Categories
Politics

Biden, Republicans and the Pandemic Blame Recreation

President Biden finds himself in a difficult position: he advocated the ideas that he had the team to deal with a pandemic and that his five-decade long career as a deal maker in Washington was just the thing to reverse political polarization of the land to overcome.

That doesn’t happen, not even a little.

Not only are Republicans resisting Mr Biden’s push to end the pandemic, some of them are actively obstructing it. The Republican governors have slowly pushed ahead with vaccination efforts and lifted the mask requirement early. In Washington, GOP leaders like Steve Scalise, the second-tier Republican in the House of Representatives – who was vaccinated only about two weeks ago – mocked public health guidelines that even vaccinated people should wear masks indoors as “government control”.

There is little Mr. Biden can do. Nearly a year and a half of living in a pandemic has shown exactly who will and will not adhere to public health guidelines.

It was only last week in my Washington neighborhood, which has one of the highest vaccination rates in the city and who voted 92 percent for Mr. Biden, started masking themselves again in supermarkets and even outdoors in parks.

In places like Arkansas, hospitals are overloaded with Covid patients and vaccination rates remain persistently low. The anti-mask sentiment is so strong that the General Assembly of the state has passed a law banning any mandate that requires it. On Thursday, Governor Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, announced a special session of lawmakers to amend the anti-mandate bill he signed in April to allow schools to require masks for students who are too young to receive a vaccine. Good luck with that, replied his Republicans in the legislature.

That leaves the President at a loss. With the Delta variant proving to be far more contagious and dangerous than previous iterations of the virus, the people he needs most to hear his message about vaccines and masks are the rarest.

Six years of Donald J. Trump largely hiding all other voices in his party left Republicans without a credible messenger to push vaccines forward, even if they wanted to. Senator Mitch McConnell, the minority leader, may use his campaign money to advertise vaccinations in his home, Kentucky, but he is barely a popular figure within the party and is viewed by its grassroots as just another member of the Washington establishment.

There are certainly other communities of vaccine resistance out there, including the demographics of people who have been mistreated by the federal government in the past (and also a small but noisy minority of professional athletes and Olympians), but it is Republicans and Republican-led states that are considered biggest hurdle in American vaccination efforts.

Without the ability to convince the vaccination hesitation and the party he had pledged to work with, Mr Biden and the federal government were left with a step that he had been resisting for weeks: making the lives of the unvaccinated more difficult to try to force them to change their minds.

That brings us to the President’s press conference on Thursday. Mr Biden said that for the first time all federal employees would be required to provide evidence that they have been vaccinated (or wear a mask at work), undergo weekly tests, and maintain social distance.

He stopped short of a vaccine mandate, saying such a requirement was a choice for local governments, school districts and businesses. He said if things get worse and those who oppose vaccines are denied access to workplaces and public spaces, maybe things would get better.

“I suspect if we don’t make further progress, a lot of companies and lots of companies will need proof in order to attend,” said Mr Biden.

This maneuver – essentially a shift of responsibility away from the federal government – is in line with the way Mr Biden often tries to project a tone of hope while airbrushing the reality of a highly divided nation.

Updated

July 30, 2021, 7:36 p.m. ET

The disinformation market in America is bigger than ever with Mr Trump despite starting the program that resulted in the full vaccination of 164 million Americans, leading to charges of discrediting the same program during the Biden administration.

But it wasn’t Mr Trump and the Republicans running to end the pandemic last year – it was Mr Biden and the Democrats who successfully turned the election into a referendum on how to tackle a unique global public health crisis.

Now, just weeks after celebrating the great strides made against the pandemic, Mr Biden is facing a new wave. And it probably won’t be long before Republicans, who did everything in their power to resist counter-measures, blame the president for failing to get the country out of the crisis he promised to resolve .

“SO EXCITED. SO PROUD,” Marathon County board member Ka Lo wrote on Thursday in a series of cheering text messages, “IT’S SOOOOOO GOOD !!!”

It remains to be seen how much Ms. Lee’s triumph will give a boost to local efforts to gain recognition for the Hmong in Wisconsin. Both the district marathon and the city council of Wausau have rejected the resolutions “community for all”, which led to the spreading of “community for all” labels and a further attempt to pass the measure in the district executive committee.

The next vote of the executive committee of the district board is planned for August 12th.

Sometimes even presidents get a little dirt on their chins.

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Categories
Health

With Mass Vaccination Websites Winding Down, It’s All Concerning the ‘Floor Sport’

NEWARK — There were only six tiny vials of coronavirus vaccine in the refrigerator, one Air Force nurse on duty and a trickle of patients on Saturday morning at a federally run mass vaccination site here. A day before its doors shut for good, this once-frenetic operation was oddly quiet.

The post-vaccination waiting room, with 165 socially distanced chairs, was mostly empty. The nurse, Maj. Margaret Dodd, who ordinarily cares for premature babies at Brooke Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, had already booked her flight home. So had the pharmacist, Heather Struempf, who was headed back to nursing school in Wyoming.

Across the country, one by one, mass vaccination sites are shutting down. The White House acknowledged for the first time on Tuesday that it would not reach President Biden’s goal of getting 70 percent of American adults at least partly vaccinated by July 4. The setback stems from hesitancy in certain groups, slow acceptance by young adults and a swirl of other complex factors.

The Newark site, which closed on Sunday, was the last of 39 federally operated mass vaccination centers that administered millions of shots over five months in 27 states — a major turning point in the effort Mr. Biden described last week as “one of the biggest and most complicated logistical challenges in American history.” Many state-run sites are also closed or soon will be.

The nation’s shift away from high-volume vaccination centers is an acknowledgment of the harder road ahead, as health officials pivot to the “ground game”: a highly targeted push, akin to a get-out-the-vote effort, to persuade the reluctant to get their shots.

Mr. Biden will travel to Raleigh, N.C., on Thursday to spotlight this time-consuming work. It will not be easy — as Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the president’s coronavirus response coordinator, discovered last weekend, when he went door-knocking in Anacostia, a majority-Black neighborhood in Washington, with Mayor Muriel E. Bowser.

In an interview on Tuesday, Dr. Fauci said he and the mayor spent 90 minutes talking to people on their front porches. But even with a celebrity doctor at the door and the prospect of giveaways at the vaccination center in a high school a few blocks away, many remained hesitant. Dr. Fauci said he persuaded six to 10 people to get their shots, though he did encounter some flat refusals.

“We would say, ‘OK, come on, listen: Get out, walk down the street, a couple of blocks away. We have incentives, a $51 gift certificate, you can put yourself in a raffle, you could win a year’s supplies of groceries, you could win a Jeep,’” Dr. Fauci said. “And several of them said, ‘OK, I’m on my way and I’ll go.’”

But in Newark, where more than three-quarters of the population is Black or Latino, the numbers tell the story. In Essex County, N.J., which includes Newark, 70.2 percent of adults have been vaccinated. But Essex also includes wealthy suburbs; in Newark, the figure is 56 percent, Judith M. Persichilli, the state’s health commissioner, said in an interview.

The Newark vaccination site, in a converted athletic facility at the New Jersey Institute of Technology that is ordinarily home to the school’s tennis teams, was set up and run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in conjunction with the Defense Department and other federal agencies. It opened on March 31; when it was operating at full tilt, its medical staff administered as many as 6,700 shots a day.

By Saturday, the daily tally was down to about 300. The long, corridorlike tents that had once shielded lines of patients from cold weather were empty. Of 18 registration desks, only four were in use, and most of the vaccination cubicles were unoccupied.

Most of the patients, including some teenagers brought by their parents, were there for their second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Many — like Abdullah Heath, 19, who took a year off after high school and will attend Rutgers University in the fall — said they were hesitant. But Rutgers requires vaccination, so Mr. Heath had little choice.

Updated 

June 23, 2021, 12:01 a.m. ET

“I wanted to wait to see how other people were when they took the shot,” he said.

Alfredo Sahar, 36, a real estate agent originally from Argentina, said he had received his first dose on the spur of the moment, without an appointment, when he tagged along with his wife to the Newark site. The couple showed up for their second doses on Saturday with a young friend, Federico Cuadrado, 19, who was visiting from Argentina and received his first shot.

“Relax this arm,” Major Dodd said as Mr. Cuadrado rolled up his sleeve. But she will not be administering his second shot; with the site now closed, he will have to go elsewhere.

At the height of its vaccination drive, New Jersey had seven mass sites: six run by the state, plus the FEMA site in Newark. Two of the state sites have closed, another will shut down this week, and the last three are expected to do so in mid-July, said Ms. Persichilli, a nurse and former hospital official. She called the FEMA site, which vaccinated 221,130 people in all, “invaluable.”

Mr. Biden has said repeatedly that equity — making sure people of all races and incomes have the same access to care and vaccines — is crucial to his coronavirus response. FEMA determined the locations for its mass vaccination sites using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s “social vulnerability index” to identify communities most in need, Deanne Criswell, the FEMA administrator, said in an interview.

It was a learning experience for the agency, she said, adding that 58 percent of the roughly six million shots administered at the mass vaccination sites were given to people of color.

“We didn’t have a playbook for this type of an operation,” Ms. Criswell said. (The agency now has one that is 44 pages long.)

In New Jersey, traffic at the mass vaccination sites started tapering off about six weeks ago, Ms. Persichilli said. At about that time, the state moved to a “hub and spoke” strategy, creating pop-up sites in churches, barbershops and storefronts surrounding existing vaccination centers that could store and supply the vaccines.

The state also has 2,000 canvassers — 1,200 paid, partly with federal taxpayer dollars, and 800 volunteers — who have knocked on 134,000 doors in areas with low vaccination rates to direct people to nearby clinics. And the Health Department is planning vaccine clinics at a rock music festival, a balloon festival and a rodeo in Atlantic City.

Overall, New Jersey is way ahead of most states: 78 percent of adults have had at least one dose of a vaccine. In four states — Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and Wyoming — the figure is lower than 50 percent.

“We’re running a marathon, and we’re in the last couple of miles, and we’re exhausted, and they’re going to be the most difficult ones,” Ms. Persichilli said. “But they are also going to be the most satisfying ones.”

Public health officials know that the last mile of any vaccination campaign is indeed the hardest. The eradication of smallpox, considered the greatest public health triumph of the 20th century, came after a highly targeted global campaign that lasted two decades. Polio has still not been eradicated in some countries, Dr. Fauci said, because of vaccine hesitancy, including among women who express unfounded fears of infertility.

“We should have eradicated polio a long time ago,” he said.

The federal effort has been enormous, involving more than 9,000 people from across the government, as well as 30,000 National Guard members supporting Covid-19 vaccination in 58 states and territories, according to Sonya Bernstein, a senior policy adviser for the White House.

With the large vaccination sites winding down, FEMA is also pivoting. The agency still supports more than 2,200 community vaccination centers and mobile vaccination units. Now FEMA is rolling out a new pilot program to offer shots at or near recovery centers that it sets up after hurricanes and other natural disasters. The first of these opened this week in St. Charles Parish, La., which has a large minority population and was devastated by Hurricane Laura last summer. Only 51 percent of the adult population in St. Charles Parish has had at least one shot, according to data from the C.D.C.

In Newark, the mood on Saturday was bittersweet. People like Major Dodd and Ms. Struempf, thrown together in a crisis, were exchanging phone numbers with newfound friends and colleagues as they planned to go their separate ways. After living in hotels for more than two months, they were both eager to depart and wistful about the prospect.

Michael Moriarty, the FEMA official in charge of vaccination operations in the New York-New Jersey region, surveyed the scene: the vacant cubicles and chairs, the boxes of unused latex gloves, the brown paper taped to the floor to cover the tennis courts. It would not take long to undo, he said, adding, “They’ll be playing tennis here at the end of the week.”

Categories
World News

Microsoft Bethesda Starfield, Ubisoft Avatar recreation

Bethesda’s Todd Howard introduces Starfield at the 2018 E3 Show.

Christian Petersen | Getty Images

The annual trade fair for the video game industry went virtual this year and offers publishers a new format for presenting upcoming titles.

The E3 gaming expo started on Saturday and will last until Tuesday, when Nintendo is expected to showcase its new releases. Microsoft, Ubisoft and Square Enix were among the major publishers who presented over the weekend.

E3 has lost momentum in recent years, Sony pulled out of the event for the first time in 2019, and longtime host Geoff Keighley skipped the event for the first time in 25 years in 2020.

Still, E3 is often used as a platform for large video game companies to generate hype for their new blockbusters. And there were some highlights of this year’s event.

Microsoft teases Starfield

The biggest reveal of the weekend was undoubtedly Starfield, an upcoming science fiction epic from Microsoft’s Bethesda.

Microsoft bought the parent company of legendary publisher ZeniMax Media for $ 7.5 billion in an industry-shaking deal announced last year. One of the key results analysts were anticipating from the acquisition was Xbox exclusivity for some Bethesda titles.

Microsoft released the big guns without delay and announced in a joint press conference with Bethesda on Sunday that Starfield will appear exclusively on the Xbox Series X and S consoles and the PC on November 11, 2022.

Microsoft has long lagged behind Sony when it comes to exclusive games – games that only run on one system. AAA franchises like The Last of Us and God of War were key to the success of Sony’s PlayStation 4, and the company is pursuing a similar strategy with the PS5.

Here are a few more highlights from Microsoft’s E3 showcase:

  • We’ve taken our first look at online multiplayer for Halo Infinite, the latest in the Halo franchise. Microsoft also announced that the game would be released around Christmas 2021 after being postponed last year due to criticism of the graphics.
  • There was an official trailer for the Forza Horizon 5 racing title and a release date of November 9th.
  • Microsoft has unveiled Redfall, a new multiplayer shooter from the developers behind Dishonored and Prey, and announced a release window for summer 2021.
  • Some popular titles, including Hades and Among Us, are coming to Xbox Game Pass, Microsoft’s Netflix-like gaming subscription service; Starfield will be available on Game Pass from the day it is released.
  • Sea of ​​Thieves: A Pirate’s Life is an expansion pack for the original game inspired by “Pirates of the Caribbean” and, thanks to a partnership with Disney, even includes the popular protagonist of the film series, Captain Jack Sparrow; the expansion will be released as a free update on June 22nd.
  • A new zombie survival co-op shooter from the makers of Left 4 Dead, Back 4 Blood, will be released on October 12th this year.
  • Age of Empires IV, the fourth entry in the real-time strategy game franchise, hits October 28th.

Ubisoft unveils Avatar game

Ubisoft made some big announcements on its E3 show on Saturday. The French publisher gave fans a closer look at the history of Far Cry 6, the sixth main part of the popular Far Cry series. The game with Giancarlo Esposito from Breaking Bad will be released on October 7th.

But a big surprise from the Ubisoft showcase was a game based on James Cameron’s 2009 sci-fi film “Avatar”. It’s called Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora and features colorful creatures and environments from the Avatar universe.

Ubisoft also showed Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six: Extraction, the newest entry in the Rainbow Six tactical shooter franchise. The game was originally supposed to be called Rainbow Six: Quarantine, but Ubisoft changed it due to controversy amid the coronavirus pandemic. Extraction debuts on September 16.

Another big reveal was a new mashup of Nintendo’s Mario and Ubisoft’s Raving Rabbids, called the Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope. As a sequel to Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle from 2017, the game will be released on Nintendo Switch next year.

Elden Ring and other great revelations

Geoff Keighley may have broken up with E3, but he’s not done broadcasting video games yet.

The host hosted his new, digital-only Summer Game Fest last week, which ended with a reveal trailer for Elden Ring, the highly anticipated role-playing title created in collaboration with Game of Thrones creator George RR Martin.

Elden Ring will be released on January 21, 2022. The game will be published by Bandai Namco.

Meanwhile, Square Enix unveiled a new game on Sunday based on Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy. It will be a single-player title, unlike another game based on the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Marvel’s Avengers, which received mixed feedback when it was released in September.

Categories
Business

Investing in AMC, meme shares can really feel like a recreation. The best way to not lose

Mario Tama | Getty Images

AMC Entertainment stock continued its wild ride on Wednesday, with the price per share rising more than 100% and suspending trading multiple times.

AMC is one of several so-called meme stocks that, along with names like GameStop and BlackBerry, have seen strong interest from retail investors this year.

Financial advisors often warn against getting involved in such frenzies. But in a recent survey, 34% of consultants admitted their clients bought GameStop, while 20% of them bought the stock themselves, according to the Journal of Financial Planning and the Financial Planning Association.

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For retail investors, the challenge can be to place bets alongside professional investors such as short sellers, whose activity can also trigger large movements.

“Often you hear the narrative that they are only retailers, but that is not the case,” wrote JJ Kinahan, chief marketing strategist at TD Ameritrade, in a recent market update.

“The high volume suggests that there are a lot of big companies out there,” he said.

For example, the distressed investment firm Mudrick Capital bought and sold 8.5 million AMC shares on Tuesday.

Understandably, investors can get so caught up in profits that they forget to remember the potential to lose.

If you want to try your hand at meme stock names, it’s important to remember that you are really playing a game like musical chairs and behaving accordingly, according to Dan Egan, vice president of behavioral finance and investing at Betterment.

“Half of the game is figuring out how to sell before it crashes,” said Egan.

Be ready to lose money

When you pay for a ticket to a sporting event, you part with an amount of money but can still watch the game.

Investors in meme stocks should start with the same approach, Egan said.

When investing in a stock like AMC you should have some level of composure because it’s fun, and if you’re losing money that’s fine, Egan said.

Plan an exit strategy

Before or while investing in a stock, it is also beneficial to identify when you would sell it in advance.

And be sure you keep that promise, said Egan.

“What often happens to people emotionally is they hit that price point, but then they ask, ‘Wait, what if it goes higher?'” Egan said.

Anyone considering trading these should be aware of how volatile they can be.

JJ Kinahan

Chief Marketing Strategist at TD Ameritrade

To avoid this, it is beneficial to set up a way for the transaction to be carried out automatically so that your emotions are not disturbed in the moment.

“Anyone considering trading these should be aware of how volatile they can be and be prepared to be disciplined about the levels they want to get in and out of,” Kinahan said of stocks like AMC or GameStop.

Avoid a team mentality

It can be exciting to be part of an investment where your activity adds to price movement and you can empathize with fellow investors on message boards.

“The community aspect, the social aspect of it, is a really tough drug that you can try to get off of,” Egan said.

Additionally, this can prevent you from selling the stock, which would mean that you are no longer part of a team or movement.

It’s important to remember that you still need to put yourself first.

“Movement leaders won’t tell you until they sell,” Egan said.

Balance again along the way

Because of the wild swings trending stocks experience, your initial allotment could go from 5% to 20% of your portfolio while you’re not careful.

Try to rebalance if your position reaches sizes you wouldn’t have invested in, Egan said.

It’s also important to remember that stocks that have performed well will continue to fall and have more potential to lose, he said.

One way to keep making the headlines without as much risk is to put your money in investments like diversified exchange-traded funds instead, Egan said.

Categories
Business

In a World Let Free, Video Sport Makers Are ‘Doubling Down’

At the height of the pandemic, people stuck indoors spent the time playing tons of video games.

Now that countries are slowly opening up again, this behavior will change. And video game makers have warned that when people go outside, their sales will fall and game spending could fall for the first time in at least a decade.

But the companies do not reduce the anticipation. Far from it.

Consider Riot Games, which makes League of Legends. “We’re doubling up,” said Nicolo Laurent, the company’s managing director. “We’re hiring like crazy.”

Then there is Microsoft’s Xbox. “Our gaming investment has never been higher,” said Phil Spencer, who runs the business.

Video game companies are among the pandemic winners saying they continue to plan to move at full steam even after the coronavirus bans that have propelled their businesses over the past 15 months have largely been lifted. Other tech companies that thrived while supplying an out-of-the-way society – including Zoom and Peloton – have also announced they will continue to spend, expand operations and hire new staff.

It’s a counter-intuitive bet. However, some of the companies said they could use the cash they had in store from the gust of wind of the year to return to the growth path they were on before the pandemic accelerated it.

“This is a great time for the industry,” said Strauss Zelnick, general manager of Take-Two Interactive, which makes the NBA 2K and Grand Theft Auto video games. He said the pandemic has made gambling more accessible to a wider audience, and rather than pulling back, “we are investing to grow to meet that demand.”

When industry predicted a slowdown in growth in the past, companies often cut costs, but those downturns and rallies were usually unpredictable due to falling stock markets and recessions, said Bill Pearce, assistant dean at the Haas School of Business from the University of California, Berkeley.

As the pandemic subsides, coronavirus vaccines and predictions of how people will react when the world opens up means companies have “more clarity and more confidence in investing,” Pearce said. Some industries that followed conventional wisdom and slowed down, such as car dealerships, are now kneeling on their knees for failing to meet increasing demand, he said.

However, John Paul Rollert, a professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, said that moving forward in the face of changing behavior is a risky and rewarding approach.

“They really play high-stakes poker,” said Mr. Rollert. Still, as the economy recovered and money sloshed around, he added, “You can see why these companies might think, ‘Covid has been good to us, but maybe post-Covid will be great for us.'”

Newzoo, a gaming analytics firm, has forecast that people will spend $ 175.8 billion on games this year, down 1 percent from 2020. This would be the first drop since Newzoo began tracking spending in 2012.

In business today

Updated

May 28, 2021 at 12:54 p.m. ET

Take-Two announced earlier this month that sales will decrease 30 percent year over year for the next quarter and 8 percent for the fiscal year. Activision Blizzard, which makes the war game Call of Duty, forecast an 11 percent year-on-year revenue decline for the next quarter.

“It’s hard to imagine that there will be as much money or game time or as many players as the industry has benefited over the last year, at least in the immediate future,” said Matthew Ball, managing partner at Epyllion Industries, which operates a company Capital fund that invests in gambling.

Other challenges, such as a global chip shortage that is limiting the availability of new video game consoles from Microsoft and Sony, and a lack of blockbuster games after a year of remote work made game development even more difficult than normal.

However, game makers said they were not concerned, especially after such huge pandemic growth.

In January, Microsoft reported quarterly sales of $ 5 billion with games for the first time, partly due to a new generation of Xbox consoles. The company bought ZeniMax Media, which publishes games like Skyrim and Fallout, in September for $ 7.5 billion.

Microsoft’s gaming business is now aiming to expand in countries like Africa by promoting the cloud gaming service xCloud, Spencer said. In cloud gaming, games are hosted in a company’s data center and broadcast to consumers’ devices so they don’t have to install the games or use expensive hardware.

“If you look at the last decade, gaming has seen a double-digit growth pattern,” said Spencer. “The pandemic has undoubtedly accelerated.”

At Take-Two, based in New York, profits rose 46 percent last year. The company has hired around 700 game developers in the past 12 months, expanded its workforce by 10 percent, and invested heavily in technology and marketing, Zelnick said.

“In many ways, it’s an investment year where we’re building for the future,” he said.

Niantic, the San Francisco-based company that produced the mobile game Pokemon Go, expects to increase its workforce by about 25 percent to nearly 900 employees this year, said John Hanke, its managing director. The company was preparing to launch two new games, one based on the Settlers of Catan board game and the other based on the Pikmin franchise. Eight more are in development.

At Riot in Los Angeles, a post-pandemic downturn was “not even an issue for discussion,” Laurent said. Revenue for the privately held company rose 20 percent last year.

(Mr. Laurent has dealt with allegations and complaints from employees that Riot is a sexist workplace. He was sued in January for sexual harassment and retaliation. He has denied the allegations.)

Riot plans to hire 1,000 employees this year, increasing its workforce by 33 percent, Laurent said. In addition to expanding its flagship League of Legends title, Riot is investing in esports leagues for its first-person shooter game Valorant and for Wild Rift, a modified version of League of Legends played on mobile phones. The company is also building two new studios in Shanghai and Seattle this year and plans to open five more locations over the next three years.

“Gambling will be the center of influence,” said Laurent in the 21st century. “The pandemic is just giving us a small boost.”

Categories
Business

Scrounging for Hits, Hollywood Goes Again to the Video Recreation Nicely

LOS ANGELES — For 28 years, ever since “Super Mario Bros.” arrived in cinemas with the tagline “This Ain’t No Game,” Hollywood has been trying and mostly failing — epically, famously — to turn hit video games into hit movies. For every “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” (2001), which turned Angelina Jolie into an A-list action star, there has been a nonsensical “Max Payne” (2008), an abominable “Prince of Persia” (2010) and a wince-inducing “Warcraft” (2016).

If video games are the comic books of our time, why can’t Hollywood figure out how to mine them accordingly?

It may finally be happening, powered in part by the proliferation of streaming services and their need for intellectual property to exploit. “The need for established, globally appealing I.P. has naturally led to gaming,” Matthew Ball, a venture investor and the former head of strategy for Amazon Studios, wrote last year in an essay titled “7 Reasons Why Gaming I.P. Is Finally Taking Off in Film/TV.”

After years of inaction and false starts, for instance, Sony Pictures Entertainment and its PlayStation-powered sibling, Sony Interactive, are finally working together to turn PlayStation games into mass-appeal movies and television shows. There are 10 game adaptations in the Sony Pictures pipeline, a big leap from practically none in 2018. They include “Uncharted,” a $120 million adventure based on a 14-year-old PlayStation property (more than 40 million copies sold). “Uncharted” stars Tom Holland, the reigning Spider-Man, as Nathan Drake, the treasure hunter at the center of the game franchise. It is scheduled for release in theaters on Feb. 18.

Sony is starting production on “The Last of Us,” a series headed to HBO and based on the post-apocalyptic game of the same title. Pedro Pascal, “The Mandalorian” himself, is the star, and Craig Mazin, who created the Emmy-winning mini-series “Chernobyl,” is the showrunner. Executive producers include Carolyn Strauss, one of the forces behind “Game of Thrones,” and Neil Druckmann, who led the creation of the Last of Us game.

Sony games like Twisted Metal and Ghost of Tsushima are also getting the TV and film treatment. (Contrary to speculation, one that is not, at least not anytime soon, according to a Sony spokesman: God of War.)

In the past, Sony Pictures and Sony Interactive operated as fiefs, with creative control — it’s mine; no, it’s mine — impeding adaptation efforts. When he took over as Sony’s chief executive in 2018, Kenichiro Yoshida demanded cooperation. The ultimate goal is to make better use of Sony’s online PlayStation Network to bring Sony movies, shows and music directly to consumers. PlayStation Network, introduced in 2006, has more than 114 million monthly active users.

“I have witnessed a radical shift in the nature of cooperation between different parts of the company,” said Sanford Panitch, Sony’s movie president.

The game adaptation boom extends far beyond Sony.

“Halo,” a series based on the Xbox franchise about a war between humans and an alliance of aliens (more than 80 million copies sold), will arrive on the Paramount+ streaming service early next year; Steven Spielberg is an executive producer. Lionsgate is adapting the Borderlands games (roughly 60 million sold) into a science fiction film starring Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart and Jamie Lee Curtis.

Buoyed by its success with “The Witcher,” a fantasy series adapted from games and novels, Netflix has shows based on the “Assassin’s Creed,” “Resident Evil,” “Splinter Cell” and “Cuphead” games on the way. Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, the duo behind HBO’s “Westworld,” are developing a science-fiction show for Amazon that is based on the Fallout video game franchise.

And Nintendo and Illumination Entertainment, the Universal Pictures studio responsible for the “Despicable Me” franchise, have an animated Mario movie headed to theaters next year — another new collaboration between a game publisher and a film company.

Today in Business

Updated 

May 21, 2021, 3:55 p.m. ET

Still, Hollywood’s game adaptation track record is terrible. Why should the coming projects be any different?

For a start, the games themselves have evolved, becoming more intricate and cinematic. “Games have stories that are so much more developed and advanced than they used to be,” Mr. Panitch said.

There are also signs that Hollywood has figured out how to make game-based films that satisfy both audiences and critics. “Pokémon Detective Pikachu,” which paired animated creatures with live actors, collected $433 million worldwide in 2019 for Warner Bros. and Legendary Entertainment — and was the first major game adaptation in three decades to receive a “fresh” designation on Rotten Tomatoes, the review-aggregation site. Since then, two more adaptations, “Sonic the Hedgehog” (Paramount) and “The Angry Birds Movie 2” (Sony) have been critical and commercial successes.

“Quality has definitely been improving,” said Geoff Keighley, creator of the Game Awards, an Oscars-like ceremony for the industry.

The most recent game-to-film entry, “Mortal Kombat” (Warner Bros.), received mixed reviews but has taken in $41.2 million in the United States since its release last month, a surprisingly large total considering it was released simultaneously on HBO Max and theaters were still operating with strict coronavirus safety protocols.

Mr. Panitch acknowledged that “video game movies have a checkered history.” But he added, “Failure is the mother of invention.”

Game adaptations, for instance, have often faltered by trying to rigidly replicate the action and story lines that fans know and love. That approach invites comparison, and movies (even with sophisticated visual effects) almost always fail to measure up. At the same time, such “fan service” turns off nongamers, resulting in films that don’t connect with any particular audience.

“It’s not just about adapting the story,” said Michael Jonathan Smith, who is leading Sony’s effort to turn Twisted Metal, a 1995 vehicular combat game, into a television series. “It’s about adapting how you feel when you play the game. It has to be about characters you care about. And then you can slide in the Easter eggs and story points that get fans absolutely pumped.”

“Uncharted” is a prequel that, for the first time, creates origin stories for the characters in the game. With any luck, such storytelling will satisfy fans by giving them something new — while also inviting nongamers, who may otherwise worry about not knowing what is going on, to buy tickets. (The producers of “Uncharted” include Charles Roven, who is known for the “Dark Knight” trilogy.)

“It’s a question of balance,” said Asad Qizilbash, a senior Sony Interactive executive who also runs PlayStation Productions, an entity started in 2019 and based on Sony’s movie lot in Culver City, Calif.

Unlike in the past, when Sony Pictures and Sony Interactive pledged to work together and ultimately did not, the current collaboration “has weight because there is a win for everyone,” Mr. Qizilbash added. “We have three objectives. Grow audience size for games. Bring product to Sony Pictures. Showcase collaboration.”

The stakes are high. A cinematic flop could hurt the game franchise.

“It’s risky,” Mr. Qizilbash allowed. “But I think we can do it.”

Categories
Entertainment

The Largest Dance Present in City? At a Brooklyn Nets Sport

I found an impressive performance – truly a spectacle – in a place I never expected: a basketball game.

The Brooklynettes, the Brooklyn Nets dance team, have been a pandemic anomaly since February: They perform live at games for nearly 2,000 spectators. It’s not the same as it has ever been before – it’s better. The reduced capacity Barclays Center is more intimate. The ushers treat you like a guest at a dinner party. The players are more sharply focused. And the dancers, whether they are performing their choreographed routines or responding to an exciting setting, are critical to the whole thing.

Back in the day, a Brooklynettes number seemed to have three qualities: speed, strength, and hair. The lines were wide. Were the dancers skillful and meticulous? Absolutely. But at the games, their hard work was masked by the noise and crowds of fans. The reality was that this wasn’t so much a dance team as it was a group of backup dancers for a basketball team.

While the Brooklynettes are still concentrating on hip-hop and street jazz this season, the look is different and more precise. At a recent arena rehearsal, Asha Singh, the Brooklynettes coach and occasional choreographer, slowed the dancers to clean up a routine. “Which angle from the left do we go?” she asked them. “Are we going to the corner? Are we stepping aside? “

Why should a position be held for a millisecond during a sprint of a dance thing? When these six bodies move as one, they pull you in – not just to dance, but into the arena, where their movement creates an invisible line of energy between the players and fans.

Even when they’re not dancing, that vitality remains standing up, hands on hips that look like clippings from Wonder Woman. It sounds strange, but now, for the Brooklynettes, a position held for a millisecond in the sprint of a dance matters because whether you see the effect or not, you feel it.

The Brooklynettes – along with an electroplated drum line and team hype, a male dance crew performing on the opposite stage – are no longer a decorative afterthought. In pre-pandemic days, they would go straight to court; now two Stages were built to create the necessary social distance to fans and players. The dancers – there are now six per game, down from 20 – are everywhere. They stand out in ways they have not done before, even when they have been front and center and doing routines on the pitch during home games.

And although capacity is reduced at the Barclays Center, the numbers for the dance still fluctuate. How many dancers do you know who perform for so many people indoors? (The arena was 10 percent full, roughly 1,700 spectators, and will rise to 30 percent on May 19th.)

“It’s invigorating,” said dancer Liv David, who added for many months during the pandemic. “I only danced in my small apartment so I wouldn’t kick my cats in the face and make the most of it. I almost forgot that feeling – that adrenaline. “

Live indoor dance performances were hard to come by in New York. When this happens, the audience is kept small. The Works & Process series at the Guggenheim Museum started with 50 spectators; When the government mandates changed, the number was increased to 75 and is now 90. In the cavernous drilling hall on Park Avenue Armory, the capacity for “Afterwardsness”, an upcoming production of the Bill T. Jones / Arnie Zane Company, is increased 118 be.

During the 2019-2020 NBA season, when the arenas were at full capacity, all 30 teams put on performances with dancing. In addition to the Brooklynettes, 10 other dance teams are now performing live. (The Knicks City Dancers don’t do this. Instead, recordings of past performances are played during the games.)

When the fans got back into the arena, Criscia Long, who oversees the Brooklynettes, Brooklyn Nets Beats Drumline, and Team Hype, was tasked with figuring out how to bring back entertainment.

“We’re in the crowd now – we’re right next to the fans,” said Long. “You can deal with them; During the performances and when the ball is in play, you can feel their energy a little more. It’s so much more connected now than having all of the crowd there. “

A seasoned dancer, Long was previously the captain of the Knicks City Dancers. She also appeared with Lil ‘Kim, who appeared in a series with the Brooklynettes that season. “She really wanted to be a part of the show,” said Long. “She rehearsed with us and you know how difficult it is with Covid protocols, but she wanted to be there. It felt like we were on tour with her. “

That was a special occasion. Even so, Singh said if you take the basketball team with you, the Brooklynettes will come up with a tour-style version of concert performances. That is even clearer now. “Very much tour, minus the artist before,” she said. “Imagine all that crazy dope dancing you would see around the artist: that’s some kind of energy we’d love to put into the arena.”

In the past, the Brooklynettes sometimes shared the pitch with team hype for combined routines. Now, however, the two groups are performing on stages on opposite sides of the arena. During the games they play off each other while members of the drum line perform with both groups.

They are all more in the moment. Sometimes the dancers react to a big piece: short bursts of choreography that bloom and disappear quickly. Even these dances, unannounced yet galvanic, attract attention. As David said, “I feel eyes on us. I feel like people appreciate what we do and what we stand up for. And that is very rewarding. “

At the start of the pandemic, like most in the dance world, Singh started zooming rehearsals and found she had less focus on correcting details like the exact placement of arms and timing – that would be taken into account as soon as possible they stood on stage – and got more to the choreography in their bodies. The dancers recorded themselves and sent her the videos for individual notes.

The center of gravity of the movement has also changed. “We used to make a lot of big guns,” said Singh. “It was like taking the steps as big as possible. How can I make my body look like it’s taking up space? “

As they still do, she added, “It’s more about the power behind the movement and less about ‘my arm needs to be up here’ so the upper tier fans can see what we’re doing. ”

As always, Singh wants the Brooklynettes to look like “a high-profile professional dance crew based in Brooklyn,” she said. “My approach to everything, everything Brooklynettes is that you have to get it right. At least try to get it right. The last thing I want someone to say – and especially in our industry – is, “Oh, it’s spurious. They make culture their own. Or they’re not really Brooklyn. ‘”

How to pose for this Wonder Woman? “That is literally our signature,” said Singh with a laugh. “I said to the ladies the other night, ‘You have to stand like you’re still performing and stay there.’ When your arms get tired you can relax but keep coming back so it still looks like your body is energized and you are there. When you are not backstage, perform. That has always been my point of view – in every show. “

It’s another example of the Brooklynettes doing something they never had to do. “Now we are learning that we have to change – we have to optimize our show, the in-between moments,” said Singh. “It’s exciting because I’m a fan of a stage. I love lights. I love haze. I love to be exalted. “

How for this stage in the stands? “It just looks a lot more like a show to me,” she said. “So I love our stage moment. We’re not sure how long it will take, but it’s been really fun so far. “

Categories
Health

Science Performs the Lengthy Recreation. However Folks Have Psychological Well being Points Now.

When assessing government-funded research projects – presumably a cleaner company – I re-asked the questions that people in crises keep asking me. Is this study useful in any way to my son or sister? Or, more generously, given the pace of research, could this work possibly be useful to someone at some point in their life?

The answer was almost always no. Again, this does not mean that the tools and technical understanding of brain biology have not been further developed. It’s just that these advances didn’t affect mental health in one way or another.

Don’t take my word for it. In his upcoming book, Recovery: Healing the Mental Health Care Crisis in America, Dr. Thomas Insel, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health: “The scientific advances in our field have been breathtaking, but as we studied risk factors for suicide, the death rate had increased by 33 percent. As we identified the neuroanatomy of addiction, deaths from overdose had tripled. While we were mapping the genes for schizophrenia, people with the disease were still chronically unemployed and died 20 years earlier. “

And it continues to this day. Government agencies like the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Mental Health Institute continue to double up, pouring huge sums of taxpayers’ money into biological research to someday find a neural signature or “blood test” for possible psychiatric diagnoses, perhaps someday in the Future useful – while people are in crisis now.

I’ve written about some of these studies. For example, the National Institutes of Health is conducting a $ 300 million study of brain imaging in 10,000+ young children with so many interacting variables for experience and development that it is difficult to pinpoint the study’s main goals. The agency also has a $ 50 million project underway to try to understand the myriad, cascading, and sometimes random, processes that occur during neural development and that could underlie some mental health issues.

This kind of great scientific effort is well-intentioned, but the payoffs are indeed uncertain. The late Scott Lilienfeld, big-budget psychologist and skeptic of brain research, had his own terminology for these types of projects. “They are either fishing expeditions or Hail Marys,” he would say. “Make your choice.” When people drown, they care less about the genetics of breathing than they are about a lifesaver.

In 1973, well-known microbiologist Norton Zinder took over a committee that considered the National Cancer Institute’s grants to study viruses. He concluded that the program had become a “gravy train” for a small group of preferred scientists and recommended that their support be cut in half. A tough, Zinder-like review of current behavioral research spending, I suspect, would result in equally sharp cuts.

Categories
Politics

MLB discussing choices for Atlanta All-Star recreation following Georgia voting legislation

The Battery is a bustling venue with shops, bars, and restaurants from local chefs in Truist Park, home of the Atlanta Braves MLB team, as the facility is currently closed during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in Atlanta, Georgia , Sports will be quarantined on April 18, 2020.

David J. Griffin | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Major League Baseball is discussing the status of its 2021 All-Star Game in Atlanta as more companies publicly oppose a new electoral law recently passed in Georgia.

The league gathers feedback from teams and executives on the matter before making a decision to move the game. The baseball midsummer event is scheduled for July 13th at Truist Park, home of Braves.

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told The Associated Press the league was expecting “substantial talks” with MLB Players Association Executive Director Tony Clark about relocating the game. But Manfred didn’t go into detail about MLB’s plan or his stance on the new law.

“I speak to different constituencies within the game and I just don’t go beyond what I would or would not consider,” said Manfred.

The Georgian legislature has passed a law that will revise the state elections. The new law adds guidelines for postal ballot papers and voter registration, and gives state officials more authority in conducting elections. Georgia Governor Brian Kemp signed the amendments on March 25th.

Critics of Georgia’s new electoral laws say it will suppress votes, especially among people of color in underserved areas. In an interview with ESPN, President Joe Biden criticized the changes, calling them “Jim Crow on Steroids”. The president added that he would support the relocation of the MLB All-Star game.

Kemp was defending the law when he appeared on CNBC’s “Closing Bell” on Wednesday, saying it gave more people the opportunity to vote on weekends. Kemp also said calls to postpone the all-star game were “ridiculous” in an interview with Fox News.

On Wednesday, top Wall Street executives including Ken Frazier, CEO of Merck, Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, and Ken Chenault, former CEO of American Express, expressed displeasure with the new law.

“Companies have to stand up. There is no middle ground,” said Chenault, who appeared with Frazier on CNBC’s “Squawk Box”. Executives urged more companies to publicly oppose elements of Gregoria’s revised electoral laws.

Economic impact

Should the city lose the game, it could suffer financially.

According to the Atlanta Journal constitution, local taxpayers would pay $ 2 million to spend to host the MLB event but get a great return on that investment. The 2019 All-Star Game should gross Cleveland $ 65 million. According to the baseball almanac, the last Atlanta location for the game generated $ 49 million in 2000.

“There is an economic impact,” said Bill Squires, sports facilities and event management expert. “People will be traveling there on the weekend. Check out the home run contest and game on Monday. There are hotels, Uber, restaurants, airfares, and rental cars – there is no doubt the economic impact.”

CNBC coverage of Georgian electoral law

Also, check out these CNBC stories on Georgia’s new voting move:

While moving the game around could be logistically difficult, Squires, who formerly ran Yankee Stadium, said he would be shocked if MLB didn’t have a contingency plan yet, especially if there was a pandemic. He used the National Football League as an example.

“If you know how sport works, think about the NFL with the situation with the San Francisco 49ers who couldn’t play at Levi Stadium and quickly moved to State Farm Stadium in Arizona,” said Squires, who also Is a lecturer at Columbia University. “The contingency plans are always in place. They have to be. I would be shocked if every league didn’t have a backup plan for the primary location as it depends on what is going on in the world.”

Robert D. Manfred Jr., Major League Baseball Commissioner, presents the Commissioner’s Trophy to Houston Astros owner Jim Crane after the Astros beat the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 7 of the 2017 World Series at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday November 1, 2017 in Los Angeles had defeated California.

Alex Trautwig | Getty Images

Does MLB have an attitude?

Should MLB postpone its competition, it would not be the first time a professional league has postponed a significant event due to a controversial law.

In 2016, the National Basketball Association removed its 2017 All-Star Competition from North Carolina after House Bill 2, also known as the “Bathroom Bill”, restricted rights in the LGBT community. The NCAA also suspended its championship events in the state. The bill was eventually overturned and the NBA returned the event to Charlotte in 2019.

“It has damaged our reputation, discriminated against our people, and wreaked economic harm in many of our communities,” said Roy Cooper, governor of North Carolina in 2017 after the bill was repealed.

However, with MLB remaining calm in its stance, it could damage baseball’s image. Patrick Rishe, director of the sports business program at Washington University in St. Louis, said the lack of action from MLB could alienate younger fans.

“If MLB is serious about targeting younger audiences, and that has been a major goal, their actions on the matter will say a lot,” Rishe said. “These younger fans want the brands they use to be synonymous with something, and they also want their teams and their leagues to be synonymous with something.”

MLB opens its 2021 regular season on Thursday, reverting to a 162-game format after only 60 games were played last season due to the pandemic.

Categories
Business

MLB pulls 2021 All-Star Sport out of Atlanta as a result of Georgia’s new restrictive voting regulation

The Battery is a bustling venue with shops, bars, and restaurants from local chefs in Truist Park, home of the Atlanta Braves MLB team, as the facility is currently closed during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in Atlanta, Georgia , Sports will be quarantined on April 18, 2020.

David J. Griffin | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Major League Baseball Commissioner Robert Manfred announced on Friday that the 2021 All-Star Game will no longer be held in Atlanta.

The decision follows an electoral law signed on Wednesday by Brian Kemp, the governor of Georgia, which, according to opponents, disproportionately disenfranchises colored people. This is one of the first concrete responses to the law denounced by executives in the US earlier this week.

Restaurants, hotels, car rental agencies, and other businesses make money when these big events come to town. The MLB All-Star game raised approximately $ 49 million for the local economy in Atlanta in 2000, according to the Baseball Almanac. The 2019 All-Star Game is set to raise $ 65 million for Cleveland, according to the same website.

“Over the past week we have had thoughtful discussions with clubs, past and current players, the Players Association and the Players Alliance, among others, to hear their views,” said Manfred. “I’ve decided that the best way to demonstrate our values ​​as a sport is to move this year’s All-Star game and this year’s MLB draft.”

The new Georgian law adds guidelines for postal ballot papers and voter registration, and gives state officials more authority in conducting elections. Critics say the law will suppress voices, especially among people of color in underserved areas.

“Just as elections have consequences, so do the actions of those who are elected,” said Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms on Twitter of the MLB’s decision. “Unfortunately, the removal of the @MLB All Star game from GA is likely the first of many dominoes to fall until the unnecessary barriers to ballot box access are removed.”

“Major League Baseball fundamentally supports voting rights for all Americans and opposes ballot box restrictions,” Manfred said. “In 2020, MLB became the first professional sports league to join the non-partisan Civic Alliance to build a future where everyone is involved in shaping the United States. We are proud to have used our platform to bring baseball fans and communities in Encourage our country to perform. You continue to have the unwavering support of our game. “

Manfred said MLB will meet commitments to support local communities in Atlanta. The league is finalizing a new host city and “details of these events will be announced shortly,” he said.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp and Atlanta Braves respond

Georgia Governor Brian P. Kemp speaks during a runoff party at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Buckhead on January 5, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Brandon Bell | Getty Images

“Today Major League Baseball gave in to fear, political opportunism, and liberal lies,” Georgia Gov replied. Kemp. “Georgians – and all Americans – should fully understand what the MLB’s decision means: breaking culture and awakening political activists who come for every aspect of your life, including sports. When the left doesn’t agree with you, the facts and the truth don’t play Role. “

“This attack on our state is the direct result of repeated lies by Joe Biden and Stacey Abrams about a bill that will expand ballot box access and ensure the integrity of our elections,” added Kemp. “I’m not going to back down. Georgians are not being bullied. We will continue to advocate safe, accessible and fair elections. I spoke to the Atlanta Braves leadership today, and they told me they did not support the MLB’s decision.” “”

The Atlanta Braves baseball team said on Twitter they were “deeply disappointed” with the decision. “This was neither our decision nor our recommendation and we are sad that fans cannot see this event in our city. The Braves organization will continue to emphasize the importance of equal choice and we had hoped our city could take advantage of this . ” Event as a platform to improve the discussion. Our city has always been known as a unity in times of division, and we will miss the opportunity to address issues that are important to our community. Unfortunately, companies, employees and fans in Georgia are the victims of this decision. “

CNBC’s Jabari Young contributed to this report.

Correction: This story has been updated to remove a reference to the 2020 Los Angeles All-Star Game that has been canceled.