The whole lot We Know About Stranger Issues Season 4

In the wise words of Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown), “Friends don’t lie.” Although we haven’t been outright lied to by Netflix, we did think season four of Stranger Things would arrive prior to 2022.

And it seems we aren’t the only ones desperately counting down the days for the Duffer Brothers-created series to return. Case in point: One social media user, named Xavier, quipped that he could have the new season done by next week.

In response to this, Stranger Things star David Harbour joked on Instagram, “Ya boy Jim gonna bring the HEAT to 2022…(sorry, sorry). Go check out the sneak peek on every cast member’s Instagram. Psyched to work with Xavier who is directing all episodes of season 5!”

Unfortunately for Harbour, some fans thought this was the actor confirming a fifth season of the show. He later clarified, “I can’t believe I have to do this, but in the age of internet click bait nonsense…the season 5 reference is a joke referring to a comment made on @netflix page about how long the show takes to film that I thought was funny. “

9/11 households, survivors ask Biden to not attend memorial companies about Saudi paperwork

Nearly 1,800 survivors of September 11, 2001, family members of the victims and first responders tell President Joe Biden to skip memorial services this year unless he releases U.S. documents detailing Saudi Arabia’s role in the deadly attacks describe.

Next month will be 20 years since the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans in the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon and Pennsylvania.

The group argued that Biden had failed to keep his campaign promise to release as much information as possible about the attacks and ignored their numerous letters and requests asking him to do so.

“Twenty years on, there is simply no reason – unsubstantiated ‘national security’ claims or otherwise – to keep this information secret,” the group said in its statement.

“But if President Biden breaks his pledges and his side to the Saudi government, we would be forced to publicly protest against any participation by his government in a September 11th memorial ceremony,” the group said.

A White House spokesman said in a statement that the public relations bureau and National Security Council staff were with the families of the victims of Sept.

In his campaign promise, Biden promised to instruct his Department of Justice to investigate cases recommending disclosure of FBI information related to the 9/11 attacks. He said the publication of such information was “tightly tailored” to guard against the risk of national security being compromised.

“I intend to be a president to all Americans and I will hear all of their voices,” said Biden. “The 9/11 families are right to seek full truth and accountability.”

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The group said it had “high hopes” that Biden would depart from previous governments and said they were disappointed that he did not live up to his words after his inauguration.

They said that since the 9/11 Commission’s investigation closed in 2004, investigative evidence “implicated Saudi government officials in support of the attacks” has been found.

The 9/11 commission found it likely that Saudi government-funded charities were backing the attacks, but found no evidence of direct government funding, according to NBC News.

The group specifically called for FBI documents from a 2016 investigation into Saudi Arabia to be released. They said they believe the documents would reveal whether anyone associated with al-Qaeda, the group that perpetrated the terrorist attacks, received any support or funding from the Saudi Arabian government.

Fifteen of the 19 attackers in the 9/11 attacks were Saudi nationals and mastermind Osama bin Laden was born in Saudi Arabia, but the country’s government denies allegations that it was involved.

Several presidential administrations have cited “security concerns” in their rationale for withholding documents related to the terrorist attacks, the group said in a statement.

Most recently, in 2019, the Trump administration relied on the privilege of state secrecy to justify keeping documents secret, according to NBC News.

SpaceX Starship absolutely stacked is ‘dream come true’

SpaceX stacks Starship prototype 20 on top of Super Heavy rocket Booster 4 on August 6, 2021.

@elonmusk on Twitter

Elon Musk’s SpaceX stacked a Starship prototype rocket on top of a Super Heavy rocket booster for the first time Friday morning, giving a look at the scale of the combined nearly 400-foot-tall vehicle.

Musk, asked by CNBC what he thought of witnessing the milestone at the company’s facility in Boca Chica, Texas, responded simply.

“Dream come true,” Musk replied in a tweet.

SpaceX is developing Starship to launch cargo and people on missions to the moon and Mars. Starship prototypes stand at about 160 feet tall, or around the size of a 16-story building, and are built of stainless steel — representing the early version of the rocket that Musk unveiled in 2019. 

The rocket lifts off on top of a Super Heavy booster, which makes up the bottom half of the rocket and stands about 230 feet tall. Together, Starship and Super Heavy are nearly 400 feet tall when stacked for launch.

SpaceX rolls out Super Heavy Booster 4 in preparation for the company’s first orbital Starship launch.

Elon Musk

SpaceX has conducted multiple short test flights of Starship prototypes over the past year, but reaching orbit represents the next step in testing the rocket. The company in May revealed its plan for the first orbital flight, which would launch from the company’s facility in Texas and aim to splash down off the coast of Hawaii.

Work to be done

A SpaceX crane lifts Starship prototype 20 on top of Super Heavy rocket Booster 4 during stacking operations on August 6, 2021.

@elonmusk on Twitter

Musk outlined four “significant items” that SpaceX aims to complete over the next two weeks in preparing Starship 20 for launch.

He said SpaceX needs to add the “final heat shield tiles” to the ship, add “thermal protection” to the Raptor rocket engines in Booster 4, complete work on “ground propellant storage tanks” and add a quick disconnect arm to the top of the recently built launch tower. The quick disconnect arm connects power and fuel lines to the rocket before launch.

While SpaceX’s fleet of Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets are partially reusable, Musk’s goal is to make Starship fully reusable — a rocket that is more akin to a commercial airplane, with short turnaround times between flights such that the only major cost is fuel.

SpaceX stacks Starship prototype 20 on top of Super Heavy rocket Booster 4 on August 6, 2021.

@elonmusk on Twitter

One important piece of making Starship fully reusable is improving its durability to survive the intense process of reentering the Earth’s atmosphere. Small hexagonal heat shield tiles are SpaceX’s answer to that problem, with the previously shiny Starship 20 rocket now covered in thousands of the tiles.

Musk noted that work on the tiles is about “98% done” for Starship 20, as “the remaining tiles are unique shapes requiring machining.”

NASA paying attention

A SpaceX crane prepares to lift Starship prototype 20 on top of Super Heavy rocket Booster 4 during stacking operations on August 6, 2021.

@elonmusk on Twitter

NASA has been paying close attention to Starship’s development, especially as the U.S. space agency earlier this year awarded SpaceX a controversial $2.9 billion contract to deliver astronauts to the surface of the moon using the rockets.

Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s top official for science missions, told CNBC that he continues to watch progress on Starship.

“Yes, I have been following this all along and am excited for @SpaceX achieving this milestone! Can’t wait to see it fly!” Zurbuchen wrote in a tweet.

Musk replied to Zurbuchen in another tweet, touting the projected capabilities of Starship.

“Due to its size & ability to return science instruments even from deep space, Starship will enable a whole new class of science missions,” Musk wrote.

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Idaho Governor Brad Little urges residents to get vaccinated towards Covid

Idaho Governor Brad Little on Friday urged state residents to get vaccinated against Covid, citing concerns about the Delta variant and its potential to stifle economic progress.

“We’re just asking everyone to get vaccinated,” Little said on CNBC’s The Exchange.

Little said his biggest concern and “one of the most damaging things” to the economy would be if children don’t go to full-time school in the fall and parents stay at home with them. “This is going to slow the economy down, so we want the vaccination rate to go up and protect our Idaho citizens,” said Little, a Republican who took office in 2019. He was previously the lieutenant governor.

Idaho has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the country, with around 46% of residents 12 and older being fully vaccinated and nearly 51% receiving at least one dose, according to the state’s public health department. Both numbers are behind the national value.

In the US as a whole, 58% of Americans 12 and older are fully vaccinated, while 68% received at least one dose, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Half of the entire American population is now fully vaccinated against Covid, a White House official tweeted Friday, before the CDC released the data on its website.

The number of daily cases is also increasing in Idaho as the highly contagious Delta variant devastates largely unvaccinated parts of the country.

Little has refrained from imposing a nationwide mask mandate, although some counties and a dozen or so cities in Idaho have enacted local requirements to help contain the spread of the virus. At the end of May, Little repealed an executive order excluding mask mandates that Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin had issued while he was at a conference.

“I believe in empowering businesses and local governments to do the right thing,” Little told CNBC. “We are advocates of vaccination and do all health protocols to contain the spread, but we are very concerned about” the Delta variant.

Little said he hopes more residents who get vaccinated will demonstrate the benefits to those who are reluctant to get the vaccination. “Every day that goes by that more people are vaccinated and protected means their neighbors, friends, family members are aware,” he said.

Despite short-term Covid worries, Little said Idaho’s economic activity continued to be strong. He noted that Idaho’s population is one of the fastest growing in the United States

“We’re worried about the new line and some more positivity rates, but we have a great booming economy here right now,” he said.

Disney ‘must be ashamed’ for assertion in opposition to Scarlett Johansson

Scarlett Johansson stars as Natasha Romanoff, AKA Black Widow, in Marvel’s “Black Widow.”

Disney | Marvel

The president of the Screen Actor’s Guild on Friday slammed Disney for “bullying” Marvel actress Scarlett Johansson in a public statement it made about the “Black Widow” star’s lawsuit against the company last week.

Gabrielle Carteris said Disney “should be ashamed” of its “gender-shaming” tactics, which suggested that the actor had a “callous disregard” for the dangers of Covid-19 to the moviegoing public.

“Actors must be compensated for their work according to their contracts,” she said in a statement. “Scarlett Johansson is shining a white-hot spotlight on the improper shifts in compensation that companies are attempting to slip by talent as distribution models change.”

Carteris, whose organization represents around 160,000 actors, announcers, broadcast journalists and performers across the media space, said that no one in any field of work should “fall victim to surprise reductions in expected compensation.”

She said that SAG is deeply concerned by the “gendered tone” of Disney’s response.

“Women are not ‘callous’ when they stand up and fight for fair pay – they are leaders and champions for economic justice,” she said. “Women have been victimized by pay inequity for decades, and they have been further victimized by comments like those in Disney’s press statements. These sorts of attacks have no place in our society and SAG-AFTRA will continue to defend our members from all forms of bias.”

Johansson filed a lawsuit against the company late last week, claiming Disney had breached her contract when it released “Black Widow” on its streaming service Disney+ at the same time it debuted in theaters.

Like many Marvel veterans including Robert Downey Jr., Johansson negotiated to have a percentage of box-office receipts tacked on to her salary. This has become increasingly common with Marvel Cinematic Universe films because of their theatrical track record.

The streaming release of the film ate into box-office profits, though Disney reported “Black Widow” scored $60 million from sales on Disney+ during its opening weekend. Globally, the film has tallied just under $350 million in theatrical ticket sales, one of the lowest hauls of any Marvel film to date.

In her lawsuit, Johansson purports that the shift to offering “Black Widow” on Disney+, while predominantly done for the safety of the public, cost her a $50 million payout.

“Disney and other content companies are doing very well and can certainly live up to their obligations to compensate the performers whose art and artistry are responsible for the corporation’s profits,” SAG’s Carteris said Friday.

Disney responded to Johansson’s lawsuit last week, saying it had “no merit whatsoever” and “has fully complied with” her contract. The company also disclosed that the star had been paid $20 million and could see a cut from sales on Disney+. It is not typical for companies to share compensation information.

Mary J. Blige graces the duvet of InStyle Journal for the primary time

mary j blige

Get a girl! After decades in the game and on the covers of several magazines, Mary J. Blige is still making premieres. Today she celebrated her first cover for InStyle Magazine for their fashion issue. Mary looked flawless on the cover, wearing a brown plaid suit with bell bottoms and her signature blonde locks that looked amazing. She shared the cover on her Instagram page and thanked her team in a long post. Mary wrote: “IT’S BURNING TIME! This black woman finally got her first @ instylemagazine cover and a spread !!! # shhhhttttttttt #NewMusicOnTheWay #BossLady $ ** t ”

Mary shared six photos from the route, and she understood the task in every look. In one photo she was wearing a long black and white striped dress with gold earrings and a black baseball cap. Mary served her leg and thigh as her cleavage revealed her red heels. On her second look, Mary wore a caramel-colored two-piece Gucci ensemble with leather heels. If you know Mary’s style she always wears bamboo earrings, so of course she had them on.

The photographer got up close and personal on her third look while captured in a black leather hooded top. However, it was the last picture that served the heat. Mary looked very sexy, yet classy, ​​wearing animal print jumpsuit while lying on a brown couch. The roommates gave Mary their flowers and said Mary always serves in the comments. Many wrote “Yes, Auntie” and complimented her on her beauty.

One roommate commented, “Gucci is her signature look.” Another commented, “She deserved this cover a long time ago. Got it! “Mary J Blige was very active on social media and recently released her documentary” My Life “. Roommate, are you looking forward to new music from the singer?

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Tidal energy plant in Canada secures assist from Japanese corporations

Laszlo Podor | Moment | Getty Images

Two Japanese companies have entered into a joint development agreement with Ireland-based DP Energy to work on the initial stages of a tidal energy project in Canada.

In statements released earlier this week, Chubu Electric Power and Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha, or “K” Line, said the agreement related to the Uisce Tapa Tidal Energy project. The development is located at the Fundy Ocean Research Center for Energy in the Bay of Fundy, a bay between the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

Both Chubu Electric Power and “K” Line called it “the first tidal power project that a Japanese company will participate in overseas”.

According to DP Energy, the first phase of Uisce Tapa – Irish for “fast water” – revolves around three 1.5 megawatt turbines. The second aims to increase the capacity of the project to 9 MW.

Uisce Tapa is backed by a 15-year power purchase agreement with Nova Scotia Power Incorporated, which amounts to Canadian dollars 530 (approximately $ 422) per megawatt hour. It also benefits from a grant of approximately $ 30 million Canadian dollars from Natural Resources Canada.

In its announcement on Wednesday, DP Energy described the Bay of Fundy as “home to some of the highest tides in the world”. At the highest surface speed, the tidal currents are “capable of exceeding 10 knots” or 5 meters per second, he added.

Fisheries and Oceans Canada said the project is being considered for approval by Chubu Electric Power and “K” Line. If everything goes according to plan, the first turbine would go into operation in 2023, followed by two more in 2026.

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The news comes the same week that tidal energy company Nova Innovation said it was able to move ahead with a project focused on increasing the production of tidal turbines after receiving funding from the Scottish government.

The £ 2 million ($ 2.77 million) funding increase announced on Thursday will be used to support the Volume Manufacturing and Logistics for Tidal Energy project, also known as VOLT.

According to Nova, VOLT will “develop the first European assembly line for the mass production of tidal turbines” and also “test innovative techniques and tools to ship, deploy and monitor turbines around the world”.

Last week, another company, Orbital Marine Power, announced that its O2 turbine had started producing electricity on-grid at the European Marine Energy Center in Orkney, an archipelago north of mainland Scotland.

The 2 megawatt O2 is known as the “strongest tidal turbine in the world”, weighs 680 tons and is 74 meters long.

How Britney Spears tries to speed up Jamie’s exit as a restorer

TO UPDATE: Jamie Spears submitted court documents for discussion Britney Spears“Requested that her trial be brought forward because of her desire to remove her father as a restorer.

In documents from E! News on Friday August 5th, Jamie’s lawyer, Vivian ThoreenShe writes on his behalf that she sees no urgency in Britney’s motion, which was made by her lawyer. Mathew Rosengart. However, Vivian said she was not opposed to rescheduling the hearing from September 29 to August 23.

Vivian went on to say that they tend to oppose the removal of Jamie because he “has dutifully and faithfully served as curator of his daughter’s estate, without any flaws in his files.” Vivian cited Britney’s financial well-being and her sons’ visitation rights as evidence of his competence.

In the same court files, the lawyer also accused Jodie Montgomery testifying in a conversation on July 9th that Britney may need a 5150 stop because she was allegedly “out of control”.

In a statement to E! News, Jodie’s lawyer, Lauriann Wright, denied the allegations. She said in part: “Mr. Spears’ statement misrepresents what Ms. Montgomery said to him regarding a potential 5150 psychiatric detention for Ms. Spears. Ms. Montgomery has at no time told Mr. Spears that Ms. Spears is currently” in favor of one qualify for such a stop. “

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Britney Spears’ new legal team is taking further steps to remove Jamie Spears as the singer’s curator.

In court documents that E! August 5th news, Britney’s attorney Mathew Rosengart a motion to reschedule the September 29 hearing for the motion to remove Jamie as curator of the estate.

Frontier Airways would require staff to get vaccinated or frequently take Covid checks

Frontier Airlines planes.

Robert Alexander | Getty Images

Frontier Airlines on Friday said it will require employees to get vaccinated against Covid-19 or regularly provide proof of negative tests.

The announcement from the low-cost carrier came hours after United Airlines said all of its 67,000 U.S. employees must show proof of vaccination no later than Oct. 25, becoming the country’s first major carrier and one of the largest companies to take that step.

“As we continue to watch the rapid increase of new COVID-19 cases across the United States caused by the Delta variant, I am concerned for the well-being of our team members, their families and friends,” Frontier’s CEO Barry Biffle said in a news release.

Frontier said the majority of the airline’s workers have already been vaccinated.

The Denver-based airline blamed the delta variant on a drop in bookings over the past week that prompted it to lower its forecast for the third quarter.

United Airways would require all U.S. workers to be vaccinated, a primary for nation’s carriers

United Airlines will require its 67,000 U.S. employees to get vaccinated against Covid-19 by no later than Oct. 25 or risk termination, a first for major U.S. carriers that will likely ramp up pressure on rivals.

Hours after United’s announcement on Friday, discount carrier Frontier Airlines said its employees must be vaccinated by Oct. 1 or get frequently tested for Covid.

Airlines including United had resisted vaccine mandates for all workers, instead offering incentives like extra pay or time off to get inoculated. Delta Air Lines in May started requiring newly hired employees to show proof of vaccination. United followed suit in June.

United’s requirement is one of the strictest vaccine mandates from a U.S. company and one that includes employees who interact regularly with customers like flight attendants and gate agents.

U.S. companies such as Facebook announced employees have to prove that they have been vaccinated to return to the office. Others are requiring them for only for certain workers. Walmart, for example, said last week that it will be required for corporate staff, but not store or warehouse workers. Uber said U.S. office staff will need to be vaccinated to return to in-person work but stopped short of requiring them for drivers.

Meatpacker Tyson Foods said this week its 120,000 U.S. employees must be fully vaccinated this year, though some 56,000 already are, according to the company.

“We know some of you will disagree with this decision to require the vaccine for all United employees,” United CEO Scott Kirby and President Brett Hart said Friday in an employee note. “But, we have no greater responsibility to you and your colleagues than to ensure your safety when you’re at work, and the facts are crystal clear: everyone is safer when everyone is vaccinated.”

Kirby said in January he wanted to make Covid vaccines mandatory and that other companies should do the same.

Ending the Covid-19 pandemic is especially crucial for airlines, among the hardest-hit industries from the pandemic. While summer vacation bookings surpassed what most executives were expecting, the fast-spreading delta variant is starting to weigh on demand, Frontier Airlines said earlier this week.

“Over the last 16 months, Scott has sent dozens of condolences letters to the family members of United employees who have died from COVID-19,” the executives said. “We’re determined to do everything we can to try to keep another United family from receiving that letter.”

United Airlines employees must upload proof that they received two doses of Pfizer or Moderna vaccines or one dose of Johnson & Johnson’s single dose five weeks after federal officials give full approval to them or by Oct. 25, whichever is first, the executives said. Exceptions will be made for certain health issues or religious reasons, United said.

The mandate does not apply to regional airlines that fly shorter routes for United.

Many of United’s employees have already reported they have been vaccinated, including more than 90% of pilots and 80% of flight attendants, according to company officials. United didn’t disclose the company’s overall vaccination rate.

In comparison, about 60% of American Airlines’ pilots are vaccinated, according to an Aug. 5 letter to members from their union, the Allied Pilots Association, which encouraged aviators to get vaccinated.

United didn’t say what the company’s overall vaccination rate is.

The decision was partly driven by concerns about rises in Covid-19 cases last year during the fall and winter, company officials said.

The Air Line Pilots Association, which represents United’s more than 12,000 aviators, believes the mandate is legal. It said the “small number of pilots” who don’t agree with the policy or plan to remain unvaccinated should contact their chief pilot’s office.

Flight attendants’ labor union, the Association of Flight Attendants, urged cabin crew members to get vaccinated, after United’s announcement.

“COVID-19 is a threat,” the union told members. “There are proven strategies to mitigate that threat. Vaccination is necessary to end the pandemic and the health and economic harm it has caused.”

American Airlines, for its part, said it hasn’t changed its policy that encourages but doesn’t mandate vaccines for employees. Delta Air Lines said it is “strongly encouraging” workers to get vaccinated but isn’t mandating it for all of its employees, aside from new hires. More than 73% of its roughly 75,000 employees are vaccinated, it said.

Southwest Airlines didn’t say whether it plans to mandate vaccines but said there has been no change to its policy.