Every sport sees a constant evolution in the game, both in the caliber of athletes that play it and the style of play that maximize their abilities. In basketball, it’s been an embrace of pace and space, a phrase that has become a cliche of sorts to describe what teams want to do, running the floor and shooting three-pointers.
It’s the combination of the level of athleticism and skill that has become the baseline in the NBA these days, with players of all sizes capable of putting the ball on the floor and, most of them, also being able to shoot out to the three-point line (and well beyond it), and the embrace of analytics, which point to where the easiest and most efficient shots are to be taken at the rim and from three-point range. The change in how the game is played irks some former players, as evidenced by the constant gripes on shows like Inside the NBA that there are too many threes taken and not enough post ups.
However, for others like Kevin Garnett, who is much closer to his playing days than a Charles Barkley, they can recognize the immense amount of skill required to succeed in the modern NBA — in part because they paved the way for this radical change. Garnett recently did an interview with the New York Times in which he explained why he doesn’t think most players, not just bigs but even guards, from 20 years ago when he came into the league would struggle to find their way in today’s game.
The game is at another level. I know you said that you made the team with Vancouver, but I want you to get on a court, sprint corner to corner, stop on a dime and shoot a 3. I want you to do 10 of those. Then I want you to focus on how tired you are. Because these players do that for 48 minutes. I don’t think guys from 20 years ago could play in this game. Twenty years ago, guys used their hands to control players. Now you can’t use your hands. That makes defense damn near impossible. Can you imagine not hand-checking Michael Jordan? Naw. The fact that you can’t touch players gives the offensive player so much flexibility. Defensive players have to take angles away and stuff like that. But if you have any creativity and ambition, you can be a great offensive player in this league. The fadeaways, one-leg runners, the one-leg balance shots — that’s stuff that Dirk Nowitzki brought to our game. And now when I watch Joker play, it feels like he has taken that Dirkness and mixed it with his own talent. And Steph Curry revolutionized things with being able to shoot it from distance with such consistency. Klay Thompson. Dame Lillard. These guards changed the game. I don’t know if even the guards from 20 or 30 years ago could play in this time right here. It’s creative. It’s competitive. It’s saucy. You’ll get dropped! A [expletive] will cross you over and break your A.C.L. these days. The game is in a great place.
It’s always nice to hear former players give flowers to the current stars in the league rather than complain about how things are different, and Garnett, along with Allen Iverson, is among the best at doing so. That’s in part due to the fact that he saw this evolution happen during his career and only stepped off the court a few years ago, so he has seen it up close and seen how good all these guys are. It’s also just being able to see that different isn’t bad and also recognized that the differences separate players both ways. He mentions the lack of hand-checking, which is a common refrain from older players to disparage the lack of defense today, but Garnett notes how that allows for more offensive creativity and, in his words, have made the game “saucy.”
He’s not putting down his generation of players, but simply noting that the game has moved to an almost unrecognizable place, which isn’t a bad thing.
Keeping up with new music can be exhausting, even impossible. From the weekly album releases to standalone singles dropping on a daily basis, the amount of music is so vast it’s easy for something to slip through the cracks. Even following along with the Uproxx recommendations on a daily basis can be a lot to ask, so every Monday we’re offering up this rundown of the best new music this week.
This week saw Cardi B deliver her first drop of the year and Foo Fighters return with a long-awaited album. Yeah, it was a great week for new music. Check out the highlights below.
Cardi B — “Up”
“WAP” was one of the most talked-about singles of 2020, making it a tough act to follow. Now, though, months later, Cardi B has offered her first single since then: “Up” is a confident new tune with a wild video to match.
Hayley Williams — Flowers For Vases/Descansos
While Williams’ 2020 album Petals For Armor was preceded by an extensive promotional campaign, she kept things far more low-key for her latest effort. Flowers For Vases/Descansos was released last week and the effort arrived after just a few days of heads up and an intentionally “leaked” song.
Julien Baker — “Favor”
One way or another, the members of Boygenius seem to find a way to reunite. They all hopped on a Hayley Williams track last year, and now Baker recruited her supergroup bandmates Phoebe Bridgers and Lucy Dacus to join her on “Favor.” All that’s missing is Adrianne Lenker.
Polo G — “GNF (OKOKOK)”
Polo G enjoyed a strong 2020 (or as much as anybody could enjoy 2020, anyway) thanks to his album The Goat, which was so, so close to topping the charts. Now he’s ready to make an impact in 2021, a campaign he has kicked off with the nonchalant single “GNF (OKOKOK).”
Freddie Gibbs — “Gang Signs” Feat. Schoolboy Q
The headline of Gibbs’ 2020 was his album with the Alchemist, Alfredo. Now he has kicked off his 2021 with another collaboration, and this time, it’s “Gang Signs,” a smooth effort co-piloted by Schoolboy Q.
Vic Mensa — “Shelter” Feat. Wyclef Jean and Chance The Rapper
It’s been a good while since Chicago rappers Chance The Rapper and Vic Mensa teamed up on music together. They both appeared on early projects for each other about a decade ago, but now, all this time later, they’re back on the same song. The occasion that brings them together again is Mensa’s “Shelter,” which also boasts an appearance from Wyclef Jean.
Bobby Session and Megan Thee Stallion — “I’m A King”
Both halves of “WAP” has a big week. Aside from Cardi’s single, Megan Thee Stallion joined Bobby Session on the celebratory Coming 2 America cut “I’m A King.” On top of that, she and Ellen DeGeneres also donated $50,000 to a Houston nurse, so alongside Meg, that nurse also had a pretty strong week.
Pooh Shiesty — Shiesty Season
Pooh Sheisty, one of Gucci Mane’s most exciting 1017 Records signees, has arrived with his first project, Shiesty Season. The 21-year-old is often unaccompanied on the effort, but he makes the guest spots he does include count, as he secured spots from folks like Gucci, 21 Savage, and Lil Durk.
Vampire Weekend — 40:42 EP
“2021” (the song) clocks in at under two minutes and is the shortest song on Vampire Weekend’s 2019 album Father Of The Bride. Now, though, the group has expanded the track big time… or rather, they got some friends to do it. On their new 40:42 EP, they recruited Sam Gendel and Goose to record new versions of the song in their own styles and each new rendition runs for exactly 20:21.
Victoria Monét — “F.*.C.K.”
Relationships today aren’t the same as they were 20 years ago, a reality that Monét acknowledges on “F.*.C.K.,” which is short for “Friend U Can Keep.” She says of the tune, “‘F.*.C.K. is a nod to the millennial and gen Z mindset. We do not have to be confined to traditional commitment ideals, and instead, embody the freedom to be intimate when and with whom we mutually, please! I wanted to give that non-binding friendship intimacy an official name.”
Finneas — “American Cliché”
Finneas has a lot of success writing with his sister Billie Eilish and subsequently for other music stars, but he’s got plenty going on on his own, too. The latest output from his productive solo career is “American Cliché.” Interestingly, the upbeat tune was initially only meant to be performed live, but Finneas’ fans convinced him to record a proper studio version of it.
Foo Fighters — Medicine At Midnight
Dave Grohl and company had their new album finished about a year ago, but due to the pandemic, it took about another year for it to finally come out. After holding the project in for so long, Taylor Hawkins had an apt description for how it felt to finally release it: “[It felt] like taking a big huge sh*t. My stomach’s been hurting for a long time. Finally! A collective sigh of relief. We’ve finally got over our constipation.”
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
As Donald Trump‘s impeachment trial moves ahead in the Senate, the former president’s allies are justifiably concerned that he could face a “PR nightmare” if the trial spends too much time focusing on the deadly January 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol building following a Trump rally. Considering that’s the entire reason Trump was impeached in the first place, it’s going to be very difficult to avoid the topic, which is why his former advisor Steve Bannon has cautioned Trump’s supporters in the Senate.
“The Democrats have a very emotional and compelling case,” Bannon said to Politico. “They’re going to try to convict him in the eyes of the American people and smear him forever.” Obviously, the Capitol riot looks very bad for Trump considering it took place after he spoke to the crowd and told them to “fight like hell” while continuing to push the lie that the 2020 election was stolen. That’s why Trump’s current crop of lawyers will attempt to avoid the subject altogether, and instead, question the constitutionality of impeaching a president after he’s left office. Via Politico:
They also plan to argue that he did not engage in insurrection, saying his fiery speech on the ellipse of the White House was protected by the First Amendment, without indulging a lengthy discussion about what happened on Jan. 6.
“We don’t need to focus on Jan. 6 because this is unconstitutional,” said a person familiar with the strategy, who was not authorized to speak publicly. “There’s a lot of legal technical arguments that are going to be discussed.”
Despite the events of the Capitol riot implicating Trump, it is very likely that he will escape conviction in the Senate. Four Republican senators voted against having the trial, and at least 17 of them would have to vote with the Democrats to convict Trump. At this stage, the main goal for Trump’s team is to get the whole thing over with as quickly as possible.
“Just remember who had 7 rings first lol,” she wrote on Twitter this morning, a delightful way for pop fans to get in on the Super Bowl discourse. Brady’s latest Super Bowl win puts him in rare position as the only player in the league to achieve that many wins, but Monet’s joke asserts that he might’ve gotten there now, but she was already there. In the end, both the pop song and Brady are record-breaking elements of culture we’re lucky to be celebrating in a year that’s been sometimes disheartening so far. And hey, maybe Ariana will get a look for Super Bowl halftime performance soon too, it’s possible her and Brady could cross paths in the future after all.
Pink Sweats is just days away from the release of his debut album, Pink Planet. To further hype up his forthcoming album, today he released the latest single, “Heaven,” along with a music video. The surreal clip literally visualizes the album’s title, putting the Philadelphia singer on a literal pink planet — all the flora is light rose-tinted — while he’s surrounded by a group of frolicking men, women, and children all wearing matching jumpsuits.
Their celebration is interrupted by the arrival of a spaceship cruising down through the coral-colored clouds, ending the video on something of a cliffhanger. Sweats’ sci-fi themes have shot through plenty of his previous videos, including the ones for “I Know” and “Drama.” Meanwhile, the singer’s prolonged rollout has also included such singles as “17” and “Not Alright” from his The Prelude EP, as well as “At My Worst,” the vibrant soft-soul single to which he later added Bay Area singer Kehlani for the remix.
We’ll see if the Pink Planet narrative extends further when the album drops this Friday, 2/12, on Warner Records — just in time for Valentine’s Day. You can get tickets to the livestream release night concert here.
Watch the “Heaven” video above.
Pink Sweats is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
Earlier this week, Bob Odenkirk landed his fourth Golden Globe nomination for his work on Better Call Saul, and he was also nominated for the fourth time by the Screen Actors Guild, although both the Golden Globes and the SAGs frustratingly overlooked Rhea Seehorn’s brilliant performance as Kim Wexler once again. Seehorn, as always, remains a great sport, congratulating Bob Odenkirk and calling attention to his new puppies.
Speaking of Odenkirk’s pets, he was walking his dog when he learned of his Golden Globe nomination, and when Deadline caught up with him, Odenkirk stated that the “nomination is a reminder that there’s other people out there in the world, that we’re part of a community. We haven’t seen each other because there’s no get-togethers, there’s no awards and the benefit shows that you’re a part of, that are a big part of … this very social business. But even just getting the nomination reminds me that I’m in this community of people I like very much.”
Asked about the sixth and final season, Odenkirk also added, “I can’t wait for the fireworks, really. Our show is a bit of a slow burn over the past few years, and [Gilligan and Gould] build up. There’s certainly exciting moments throughout, but towards the end, it gets super supremely intense.”
“I think we’re going to learn things about the characters in Breaking Bad that we didn’t know. We’re going to learn things about the events of Breaking Bad that we didn’t know,” Gould said. “We’re going to learn things about the fates of a lot of these characters that may surprise people or certainly throw them into a different light.”
That’s not official confirmation that Kim Wexler will be a part of the Breaking Bad timeline, but it’s pretty damn close.
On November 7, four days after the 2020 presidential election, Rudy Giuliani held a press conference not at the Four Seasons hotel, which would make sense, but at Four Seasons Total Landscaping, Philadelphia’s soon-to-be most famous landscaping business next to a sex shop. How the heck did that happen? The short answer is: “Giuliani.” The longer answer will be provided in the still-untitled doc, which “will give a firsthand account of the rollercoaster journey that one well-meaning small business in Philadelphia went through when they agreed to host a political press conference in the midst of the most hard-fought American election in recent history.”
Christopher Stoudt has directed a feature documentary about Four Seasons Total Landscaping, the Philadelphia-based small business that gained notoriety after Rudy Giuliani held an impromptu and chaotic press conference to discuss then-President Donald Trump’s planned legal challenges to the election ballot-counting process… The film will include interviews with key executives of Four Seasons Total Landscaping, including owner Marie Siravo and director of sales Sean Middleton.
Stoudt, who was nominated for an Emmy for his documentary Lost LA: Descanso Gardens, should have no problem getting Rudy to sit down for an interview. Clearly.
A few notes before we begin our discussion about the 2021 Super Bowl commercials
As in previous years, we will utilize a “good/bad/ugly” format to break them down, with a focus on the more notable spots as opposed to a discussion of every single one of them
We will be grading on a curve here, mostly because even the “good” Super Bowl commercials are usually a little corny in a “they’re trying to reach everyone from Generation Z to your great aunt Bernice and something gets lost in translation” kind of way, but also because you never want to be the “everything sucks, I hate it” guy if you don’t have to
Whatever, it’s my list, leave me alone and make your own list if you’re so great
Here we go.
THE GOOD
Dan Levy murders a candy
I do not know or particularly want to investigate what it says about me on a deeply personal level that I love when the M&M commercials get dark like this. It was always weird to me that we turned a food into an adorable little guy with feeling and a personality. I like that they address the implications of that decision head-on. It’s disturbing but I love it. Take it further, I say. Show me television’s Dan Levy biting it one as it screams. Don’t shy away now, M&Ms. You started this.
Space things
Big year for space. My favorite of the two was the Inspiration4 ad, not so much for the content of it as because it is funny to picture hopping in a time machine and jetting back to like 1972 and explaining “so, in 2021, in the middle of a pandemic that’s been raging for a year, there will be a Super Bowl commercial for an all-civilian trip to space.” Really think about how you’d paint that picture. It’s fun.
Also fun? Pretend that commercial and this one…
… are connected and we just leave a spaceship full of regular-ass people floating around the cosmos because we got distracted by potato chips.
The singing Oatly man
What I like about this commercial, which was very divisive for many but a total delight for me, is that it implies one of two things:
The CEO of Oatly is a prankster and thought, correctly, that it would be really funny to waste millions in advertising dollar to get an awful song stuck in America’s head
The CEO of Oatly pitched this commercial earnestly and no one he works with had the heart/authority to stop him and it all kind of spiraled out of control until we got here
Either way: perfect.
The Cheetos “good for Shaggy for still cashing checks’ one
I pulled a 180 on this one between when it was released last week and when it aired during the game. My first reaction was “Who in the world — specifically, like I want names — asked for any of this?” But then I watched it again between the in-game action and suddenly I was half-charmed. Good for Shaggy, still cashing his “It Wasn’t Me” checks. Man probably put an addition on his house with this payday. We should all be so lucky.
I don’t know why but I will hear this from Lenny Kravitz only
This commercial should have been mystical garbage. If you just read a transcription of the voiceover, or had almost any other celebrity deliver it, you would have rolled your eyes so hard that the momentum kept them spinning in their sockets like little slot machines. Somehow, though, it worked with Lenny Kravitz. I, like, believed him about us all being billionaires. I would believe him about anything, I think. I would probably buy a boat from him if he told me buying a boat would “free up my energy,” whatever that means. I don’t even like the water. I’m sure it’s fine.
[fans self furiously]
The nice thing about this Sultry Alexa ad is that it allows me to tell my favorite story again. When I saw Black Panther in the theater, in a packed house, during the scene where Killmonger fights T’Challa and Michael B. Jordan takes off his shirt, a woman a few rows in front of me unleashed an “oh my God” that was so low and guttural that it kind of sounded like it escaped her body without her permission. It was great. I miss seeing movies in theaters.
Screw you, Norway
Fine. Good. A solid use of everyone’s time and effort. Moving along.
I’m including the Doritos one only because of the thing where Marshawn Lynch says “beast up on them boys, Archie”
“Beast up on them boys, Archie.”
This sentence lives inside my head now. I suspect it will stay there forever. Like, I could be on my deathbed hopefully many decades from now and out of nowhere I might mutter it. It could very well end up being the last words I ever speak. I’m weirdly okay with that.
THE BAD
This was cute, I guess, but it shoulda been Muppets
It is much more fun to picture this commercial with some collection of Chaos Muppets — Gonzo, Animal, Swedish Chef, etc. — just wreaking havoc in the background while Daveed Diggs attempts to sing. To be fair, you could say the same thing about every commercial on this list. Put the Muppets in a Super Bowl commercial next year. Put them in all the commercials. Let Statler and Waldorf call the game. Let Kermit sing the National Anthem. Let Dr. Teeth do the halftime show. I need to stress here that I am not joking.
Dolly no
This commercial placed me in a tricky spot. On one hand, it is my position that Dolly Parton is a top-five living American and top 10-15 all-time. It physically pains me to criticize her. On the other hand, taking a song about the Working Man and using it to promote starting a side hustle in your non-work hours — hence, 5 to 9 instead of 9 to 5 — feels… gross. You are now working 9 to 9 because your full-time job doesn’t pay your bills adequately. I hate it. Work stinks. We should not be promoting doing more of it. Ugh. Let’s never talk about this again.
Why are all our celebrities flat now?
This was the weirdest trend of the night. McConaughey and Jason Alexander just flat as can be, for various reasons and various products. I did not like it. Especially the Jason Alexander one. Shirts should not react to the things that happen to them. It’s weird. Less of this.
Do not encourage Boston, please
Another tough spot for me, personally. I very much support both anarchy and wild animals running amok in a large metropolitan area, so some goof releasing the Budweiser Clydesdales and watching them turn into Demon Stallions that are hellbent on destruction should be right up my alley. But, I’m sorry, I am sad to report I cannot support it. There are simply too many Boston things these days. We need fewer Boston things. I will revisit this stance for a Ben Affleck Dunkin commercial, though. An earnest one, dead serious, with him looking straight into the camera, where he just says how much he likes their iced coffee. But that’s it.
Come on, Robinhood
I’m sure this ad was in production long before GameStop and Reddit heaved its entire business into a tornado, but I still wish Robinhood had acknowledged the whole thing in some way. Maybe a tendies-based partnership with Popeyes. Maybe they reveal that the Popeyes Lady made $5 million hosing short sellers in a series of furious day trades. Like, we cut to a dark basement and she’s down there hunched over a glowing screen and clicking 100 times per minute and cackling like a supervillain as she sends, like, Circuit City’s stock through the roof. I’m just spitballing here. Could work.
I do not think I needed a Mayo Fairy
This all seems extremely on the nose in a way that makes me uncomfortable. Pass.
THE UGLY
This was depressing on a deeply existential level
This year, in 2021, almost 30 years after Wayne’s World came out, Mike Myers and Dana Carvey (and Cardi B, for some reason) got together to spoof the scene from the movie where they spoof selling out, but for a real and actual Super Bowl commercial. Think about that. Or maybe don’t. It is really all quite depressing once you look closely at a single layer of it, let alone all the layers. Why would they do this to me, personally? Someone should have stopped them. Where is Tia Carrere when you need her?
No
Hmm. Gross.
I cannot in good faith support the Bud Light Extended Universe
I do not like the idea of spokespeople of yore banding together in the present. It’s bad enough that almost every commercial during the game pulled the nostalgia strings for actual artistic projects you once enjoyed, now they’re during it for commercials, too. No. No thank you. Do not do this again please, unless it’s for Budweiser proper and you bring back the frogs. Those guys were okay.
And while I’m at it…
… if I understand this commercial correctly, there was a fictional universe where lemons rained from the heavens and caused bodily harm and property damage all over the world, and Bud Light responded by using the lemons to flavor a beverage. Isn’t that, like, the last thing you’d want after your brother died in a blizzard of falling citrus? I get that it was all in service of a silly little “when life gives you lemons” joke, but if someone offered me a lemon-flavored beverage a week after, like, my brother died in a blizzard of falling citrus, I think I would consider it in poor taste at the very least.
DMX has been on the comeback trail since his release from prison, with a rumored album in the works and a few successful media appearances over the past two years, including his fan-favorite Verzuz battle with Snoop Dogg. He also toured with Three 6 Mafia and Bone-Thugs-N-Harmony in 2019 before making sure he focused on his sobriety and health later that year. While 2020 saw a slowdown in his promotional efforts, in 2021 he’s once again talking about his new music, most recently on NORE’s Drink Champs podcast, where he revealed a few intriguining tidbits about his upcoming album — namely, who it features.
Given how much the sound of mainstream rap has changed since the days DMX reigned over the charts with his best work, choosing complementary-sounding features would seem like a lot of work. However, thanks to the rise of a few ’90s-influenced, street-centric names in the last couple of years, DMX has seemingly found the perfect partners-in-rhyme to aid his comeback: Griselda Records’ Benny, Conway, and Westside Gunn, and Pop Smoke. He reveals as much in the teaser for the forthcoming episode of Drink Champs, telling NORE, “I got the Griselda boys. Pop Smoke. That’s what type of new I’m doing,” although he confirms that he never got to meet Pop Smoke in person.
Don Bay has been in the citrus business for over 50 years now, and according to him, his most recent growing endeavor has been the most challenging. Alongside his son Darren and grandson Luke, Don cultivates Sumo Citrus®, one of the most difficult fruits to grow. The Bay family runs San Joaquin Growers Ranch in Porterville, California, one of the farms where the fruit is grown in the United States.
Sumo Citrus was originally developed in Japan, and is an extraordinary hybrid of mandarin, pomelo and navel oranges.
The fruit is temperamental, and it can take time to get a thriving crop. The trees require year-round care, and it takes five years from seed to fruit until they’re ready for harvest. Thanks to expert citrus growers like the Bay family though, Sumo Citrus have flourished in California. Don and his son Darren worked together through trial and error to perfect their crop of Sumo Citrus. Darren is now an expert on cultivating this famously temperamental fruit, and his son Luke is learning from him every step of the way.
Don, Darren and Luke BayAll photos courtesy of Sumo Citrus
“Luke’s been involved as early as he could come out,” Darren said in a YouTube video.
“Having both my son and grandson [working with me] is basically what I’ve dreamt about,” said Don. “To have been able to develop this orchard and have them work on it and work with me — then I don’t have to do all the work.”
Down the road from the Bay farm, Kellie Neufield’s family turned empty farmland into a thriving Sumo Citrus crop in just six years. They’ve spent every week during those six years tirelessly working on it and watching it grow. “Sumo Citrus is what we’re leaving behind,” Kellie said in a video. “It’s what we’re leaving to our kids.”
The pride she feels for what she’s built with and for her family is palpable.
Kellie Neufield (center) and her daughters
Kellie wasn’t always a farm girl. Born in Orange County, she didn’t get introduced to farm life until she met her husband at college. He grew up on a farm, and once they got married, he showed her the ropes. Together they have 35 years of experience growing citrus between them and relish the steps it takes to bring Sumo Citrus to market, especially harvest time.
“Harvest is the most exciting time,” said Kellie. “I let my kids miss school, we come out here, I bring donuts and cookies for the pickers.” Each fruit is handpicked and laid in bins rather than tossed in large carts to keep them in prime shape for market. It’s a laborious job, but Kellie and her family wouldn’t have it any other way. They’re determined to protect their product from harvest to market.
Julie Imbimbo of Strathmore, CA has also made growing Sumo Citrus a lifetime endeavor, even when life got particularly hard. She worked on the farm at Paradise Acres with her husband until 2015 when he passed away from cancer. Even after he was gone, she continued cultivating without him, determined to keep his contribution alive.
Julie Imbimbo
“It was extremely important to me that this was his legacy,” Julie said in a YouTube video. “It broke my heart that he never got to see [his fruit] being harvested. I made the decision. This was going to be my life. And our life. And my connection with him.”
This love, care and dedication go into each Sumo Citrus you find at the store. It’s why the mandarin hybrid with a knot on the top has garnered a sizable following from citrus fans. Not only is it delicious and easy to eat, but there’s no mess, so you can take it with you wherever you go and not worry about a juice explosion.
If you’re looking to develop a healthy snacking habit, there’s no better moment. Sumo Citrus is only in season from January through April, so now’s the time to stock up. Start the new year right with an enormous, super-sweet fruit like nothing else out there, grown by people who’ve dedicated their lives to perfecting it.
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