers. Baylor’s win over Houston drew 8.1 million viewers, a 37% decrease from the early 2019 semi-finals.

Last month, John Bogusz, executive vice president of sports sales and marketing at CBS Network, confirmed the decline in NCAA viewership during the pandemic. He mentioned that the network had provided additional ad inventory for marketers in case the network failed to meet viewer goals.

“We’ll wait and see how the games develop, but we’ve put some inventory aside to take care of our advertisers if necessary,” said Bogusz.

Lexie Hull # 12 of the Stanford Cardinal blocks the shot from Aari McDonald # 2 of the Arizona Wildcats in the championship game of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament at Alamodome on April 4, 2021 in San Antonio, Texas.

Ben Solomon | NCAA Photos | Getty Images

Attendance for women’s game

Disney-owned ESPN hosted the San Antonio women’s tournament. On Tuesday, the title game between Arizona and Stanford drew an average of 4 million viewers on Sunday, peaking at 5.9 million. The network said it was the most watched women’s competition since 2014.

Stanford defeated the Wildcats (54:53) to win its first NCAA women’s basketball title since 1992.

The network also reported solid numbers around the semi-finals. Stanford’s win over South Carolina drew an average of 1.6 million viewers, while the University of Connecticut’s loss to Arizona drew 2.6 million viewers, up 24% from the 2019 second semifinals.

Disney placed six games of the women’s tournament on its ABC network. This was the first time since 1995 when CBS broadcast some competitions from the women’s tournament when CBS aired some competitions.

The Iowa vs. Connecticut competition on March 27 was the highest rated of the games with 1.5 million viewers, followed by the Michigan-Baylor game with 1.2 million. The network said the Sweet 16 competitions, which aired on ABC, ESPN, and ESPN2, averaged 918,000 viewers, up 67% from 2019.

Categories
World News

Coinbase studies estimated Q1 income of $1.eight billion, up nine-fold

In preparation for its debut on Nasdaq next week, the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase announced on Tuesday that sales in the first quarter had increased nine-fold over the previous year, due to a historic price increase for Bitcoin.

Revenue in the reporting period rose from $ 190.6 million in the year-ago quarter to around $ 1.8 billion, Coinbase said in a press release. The results are preliminary and unchecked. Net income increased from $ 31.9 million a year ago to $ 730 million to $ 800 million. Coinbase has 56 million verified users.

Coinbase is poised to become the latest tech company to hit the market with a massive valuation, capitalizing on the continued growth of the sector despite general economic troubles due to the coronavirus pandemic. Trading in the private market valued the company at $ 68 billion, a number that climbs to about $ 100 billion considering a fully diluted stock count.

In the past seven months, the software provider Snowflake, the food delivery app DoorDash, the room sharing website Airbnb and the games platform Roblox went public. Their market capitalization is currently between $ 40 billion and $ 113 billion.

Coinbase is unique in that its rating upgrade reflects the trajectory of the top cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin is up about 700% over the past year, while Ethereum is up more than 1,100%.

Bitcoin and Ethereum last year

CNBC

Coinbase announced last week that the SEC approved the direct listing, which is scheduled for April 14th. The company has announced that it will register nearly 115 million Class A common shares trading under the ticker symbol COIN. In the case of direct listing, the issuing company waives the sale of new shares and instead allows existing stakeholders to sell their shares to new investors.

While Coinbase today relies heavily on attracting users who store and trade the two major cryptocurrencies, the company is betting on developing a larger ecosystem of crypto-related assets in the years to come.

“We expect significant growth in 2021, driven by transaction and custody revenues, as institutional interest in the crypto asset class has increased,” the company said in the press release.

In the first quarter, Coinbase said it had 6.1 million monthly transaction users (MTUs). Looking at the year as a whole, three possible scenarios for revenue are identified, as much of the business comes from these transactions.

Rising market values ​​could result in MTUs of 7 million, Coinbase’s most aggressive estimate. In the middle range, MTUs would land at 5.5 million in a flat crypto market. And the most conservative forecast in the event of a price drop is 4 million MTUs.

– MacKenzie Sigalos from CNBC contributed to this report.

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Categories
Politics

Capitol Rioters Face the Penalties of Their Selfie Sabotage

Mr. Biggs’ activities that day were extensively recorded by himself and others. His walk from the Washington Monument was filmed by Eddie Block, a proud boy on a scooter who rolled behind him and identified Mr. Biggs and others in his commentary. Mr. Biggs appeared repeatedly in photographs and recorded himself climbing the Capitol steps.

It was a long, awkward road that got him to this point. Mr. Biggs, 37, also known as Rambo, was a Florida DJ who “romped around nightclubs pounding ecstasy” before joining the military in 2007, he said on his broadcasts. He was posted to Iraq for a year and then to Afghanistan. He made his news media debut after leaving active service in 2012.

In 2008, Michael Hastings, a reporter embedded with Mr. Biggs’ unit in Afghanistan, encouraged him to appear on camera in the news media upon his return to the United States, Mr. Biggs said. Before Mr. Hastings died in a car accident in 2013, Mr. Hastings wrote a profile of General Stanley McChrystal for Rolling Stone, which ended the general’s military career.

Mr. Biggs ‘hiatus came after fueling conspiracy theories about Mr. Hastings’ death. Mr. Jones invited him to Infowars, the far-right, conspiratorial radio and online show.

Mr. Biggs joined Infowars in 2014 and traveled the next year to attend racial justice demonstrations in Ferguson, Missouri, and to the 2016 occupation of Malheur Wildlife Refuge in Oregon by armed right-wing extremists. Escorting Mr. Jones to Republican 2016. At the National Convention, Mr. Biggs fell in a dispute with communist protesters, including one who burned an American flag.

He and another Infowars employee claimed they were burned to put out the fire. In a mundane video called “Joe ‘Rambo’ Biggs: Commie Crushing Crusader!” Mr. Biggs said he “jumped” over the “cops”, tore off the protester’s shirt and gave him a “stomp”.

Police charged protester Gregory “Joey” Johnson of the offense.

When Mr. Johnson’s attorneys saw the videos of Mr. Biggs’s allegations, they demanded that the charges against Mr. Johnson be dropped, which they were. Mr Johnson sued the City of Cleveland and its police force on the grounds that they violated his First Amendment rights. He received a severance payment of $ 225,000.