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What Does a Dancing Physique Really feel Like in Ukraine? ‘I Am a Gun.’

Anna Vinogradova, an independent dance artist living in Kyiv, doesn’t carry a gun. She’s not even particularly patriotic, she said. Her body, though, is speaking up. “It’s like, I am a gun,” she said, “and I am staying here to protect the city.”

She knows that she can’t actually defend people. She knows the army is in charge of that. “But with my presence, with my energy,” she said, “I’m fighting.”

Before the Russian invasion on Feb. 24, Vinogradova helped to run a small movement school for children. She had also become enamored of pole dancing, which led to a satirical work, combining standup and pole dancing, that she performed in a strip club. Vinogradova dressed as a miner — a homage to her hometown, Donetsk, which has been in conflict with Russia since 2014.

“I tried to look at my culture through pole dancing,” she said.

Times have changed. Now there is little opportunity for that kind of artistic reflection or for dance making. “This is life and death, and there are many things that need to be done,” said Larissa Babij, a Ukrainian American dancer who has lived in Ukraine since 2005 and now works at the foundation Heroes Ukraine to support a unit of the country’s Special Operations Forces.

Stories of Ukrainian ballet dancers have made headlines in the United States and Europe, but I was curious about Ukraine’s lesser-known contingent of independent dance artists and contemporary choreographers. Over the past few months, I have spoken to more than a dozen independent and experimental dance artists living in Ukraine, in video interviews and on WhatsApp, to discover more about what the scene was — small and underfunded, yet a network of people all the same — and what it has become.

Many dancers have left Ukraine to live and work elsewhere — most going to other parts of Europe. And many who have remained understandably don’t have dancing on their minds. There’s too much else to contend with, even when bombs aren’t dropping.

Some are using their knowledge of bodies and dance in practical ways to help the military (and themselves) contend with the mental stress and physical strain of war. Others are finding solace in the simple yet essential routines that hold the body together — sleeping and showering, stretching and breathing. Viktor Ruban, a dance artist, scholar and activist, said he views these as a somatic practice that comes “from the impulse of the body.”

He also spoke about crying. He is not a crier. But when tears come, he lets them flow.

“The amplitude of the emotions is so, so huge on a daily basis,” he said. “I experience from my body the tension in the chest and also some muscle spasms and trembling feet or trembling arms, palms. Just noticing what’s happening in the body is also helping a lot.”

Beyond securing Ukraine’s freedom, there isn’t a theme tying the stories of these artists together. How could there be? This is a war and they are individuals, reacting to it and to their own altered reality in different ways.

Dance artists have a particular sensitivity to the way trauma inhabits the body. Many I spoke to have experience in somatic work, which places a spotlight on the internal experience of moving: feeling sensations within the body. It’s less about changing your outward physicality and more about how movement affects you from the inside out. It can be robust or slow and methodical; it tends to be calming and centering. An aim is to unearth a greater awareness of and insight into the mind-body connection.

Mykyta Bay-Kravchenko, a dancer and teacher who lives in Lviv, has started to teach somatic classes focusing on what he called “static movement,” which facilitates connections among people, in part because of how he feels in his own body: At times, frantic.

“I feel like something is drumming inside,” he said, likening the sensation to Steve Reich’s minimalist, propulsive composition “Drumming.” “It’s not a good feeling of energy. We have terrible news every day. Every day something is bombed, and always you have it in your mind that today can be your last day.”

Other artists are volunteering in humanitarian and military efforts. After the Russian invasion began, Krystyna Shyshkarova, whose Totem Dance School in Kyiv is a prominent space for contemporary dance, left for a small town in the Vinnytsia area in west-central Ukraine, where she used her skills as a teacher and a choreographer to direct volunteers. Around that time, she described the way she felt as having a “cold anger inside — I’m like a machine a little bit.”

Since early May, Shyshkarova has been back in Kyiv, where she is teaching and choreographing at her school, although with a much smaller group of students. One of her studios is deep in the building. There are no windows. “It’s completely defended, like in a capsule,” she said, so when the alarms sound, “We are like, What can we do? Let the rockets fly and we’ll dance. It’s a strange feeling.”

She still does volunteer work, locating drones, thermal vision goggles and vests. One part of her studio is essentially a storage facility. But recently she has started to think about how she could help in a more specific, perhaps even lasting way.

“I start to see how many traumas the soldiers have,” Shyshkarova said, “and it’s not about the bullet, not about bombs. It’s because they run too much and something goes wrong with the back. Or they turn, and something is wrong with the knees.”

She and her husband, Yaroslav Kaynar, also a dancer, choreographer and teacher, began to take courses in tactical training. And she studied YouTube videos about how to manage weapons and to move with greater efficiency. “There are mechanical and good body patterns or healthy body patterns,” Shyshkarova said. “This is what we have in contemporary dance — we learn this from childhood.”

To better train those in the military, Shyshkarova is creating a system that she calls “tactical choreography” and is developing it with Andrii Polyarush, a soldier who lost a hand in March.

“He wants to be useful,” she said. “He wants to go back to the battlefield. I said, ‘Come on, you don’t have a hand. How you can do it?’ Stay here. Help me.”

Using a combination of modern dance techniques and tactical training, the program will feature preparatory exercises for civilians and military personnel to create healthy movement habits. Sitting down, standing up, rolling over — without injuring any joints — are not as simple as they sound. And try adding to that body armor and ammunition.

“How to fall quickly,” she said. “How to move parallel to the floor or change the position of the body without letting go of the weapon and without losing focus on the enemy.”

Reading Lynn Garafola’s recent biography of Bronislava Nijinska, I sensed a connection between the grit of these contemporary dance artists and the innovative spirit of Nijinska, who developed her progressive ideas about movement and dance working in Kyiv, starting in 1915. The sister of the brilliant dancer Vaslav Nijinsky, Nijinska was a member of Diaghilev’s groundbreaking Ballets Russes. But it was in Kyiv, away from her former ballet life in Russia, that her radical movement theories were formed. She and her experimental colleagues were ahead of their time: For her, the arts could let go of narrative. Dance didn’t need music; the body could exist on its own.

Nijinska formed her School of Movement in Kyiv, but left the country in 1921 because of political pressures. (Ukraine’s prolific avant-garde period — of which theater was always more prominent than dance — came to an end in the 1930s, suppressed by Stalin.)

Ruban is invested in preserving Ukrainian dance and theater heritage; his work grows out of the embers not just of Nijinska — with Svitlana Oleksiuk, another dance artist, he created a lecture-performance about the choreographer — but also of that experimental period more broadly.

For Ruban, who recently presented a version of an older piece — he said he finds it easier to look at past work and adapt it to the current climate — now it is not the time to delve into a deep creative process. “It’s really hard to find the movement and dance language to speak about the situation,” he said. “We do things that are more vital at this point.”

One thing he has done is start the Ukrainian Emergency Performing Arts Fund to provide financial assistance to artists. He has also begun working with Liudmyla Mova, a choreographer, psychologist and professor, on a new program that helps people in the military cope with physical and mental stress. “We’ll be giving work on body structure and centering,” he said, as well as on grounding, balancing and “many other applicable things from somatic work.”

Somatic methods are not alien to the military. Katja Kolcio, a somatic movement educator and a professor of dance at Wesleyan University, helped to develop a program in somatic resiliency during war and has worked closely with Ukrainian war-relief workers, the Ukrainian National Guard, Ukrainian Armed Forces and veterans.

“Somatic practices combine movement exploration with reflection in order to deepen awareness by drawing on our own inner wisdom and resilience,” Kolcio said.

The lived experiences, memories and the culture of participants matter. Those practices, she continued, “are particularly effective in the context of this war on Ukraine because they draw on the very resources that Putin is aiming to eradicate — Ukrainian cultural history and knowledge, passed down through generations of Ukrainian experience.”

It is through the arts, she said, that Ukrainians have been able to maintain a sense of selfhood, even when books and language were banned, and performances and artwork censored by the Soviets (as well as by Russia, long before Soviet times):“It was such an explicit attempt to erase a sense of Ukrainian-ness,” she said, and yet that was preserved “through the embroidery, through the chants and songs and movements.”

She added, “And so I think being able to finally feel one’s selfhood, it’s a physical act.”

At Soma, an independent space for movement exploration in Lviv, led by Olha Marusyn, somatic classes are offered, including a morning preparation. The word preparation is intentional. “You really prepare yourself for something, for anything,” she said. “And then we try to work with the body-mind connection, with attention, with knowing where you’re situated and what you’re looking at and what’s happening around.”

But dancing as an art continues in Ukraine, too. This month, the All-Ukrainian Association Contemporary Dance Platform presents “Let the Body Speak,” featuring dance videos by Ukrainian choreographers. Anton Ovchinnikov, a founder of the platform and an established Ukrainian choreographer and festival organizer, said it is “a kind of archive of, as we say, body memory. The idea is to edit these videos until the end of the war.”

Ovchinnikov estimates that 70 percent to 75 percent of Ukrainian choreographers have left the country for other parts of Europe. “Let the Body Speak” features their voices, too. (It is supported by the British Council and the Ukrainian Institute, and created in collaboration with the Place, a London organization for dance.) “Our idea is not about presenting it in Ukraine, but abroad,” Ovchinnikov said, as a way to “represent Ukrainian contemporary dance.”

Not everyone thought it was a good idea. “There were a group of dancers who told us that now is not the time to present dance or dance videos,” he said.

But Ovchinnikov said everyone must decide for themselves whether to make dances now. “It’s very, very private,” he said. “It’s important that this decision should be outside of any of the opinions or restrictions.”

There is also the question of what Ukrainian contemporary dance is. Especially in this moment. Of course, there is still ballet and folk dance. (At the National Opera of Ukraine in Kyiv, ballet performances have resumed, though at a smaller scale until more dancers become available.) There are street dancers in Kyiv who raise money for war efforts. The contact improvisation scene in Kyiv was described to me as being strong and well organized — as much of a social club as a dancing community. Yet what some see as contemporary work is not avant-garde, but commercial dance more aligned to what you might see on the TV show “So You Think You Can Dance.”

What can dance, as an art form, mean under these circumstances? For the young choreographer Danylo Zubkov, who leads a group in Kyiv, Ukrainian contemporary dance can only be created now by dance artists living in the country since the Russian invasion on Feb. 24. And that means starting from scratch. As he sees it, now is the time for the birth of authentic, essential Ukrainian contemporary dance. To be an independent artist, he says, is about trying to create something new. “When you do not question yourself,” he said, “you cannot find it.”

He works regularly with his dancers, but it’s early days: He said he doesn’t have the words to describe his work now. But what he does know is that it has nothing to do with generating choreographic material for a show. He wants to usher in a new era of dance; to him, that’s what being an independent artist is all about. “And this new is not connected with anything,” he said. “Me and my friends are not making dance just as a way to forget about the reality. We are trying to save it as something more.”

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World News

Physique Components Present in Touchdown Gear of Flight From Kabul, Officers Say

WASHINGTON — The Air Force acknowledged on Tuesday that human body parts were found in the wheel well of an American military C-17 cargo plane that took flight amid chaos at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul.

Air Force officials have not said how many people died in the episode on Monday, but said the service was investigating “the loss of civilian lives” as a crowd of Afghans, desperate to escape the country after their government collapsed to the Taliban, climbed onto the plane’s wings and fell from the sky after it took off.

Harrowing video of the episode, recorded by the Afghan news media, has circulated around the world, instantly making the horrific scene — of American military might flying away as Afghans hung on against all hope — a symbol of President Biden’s retreat from Afghanistan.

“We are all contending with a human cost to these developments,” Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, said at a briefing on Tuesday.

“The images from the past couple of days at the airport have been heartbreaking,” said Mr. Sullivan, the first cabinet-level administration official to take questions from reporters since the Taliban took control of Kabul on Sunday.

Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., the top military officer in charge of Afghanistan, flew to Kabul on Tuesday, where, he said, commercial flights had resumed after they were paused to secure the field. A White House official said U.S. military flights evacuated about 1,100 people on Tuesday, bringing the total so far to more than 3,200.

American pilots and troops were forced to make on-the-spot decisions during the panic at the airport on Sunday and Monday. Another C-17 transport plane left Kabul late Sunday night with 640 people crowded on board, more than double the planned number, military officials said, after hundreds of Afghans who had been cleared by the State Department to be evacuated surged onto loading ramps. The pilots, determining that the immense aircraft could handle the load, decided to take off, officials said. That plane landed safely at its destination with the Afghans aboard.

But the people who tried the next day on a different C-17 were not so fortunate.

Early Monday morning, the gray Air Force plane — call sign REACH885 — descended onto the runway. The lumbering jet was carrying equipment and supplies for the U.S. Marines and soldiers on the ground securing the airport and helping with the evacuation of thousands of Americans and Afghans.

Minutes after the plane touched down, rolled to a stop and lowered its rear ramp, hundreds, perhaps thousands of Afghans, rushed forward as the small crew watched in alarm.

The crew was aware of what had happened the night before. On Monday morning, the number of people at the airport clamoring to get onto flights had swelled. The crew members feared for their safety, jumped back up into the plane and pulled up the loading ramp before they had finished unloading, officials said.

Updated 

Aug. 17, 2021, 9:00 p.m. ET

By then, throngs of Afghans had climbed aboard the wings of the plane and, unbeknown to the crew, officials said, into the wheel well into which the landing gear would fold after takeoff.

The crew contacted air traffic control, operated by U.S. military personnel, and the plane was cleared for takeoff, after spending only minutes on the ground.

Mindful of the people hanging onto the plane, the pilots taxied slowly at first. Military Humvees rushed alongside trying to chase people away and off the plane. Two Apache helicopter gunships flew low, seeking to scare some people away from the plane or push them off with their powerful rotor wash.

REACH885 accelerated and was airborne.

Minutes later, however, the pilot and co-pilot realized they had a serious problem: The landing gear would not fully retract. They sent one of the crew members down to peer through a small porthole that allows them to view potential problems in the wheel well while aloft.

It was then the crew saw the remains of an undetermined number of Afghans who had stowed away in the wheel well — apparently crushed by the landing gear. Scenes captured in videos of the flight showed other people plunging to their death.

After the four-hour flight, the plane landed at its destination, Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, which has become the hub for receiving passengers, including Americans and Afghans, eventually bound for the United States.

Alerted of the tragedy on board, mental health counselors and chaplains met the anguished crew members as they disembarked.

“Safety officials are doing due diligence to better understand how events unfolded,” Ann Stefanek, an Air Force spokeswoman, said in the statement.

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Entertainment

Intercourse/Life: Does Adam Demos Have Physique Double in Bathe Scene?

We would have expected it to be on a Netflix show called. frontal nudity? Sex / life? Yeah, but that didn’t stop us from falling jaws when Adam Demos appeared as full-size Brad Simon in the third episode, Empire State of Mind. It seems Cooper Connelly (Mike Vogel) wasn’t the only one shocked by the size of Brad’s penis, as fans immediately wondered if it was demos or not during the scene. Well, it looks like we have an answer thanks to an interview on Collider with showrunner Stacy Rukeyser. “No. This is not a body double. I mean, people usually ask, ‘Is it real or is it a prosthesis,’ ”she told the point of sale. “And I can tell you what Adam Demos says: ‘A gentleman never tells’. So we leave that to the imagination of the beholder.”

If you’re wondering what Demos actually said about the scene, he confirmed in an interview with. the lack of a body double Weekly entertainment. “I was okay with [the nudity] because you read the script and know what you’re getting into from the start. That doesn’t mean you can’t have discussions about the level of comfort they allowed us – and with the intimacy coordinator, so it felt a lot safer. “So there you have it, you never really know what is real and what is fake . Sounds like a good reason to look again Sex / lifecurrently streamed on Netflix.

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World News

After 35-Day Manhunt for Far-Proper Soldier, Physique Is Present in Belgium

BRUSSELS – A 35-day manhunt in Belgium, which involved helicopters, armored vehicles, 400 soldiers and police officers, as well as reinforcements from Germany and the Netherlands, culminated on Sunday with the discovery of the body of a missing soldier with the far right left.

The body was found in a forest where soldier Jürgen Conings, 46, disappeared more than a month ago after threatening the government and virologists responsible for the country’s response to the coronavirus, federal prosecutors said. The soldier was armed with four rocket launchers, a submachine gun and a semi-automatic pistol that he had taken from an army depot.

The prosecutor said an initial investigation found the body to belong to Mr. Coning, a shooting instructor who was identified as a high-level national security threat in February. He is said to have shot himself, the authorities said.

In a letter to his girlfriend around the time he disappeared on May 17, Mr Conings wrote that he would not give up without a fight.

“The so-called political elite and now virologists decide how you and I should live,” he wrote. The virologists and the government “took everything away from us,” he said. “I don’t care if I die or not.”

The soldier’s disappearance came at a time of frustration in Belgium over the pandemic restrictions and the economic damage it caused. The country has had a relatively large number of Covid-19 deaths per capita and has imposed one of the longest lockdowns in Europe.

The far-right camp in Belgium has used the pandemic to spark public anger against the government. Already last spring, reports from state security authorities warned of the “occurrence of various right-wing extremist individuals and groups spreading conspiracy theories” on Covid-19.

Recognition…Belgian Federal Police

Mr Conings’ connections to right-wing extremists were investigated by the federal prosecutor’s office.

Before the soldier went missing, he went to the home of Marc Van Ranst, a top virologist active in Belgium’s Covid-19 response, and waited outside for him to return home from work. But dr. Van Ranst had taken his first afternoon off in 16 months and was already home.

It was not the first time that Mr. Conings had found Dr. Van Ranst, a prominent public health figure in Belgium, threatened. Dr. Van Ranst had also drawn the ire of the far right for speaking out against racism and xenophobia.

After the soldier disappeared, the Belgian authorities brought Dr. Van Ranst and his family to a safe place. When the body was discovered on Sunday, Dr. Van Ranst, who celebrated his 56th birthday in hiding, told the local news media that he hoped “to return to normal life soon”.

Although he said he had little pity on Mr. Conings, he expressed condolences to the soldier’s family.

Mr. Conings joined the military when he was 18. However, after making racist comments and threats, he lost his security clearance and was demoted last year, the Belgian authorities said.

Although the security services described the soldier as a “potentially dangerous extremist”, the Belgian Defense Minister said in a parliamentary hearing that after his demotion, Mr Conings had an access card to an ammunition depot.

Belgium is linguistically and politically divided between the affluent Dutch-speaking region of Flanders in the north and the poorer French-speaking Wallonia in the south. Everyone has their own government and political landscape, and centrist politicians face pressures from the far left and far right.

The challenge is particularly pronounced in Flanders, where Mr. Conings and Dr. Van Ranst as well as two right-wing parties are at home. One of them, Vlaams Belang, a Flemish ultra-nationalist anti-immigration party, has gained significant support in recent years.

After Mr. Conings went missing, 45,000 people joined a Facebook group called “Everyone United Behind Jürgen” before Facebook blocked them. On Telegram, the encrypted messaging app, around 3,300 users exchange solidarity messages in the group “As a man behind Jürgen!”.

But when the Facebook group called for demonstrations in support of Mr. Conings near his hometown a week later, only about 350 people turned up.

The long and unsuccessful manhunt had become a source of bitter jokes in a country the size of the state of Maryland. Last week police discovered a backpack of ammunition that they believe belonged to Mr. Conings.

“This place had been searched before, but the backpack might have been overlooked,” the federal prosecutor told local media.

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Entertainment

From the Lindy Hop to Hip-Hop in One Improvising Physique

If you want to understand the connections between jazz dance and its descendants, you can read a book or take a class. But how much more efficient and fun it is to watch LaTasha Barnes do her thing.

Barnes is a dance scholar in an academic sense who recently earned a Masters degree from New York University. But it is their embodied knowledge that is rarer and more influential. A hard-to-beat master in the club-derived form known as house, without admitting that field, she has also become a leader in Lindy Hop, a form that, despite being originated by black dancers, has long been deficient in black Practitioners.

All of this makes Barnes a bridge between worlds that seldom cross, a connector, or rather a re-connector, as the styles and subcultures she joins encompass much of the world-conquering dance that has historically been used in African American Communities emerged a century or so – are all branches of a family whose members often do not recognize each other.

It is this lack of recognition that Barnes can seemingly mend with ease. To see her dance, especially to jazz music, is to watch the collapse of historical distance. Steps and attitudes separated by epochs flow through her improvising body, not as an intentional amalgamation, but as a single language that she has apparently always known and which she nevertheless creates on the spot. The links are natural, informal, authentic without any reference to the antiquarian. They are active, present, going live. The shock of disclosure can make you laugh out loud.

This Barnes effect is well known in the lindy hop, solo jazz and house scenes as well as in the broader circles of street and club dance. But now, at 40, Barnes could be on the verge of a different kind of recognition. On May 19, her show “The Jazz Continuum” will be premiered at the Guggenheim Museum as part of the future-oriented Works & Process series. In August it goes to the renowned Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in the Berkshires.

As the title suggests, “The Jazz Continuum” aims to uncover hidden connections and forgotten continuities. Barnes has put together a cross-generational crew of black dancers, experts in various styles, and puts them in conversation with jazz musicians and a DJ.

“It’s a very personal show,” Barnes said recently from her Brooklyn home. “It’s about each of us expressing our individual understanding of the jazz we have.” The reorientation of jazz towards the project also has a public point. “We want to create more space so that not only the value of these dance forms is recognized,” she said, “but especially so that the black community should turn its gaze back to its beauty and strength.”

In a way, Barnes tries to reproduce her own experience of rediscovery. Their dance began in the womb. Her father was a DJ, and at his parties she said she would ditch her mother’s groove until she got closer to the speakers so Barnes, who was still in the womb, could sync to the music.

Barnes’ childhood in Richmond, Virginia was full of dancing, especially every Sunday at family barbecues. “I would try to do the dances my aunts and uncles did,” she said. “When the song changed on the radio, so did the dances.” She kept up with her grandmother and even her great grandmother, who was born in 1928.

Her mother also took her to formal dance classes, but at the age of 8, discouraged by teachers who told her she had the wrong body type – too short and muscular – she turned to athletics and gymnastics. She never stopped dancing in her teens, but it was mostly at parties after the track meet or at clubs where people snuck in her and her friends because they really got down to it.

She joined the army at 18, another family tradition. She rose through the ranks at an unusual rate, becoming a first class sergeant in about half the usual time. As a satellite communications operator, she spent four years in Europe and then with the White House communications agency (followed by three more years as an independent contractor).

All the while, she was drawn to doing physical tests, joining powerlifting teams, and participating in fitness competitions. When she was recovering from a sports injury in 2004, she was hit by a car and walked away with a broken hip, broken back, and broken wrist. She later helped identify the driver by tucking her body into the dent on his hood. Doctors found that she also had degenerative disc disease. They told her that maybe she would never be athletic again.

After a year of regenerative work, a physical therapist suggested dance therapy. Barnes found a class in pop, the funk style of robotic contraction and isolation. It wasn’t long before a teacher introduced her to Junious Brickhouse.

Brickhouse recently founded Urban Artistry, an organization in Silver Spring, Md. Dedicated to preserving and performing urban dance forms. He taught Barnes the house, which she did as a teenager, without knowing what it was called. But he also required that she knew about various neighboring styles (hip-hop, waacking), studied with mentors and was in line with authors.

According to Brickhouse, the idea of ​​having people train in many styles recently was both about connecting people and promoting versatility. “When you’re just a BMX rider, it’s hard to understand surfers,” he said, “and when you’re all a b-boy or a popper the world seems small. LaTasha welcomed the openness and the idea that where we come from we can inform about where we are going. “

Brickhouse helped Barnes become a teacher and made her known for her highly competitive nature: dance battles. For house dancers, the biggest fight is Juste Debout, a competition in Paris that fills the arenas with fans. In 2011, Barnes and her partner Toyin Sogunro won Category 2 against 2 houses. Barnes quit her job at the White House and devoted herself to dancing.

In her search for a competitive edge, she’d already picked up a touch of jazz dance that had emerged from old footage and found similarities with house. But then Jeff Booth, a white radio musician who took popping classes at Urban Artistry, began to share some of the Lindy Hop he’d learned elsewhere. Trade moves showed more similarities.

Step inside Bobby White, a swing dance champion, teacher, and amateur historian. When he came to Urban Artistry to teach a vintage jazz dance called the Big Apple, he noticed that, first time trying the routine, Barnes looked eerily like one of the least famous dancers of the original Black Lindy’s most famous group Hoppers. Whitey’s.

“I had never seen anyone move like that,” said White. And when Barnes started studying Lindy Hop with him and others, climbing up at her usual rate, he wondered how “she was doing things no one had seen before, which still made sense because it was in the music . “

When Barnes tried to swing out, she thought, “I’ve felt this before.” Her grandmother told her that she had already been taught the dance by her great-grandmother. “And then it became a way of honoring her,” said Barnes. “Every time jazz music comes up, I feel it.”

From White’s point of view, Barnes became an inspiring role model, bringing with him a spirit of jazz dance that the lindy hop scene had missed when they joined a new generation of black dancers devoted to form.

“I’m a black woman,” said Tena Morales-Armstrong, President of the International Lindy Hop Championships. “When I started dancing Lindy 20 years ago, I didn’t even know that black people started it. I could go to many, many events and never see anyone who looks like me. “

Lately this has changed, with the support of groups that Barnes belongs to – the Frankie Manning Foundation, Hella Black Lindy Hop, the Black Lindy Hoppers Fund – organizations that strive to give black dancers better representation and access to education and To enable resources.

Barnes’ influence isn’t just as a black dancer on the Lindy scene, however. Sometimes she demonstrates house at Lindy events. She demonstrates jazz at house events. Your live broadcast is a conduit, especially when what comes out is not either / or both / and.

“In the black community, we let go of a lot of the things we created,” said Michele Byrd-McPhee, founder of Ladies of Hip-Hop and performer of Jazz Continuum. “LaTasha did a great job showing us how to become aware of our history and how to claim it for ourselves.”

Melanie George, associate curator at Jacob’s Pillow and jazz dance expert, sees Barnes as a model for a jazz approach to a dance career: “She is equally interested in all of these forms. She found a way not to have to choose. “Concert dance moderators often expect jazz and hip-hop artists to adapt to their needs, but Barnes” comes in as LaTasha “.

And George added, “What we know about great jazz dancers is the same as what we know about great jazz musicians – it gets richer over time.”

At 40, Barnes is in bloom. And what she has learned about herself may now become apparent to others. “I’ve always seen myself as the eternal outsider,” she said, “without realizing that it was actually the other way around.” She’s inside because the center of American dance is what she knows what she’s doing.

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Health

Rising From the Pandemic With Pimples, Facial Hair and Physique Odor

Some children will be bigger, some will be more developed, some boys will have changing voices while others will not. “This is all a normal part of puberty, but it might appear a little more suddenly,” said Dr. Josefson.

Updated

April 19, 2021, 5:23 p.m. ET

Families should talk to children about how these changes are normal, how every body changes, but not in harmony. Dr. Coble suggested, “Start with the basics, how do you eat, how do you sleep?”

If your children have been truly isolated, remember to help them recover – perhaps by encouraging them to spend socially distant time outside with a good friend. Pandemic or no pandemic, children and families need reliable information about puberty. Dr. Adiaha Spinks-Franklin, Developmental Behavioral Pediatrician at Texas Children’s Hospital and Associate Professor at Baylor College of Medicine, sends families to Amaze.org with videos for children and the Healthy Bodies Toolkit website developed by Vanderbilt University.

Even in times without a pandemic, life is often more difficult for early developers, who remain emotionally and intellectually the same age as their peers, but who may look significantly older. Dr. Carol Ford, professor of pediatrics and director of adolescent medicine at Philadelphia Children’s Hospital, said the children who develop early need more and more support, and that may be especially true now when the changes could be more pronounced after a year interval away. Parents need to be ready to have concrete and detailed discussions on topics such as personal hygiene (yes, your sweat smells different) and the developments ahead (menstruation, wet dreams).

Some adolescent specialists have raised questions about whether the emotional intensity of the lockdown and the pandemic year might actually have contributed to early puberty. Dr. Spinks-Franklin said, “I had some of my girls who started their periods during the pandemic.” She wondered if stress had anything to do with it or if it was just a regular development.

A preliminary analysis from Italy published in March found that referrals for early puberty among girls increased significantly in the first six months of the pandemic compared to the same half of 2019. From March to September 2020, 246 children, almost all girls, were referred to the Bambino Gesù children’s hospital in Rome to investigate suspected precocious puberty, compared with 118 in the same months of 2019. The authors asked questions about possible links with Use stress, higher caloric intake, and increased screening to be addressed with further research.

If you think your child may be developing prematurely, make an appointment for a personal exam and ask the pediatrician to discuss issues related to puberty and body image. After the 10-year-old’s mother raised the issue, Dr. McFadden with her patient and reiterated the message that the changes in the body during puberty are normal and healthy. She talked to the mother about talking to the child’s teachers. “So there will be a group of people looking for her when she comes back to personal school.” And she and the mother discussed the risks that can be associated with early development in girls who may be older than them or to whom they may be victims.

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Business

What Working Too A lot Does to Your Physique

If these types of companies have work-life policies in place, why don’t they seem to stick around?

Take a look at the reward structure. You have an OK base salary, but then the bonus is awarded based on how you hold up against your colleagues at the end of the year. It’s like a tournament. It’s like a race. And all you know is that the people next to you by whom you will be judged are just as smart as you are. You work just as hard. The only leverage you have is trying to revise them. These reward structures continue that work ethic.

When an organization says: “We value work-life balance, we don’t want our employees to work on weekends, we want blah blah blah”, there is still this competitive structure in which employees have an incentive to work all they can because others are doing the same, and only winners will be rewarded.

Fostering talent can work for a company. However, you have found that many employees choose these busy schedules even when they come with a high personal cost. One Employee told you: “I work hard because I want to.”

The people who get hired at banks have competed in excellence all their lives. When I speak to students at the beginning of their bachelor’s career and ask them: “What do you want to be?” Very few want to go into banking.

So what is happening? When these companies come on campus, people start competing because they have been conditioned to do so throughout their lives. They chase what everyone else is chasing, regardless of whether or not they are actually interested in the work. Regardless of whether there are consequences or not, these people want to win.

This is perhaps the last part that includes people in these intense work schedules. It’s the idea that there is a cadre of people who are the best, the brightest, and if you don’t keep up, you’ll end up in some sort of second-rate company – part of an indefinable “rest”.

What is so bad about it?

The people in the best and brightest group, they have opportunities, they earn a lot, they work with other interesting people, they work on global deals. The rest of you push paper with uninteresting colleagues and over time you become like them. People sincerely believe that. You believe that if you do not work for an elite organization, you will fall into an abyss of personal social origin.

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Entertainment

Who Is the Physique Alex Digs Up in Who Killed Sara?

The season finale of Who Killed Sara? did not answer all of our questions; in fact, it left us even more! One of the big questions we have for the next season is the identity of the body that Alex discovered in the final minutes of the finale. Is it sara Is it someone else we know Is it someone we haven’t heard from? There are many theories, each with their own advantages and disadvantages.

The most obvious conclusion is that the body belongs to someone who was murdered by Cesar Lozcano. After all, we’ve spent much of the show unraveling the depraved and violent things he’s willing to find his way around and cover up his mounting crimes. One possibility for the body is that it is Sara herself, as it is her death that has been the driving force behind the whole show so far. At the end of the season, we learn that Sara’s death wasn’t as clear-cut as everyone first thought: She was targeted by Mariana, who wanted her dead to keep family secrets, but Elroy, who was supposed to manipulate parasailing like Sara would die, revealing that he couldn’t bring himself to do it.

Given that we see Sara’s apparent death on screen – she actually has a parasailing accident, though we now wonder who tampered with the rigging – the likelihood that she is the body with a bullet hole seems less likely to be. A far more likely theory is that it is one of the women Cesar traded, blackmailed, and molested. We’ve already seen how he murdered at least one of the women he forced to work in his brothel. Worryingly, he even made a record of the violence.

This theory makes more sense if you remember that Alex found the grave site based on a drawing in Sara’s notebook. This suggests that the body was likely there during Sara’s lifetime and either knew or was investigating the identity of the dead person. Since this was the big cliffhanger at the end of the season, we’re pretty confident we’ll get some answers when Season 2 hits Netflix on May 19th!

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Entertainment

What Is a Ballet Physique?

The summer quarantine and protests against Black Lives Matter gave her the opportunity to “think and feel what I hadn’t allowed myself to feel in the ballet world for a long time,” she said. “I stopped myself from strengthening my quads, hamstrings, and even my rotator muscles because I feared I would bulge too much.”

She focused on building strength and realigning her body with gyrotonic training. “You need these muscles,” she said.

In the past, gyms were taboo in ballet for fear of bloating. Dancers were not to be seen as sporty, but as beautiful, waif-like and ethereal. Ballet flats, however, especially until the 1950s, had more curves. That fashion has changed – and the person many like to blame is George Balanchine, the founding choreographer of the New York City Ballet, who had an oversized influence on post-war ballet in America.

Some believed – and still do – that Balanchine preferred dancers with long legs and tiny heads. The idea of ​​a Balanchinian body persisted, creating a template for what people think a ballet dancer should look like. But Balanchine choreographed for dancers with a range of body types and selected them for his company. “I think his greatest level of acceptance was disrespect,” said dance historian Elizabeth Kendall.

In a joint interview, City Ballet’s current directors, Artistic Director Jonathan Stafford and Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelan said the dance world was moving in a better direction. “Look at the white European beginnings of ballet,” said Stafford. “It has taken a long time for ballet to overcome this ‘ideal’ image – whatever the ideal meant for that person – whether it is someone tall and thin or someone who is is very pale. Obviously, ballet companies came very late to overcome this aesthetic. “

Stafford and Whelan represent a generation change in leadership that explores a new perspective on what ballet culture might look like. Both were main dancers and have long ties with the company; Whelan was a star whose career lasted 30 years. They were appointed to their new roles in 2019 after the city ballet was rocked by the loss of its veteran leader Peter Martins, who fell after an investigation into reports of physical and emotional abuse (he denied the allegations) and a scandal involving men withdrawn dancers shared photos of dancers.

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Business

Why an Animated Flying Cat With a Pop-Tart Physique Offered for Nearly $600,000

The emerging market for these items reflects a remarkable, tech-savvy move by digital content developers to financially connect with their audiences and eliminate middlemen.

Some NFT buyers are collectors and fans showing off what they bought on social media or on screens in their homes. Others are trying to make money quickly as cryptocurrency prices rise. Many see it as a form of entertainment that combines gambling, sports card collecting, investing and day trading.

The staggering NFT sales prices have created some of the same confusion and ridicule that has long plagued the cryptocurrency world, which has endeavored to make good use of its technology beyond forex trading. And there is uncertainty about the stability of values, as many transactions use cryptocurrencies, the value of which has fluctuated significantly over the past two years.

But true believers remind people that most of the big tech things – from Facebook and Airbnb to the internet itself to cell phones – often look like toys.

“A lot of people are cynical about things like this,” said Marc Andreessen, venture capital investor at Andreessen Horowitz, in a discussion on the Clubhouse social media app earlier this month. But people don’t buy things like sneakers, art, or baseball cards for the value of their materials, explained he and partner Ben Horowitz. You buy them for their aesthetics and their design.

“A pair of sneakers worth $ 200 is about $ 5 in plastic,” Andreessen said.

“You’re buying a feeling,” added Mr. Horowitz.

The market for NFTs began to revive last year. In 2019, more than 222,000 people quadrupled in sales worth $ 250 million, according to Nonfungible.com, which is tracking the market. With day trading rising alongside the stock market during the pandemic, investors have been looking for riskier and more esoteric places to make money, from sneakers and streetwear to wine and art.