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Bon Iver, Leon Bridges, Willow, And More Will Play At Day In Day Out 2023

Day In Day Out festival is set to return to Seattle this summer. Taking the stage at Fisher Green Pavilion at Seattle Center are several promising acts.

Bon Iver, Leon Bridges, Willow, Alex G, are some of the names set to play. Singer and Euphoria actor Dominic Fike will also perform, as well as instrumental band, Explosions In The Sky. The latter will perform their entire third studio album, The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place, in its entirety.

Also on the bill are Yaeji, Ethel Cain, Surf Curse, BadBadNotGood, Indigo De Souza, Nation Of Language, and Emumclaw.

“We will be on stage with guitar and other instruments at @dayindayoutfest this summer,” said Emumclaw with other people who also play music and such come see us standing up.”

Several DJs — including Maxwell Edison, Mimi Zima, Chinese American Bear, and Sea Lemon — will be performing sets.

Day In Day Out will take place Saturday, August 12 and Sunday, August 13. Tickets are available for purchase here. Show times and daily performance schedules are set to be announced soon.

You can check out the full lineup below.

Surf Curse is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Who Is One Award Away From An EGOT?

After the Grammy Awards were held last weekend, Viola Davis made major headlines after she won an award for the audiobook of her memoir, Finding Me.

Davis, who is now the latest entry into the acclaimed EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony) hall-of-fame, might have other fans wondering how many of their favorite celebs are just one more award shy away of joining her next.

Only 18 performers have achieved this feat, with Richard Rogers being the first to do so in 1962 per Variety. Since then, Mike Nichols, Whoopi Goldberg, Helen Hayes, Marvin Hamlisch, Robert Lopez, Jennifer Hudson, Andrew Lloyd Webber, John Legend, Rita Moreno, Audrey Hepburn, and more have entered the exclusive club.

Here is the full list of people that are currently alive and one award away from achieving an EGOT. (Hint: Some of the entries include surprising musicians.)

Grammy:

Ellen Burstyn
Jeremy Irons
Jessica Lange
Frances McDormand
Helen Mirren
Al Pacino
Vanessa Redgrave
Geoffrey Rush
Maggie Smith

Oscar:

Dick Van Dyke
Cynthia Erivo
Anne Garefino
Hugh Jackman
John Kander
Alex Lacamoire
Cyndi Lauper
Katrina Lenk
Audra McDonald
Bette Midler
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Cynthia Nixon
Trey Parker
Ben Platt
Billy Porter
Ari’el Stachel
Marc Shaiman
Bill Sherman
Matt Stone
Charles Strouse
Lily Tomlin
David Yazbek

Tony:

Adele
Julie Andrews
Burt Bacharach
Alan Bergman
Cher
Common
Eminem
Michael Giacchino
Ludwig Göransson
Brian Grazer
Hildur Guðnadóttir
H.E.R.
Ron Howard
Kristen Anderson-Lopez
Paul McCartney
James Moll
Randy Newman
Trent Reznor
Atticus Ross
Martin Scorsese
Ringo Starr
John Williams
Kate Winslet

Emmy:

Joel Grey
Elton John
Justin Paul
Benj Pasek
Bruce Springsteen

Some of the artists mentioned here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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McDonald’s assistant manager dubbed ‘Mama McDonalds’ helps struggling teen get into college

Unconditional positive support in your teen years can be life-changing, and it’s something many teens take for granted. But 18-year-old Emanuel Graham didn’t always have that luxury until he started working at McDonald’s. Yes, the fast food chain.

By the time Graham was 13, he had lost both of his parents and found himself without the parental support he needed to thrive. “After those years, I kept messing up in school because both of my biggest support systems, they were gone,” he told CBS. Graham went on to say, “I didn’t even think I’d make it to college—or senior year.”

That’s a lot of pressure for a teen to face alone, but while in high school, Graham started working at his local McDonald’s in Lynn, Massachusetts, where he met assistant manager Andrea De La Rosa. Turns out he was in for much more than a job because De La Rosa became a mentor and one of the adults cheering in Graham’s corner.

“When he came to me and said he wanted to apply [to college], I sat him down and we filled out applications on my lunch break,” De La Rosa told McDonald’s Corporate.


The teen gave De La Rosa the nickname “Mama McDonald’s” because she makes it a point to be there for her young employees. She even goes as far as to answer their late-night calls, as well as helping them with homework and their college applications.

“You never stop being a mother just because they’re not your kids,” De La Rosa told CBS. And thanks to Mama McDonald’s’ help, Graham is now a student at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, studying business.

Graham isn’t the only one who finds the support De La Rosa gives to be valuable. During an interview with CBS, one young employee said, “I don’t have a good relationship with my mother. Andrea gives me the mother figure that I never had.”

It seems that De La Rosa is leaving her impact on every teen that comes to work in her McDonald’s. Though Graham no longer works with the manager while he attends school, he says she continues to check in on him often to make sure he has what he needs.

“Every child deserves to have a parent or someone standing in their corner, the kids are our future and if they get the right push they can exceed and excel in life,” said De La Rosa to McDonald’s Corporate.

See the sweet interactions below:

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Church of England is considering switching to gender-neutral pronouns for God

Is God male? Female? Both? Neither? In Christian scripture, the answer is not so cut and dried. God is often referred to as the Heavenly Father who created man in “his” image. At the same time, other parts of the Bible contradict that notion, indicating that God is equal parts masculine and feminine, being the sum total and creator of all things. One could also say that God is neither male nor female, again considering that, in being everything, God is not limited to what distinguishes humans from one another.

It’s because of this nuance that the Church of England announced that it would be considering dropping the use of “he” and “him” and instead adopting gender-neutral pronouns.

According to The Guardian, the Rt. Rev. Dr. Michael Ipgrave, Bishop of Lichfield and vice-chair of the commission behind this change, argues that while this breaks traditional teachings, the church had already been “exploring the use of gendered language in relation to God for several years.”

church of england

The project comes in response to Rev. Joanna Stobart, vicar of Ilminster and Whitelackington in Somerset, who asked the synod to provide an “update on the steps being taken to develop more inclusive language” used in prayer, especially for those who “wish to use authorized liturgy and speak of God in a non-gendered way.”

While specifics of this campaign remain unclear, there has already been pushback, particularly at the possibility of removing the term “Our Father” from The Lord’s Prayer. The Telegraph reported that the Rev. Dr. Ian Paul asserted that it would change the messaging to something not “grounded in the scriptures”.

“‘Father’ can’t be substituted by ‘Mother’ without changing meaning, nor can it be gender-neutralized to ‘parent’ without loss of meaning,” he said.

Still, a spokesperson for the Church of England countered, “This is nothing new. Christians have recognized since ancient times that God is neither male nor female, yet the variety of ways of addressing and describing God found in scripture has not always been reflected in our worship.” This interest in exploring new language is therefore a way to further align values.

While the concept of using gender-neutral language might be relatively new for English speakers, other languages around the world have used non-gendered pronouns for centuries. English itself is a language comprised of several mother tongues and is constantly evolving—hence why it has so much variety. So perhaps this change is merely an example of what the English language naturally does, what it has always done.

Either way, it’s an interesting example of how language is merely a tool to put a name to that which is intangible—a tool that can change depending on its purpose. In this case, it’s being used to define arguably the most intangible thing in the universe.

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Pile Treat Fans To An Experimental Track About Conspiracy Theories On Their New Song ‘Lowered Rainbow’

Pile returned with a music video for their new song, “Lowered Rainbow,” ahead of the band’s All Fiction album dropping next week.

Blending a psychedelic instrumental with some dark lyricism that raises the tension of the track, even the band members felt it differed from their previous releases. It also has some incredibly abstract sketched-out visuals that match the song’s vibe.

“Musically, this one took a bunch of different shapes before it landed the way it did on the record,” lead singer Rick Maguire shared in a statement. “The structure of the song didn’t really change much from when it was written so most of the alterations made were textural, and we pushed it further than a lot of other songs we have. Lyrically, it’s about cults, conspiracy theories, and the trend toward increasingly imaginative beliefs about reality.”

On the same day of their album’s release, Pile will also be embarking on a global tour that kicks off in Philly — with additional dates scattered throughout the fall.

Watch Pile’s music video for “Lowered Rainbow” above. Below, find their complete list of forthcoming tour dates.

02/27 — Philadelphia, PA @ PhilaMOCA
02/28 — Philadelphia, PA @ PhilaMOCA
03/01 — Ridgewood, NY @ TV Eye
03/02 — Ridgewood, NY @ TV Eye
03/03 — Somerville, MA @ Arts at the Armory
03/08 — Lille, FR @ La Bulle Café
03/10 — Paris, FR @ Supersonic
03/12 — Barcelona, ES @ Razzmatazz
03/13 — Madrid, ES @ Moby Dick
03/14 — Lisbon, PT @ ZDB
03/15 — Porto, PT @ Maus Hábitos
03/16 — San Sebastian, ES @ Dabadaba
03/19 — Bologna, IT @ Freakout club
03/20 — Milan, IT @ Circolo Arci Bellezza
03/21 — Zürich, CH @ Rote Fabrik
03/22 — Bochum, DE @ Die Trompete
03/23 — Amsterdam, NL @ Doka
03/24 — Antwerpen, BE @ Trix
03/26 — Malmö, SE @ Plan B
03/27 — Berlin, DE @ Badehaus
03/29 — Groningen, NL @ Vera
03/31 — London, UK @ 9294
04/01 — Birmingham, UK @ Castle and Falcon
04/02 — Leeds, UK @ Brudenell Social Club
04/03 — Glasgow, UK @ Stereo
04/04 — Manchester, UK @ Soupkitchen
04/05 — Bristol, UK @ Exchange
04/06 — Brighton, UK @ Green Door Store
09/08 — Portland, ME @ SPACE Gallery
09/10 — Rochester, NY @ Big Jar
09/12 — Toronto, ON @ Horseshoe Tavern
09/13 — Detroit, MI @ El Club
09/17 — Minneapolis, MN @ Turf Club
09/19 — Missoula, MT @ Zoo Town Arts
09/21 — Seattle, WA @ Tractor Tavern
09/22 — Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios
09/26 — San Francisco, CA @ Cafe Du Nord
10/01 — San Diego, CA @ Soda Bar
10/02 — Phoenix, AZ @ Rebel Lounge
10/06 — Denton, TX @ Andy’s Bar
10/09 — Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall
10/11 — New Orleans, LA @ Gasa Gasa
10/16 — Richmond, VA @ Richmond Music Hall

All Fiction is out 2/17 via Exploding In Sound. Pre-order it here.

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Central Cee Shares His Romantic New Single ‘Me And You’ Just In Time For Valentine’s Day

Buzzy London star Central Cee is back with a new love song. Known for viral hits, like the ode to rapper Doja Cat appropriately titled “Doja,” Cench is one of the biggest acts in the UK drill scene. On the new drill-infused track called “Me And You,” Cench and his lady are the envy of everyone.

Over romantic synths and a sample of Donell Jones’ “Shorty Got Her Eyes On Me,” Cench hypes himself up as quite the ladies man, letting a special woman know the perks that come with being by his side.

“You ain’t gotta worry ’bout nobody else, it’s me and you / Bought you a bag, now that guy’s askin’ what I see in you / Put you on the ‘Gram, now they wanna take pics like me and you,” he raps on the song’s chorus.

The song shows off more of Cench’s romantic side. In an interview with Rolling Stone last year, he described himself as a “hopeless romantic,” however, he prioritizes music first.

“A relationship is like a career, innit? It takes dedication,” said Cench. “Because I’m so focused on my career and my life situation, I can’t really put too much time into a relationship, or anything like that.”

Check out “Me And You” above.

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We’re Picking Winners For Super Bowl LVII

The 2022 NFL season culminates with Super Bowl LVII on Sunday evening in Glendale, with the Kansas City Chiefs taking on the Philadelphia Eagles on the sport’s biggest stage. After two weeks of build-up following Championship Sunday, everyone is simply ready for kick-off and, in this space, we are basking in the glow of a guaranteed winning season after a 4-0 performance on the last card. Granted, the Super Bowl is a different animal (make sure to line shop!!!!), and we’ll get to our picks momentarily.

First, though, a look at the full-season effort.

  • Championship Sunday: 4-0
  • 2022 Season: 56-44-2

Come get these winners.

Chiefs and Eagles combine for UNDER 5.5 sacks — DraftKings

There is a lot of buzz about both pass rushes, and with good reason. Philadelphia has a historic mark with more than 70 sacks this season, and Kansas City was a top-three team in sacks. As such, this number is inflated. Then, Patrick Mahomes is (very) adept at avoiding sacks, and Hurts can get us home on the other side behind two quality offensive lines.

Dallas Goedert longest reception OVER 18.5 yards — FanDuel

From a trend standpoint, Goedert beat this more than half the time in the regular season, and I’m a fan of his YAC ability. Kansas City doesn’t always have best tackling room and, crucially, this is the best number I’ve seen in the market as of Thursday evening.

Kadarius Toney Over 25.5 receiving yards — PointsBet

This is a talent bet more than anything. Toney was an early exit from the AFC title game with injury, but without Mecole Hardman to stretch things out with speed, Toney is important here. One catch could do it, and this is the best number available in the market.

Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles UNDER 24.5 points in the first half — Widely available

This is the consensus number after an uptick in the full-game total. I would lean under there also, but prefer the first half. Philadelphia’s defense is very stout and should be able to key on Travis Kelce to make things a little more difficult on Mahomes. I also buy KC’s defense more than the market does, and there could be some #nerves at the outset.

Kansas City Chiefs (+1.5) over Philadelphia Eagles — Widely available

I feel obligated to give out the side, so here we are. Fundamentally, this is a bet on Patrick Mahomes, as most would acknowledge Philadelphia has the deeper, more complete roster. It’s a principle to simply take Mahomes as an underdog, though, and the Chiefs are undervalued on defense right now. This isn’t a huge edge by any means, but go Chiefs.

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Breaking Down All The Ways Kevin Durant Makes The Suns Better

NBA fortunes and outlooks move swiftly. A week ago, the Phoenix Suns were floundering without Devin Booker and trounced by the Atlanta Hawks, 132-100, at home on national television. A week later, Booker is back in the lineup after a six-week absence because of a groin injury, Phoenix has won three in a row and sits fourth in the West, and superstar wing Kevin Durant is en route to the Valley.

Late Wednesday night, ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported the Suns were acquiring Durant and TJ Warren in exchange for Mikal Bridges, Cameron Johnson, Jae Crowder, four first-round picks and a 2028 first-round swap.

The move instantly shifts Phoenix from a middling Western Conference club jockeying for homecourt advantage to among the West’s elite. Averaging 29.7 points (67.3 percent true shooting), 6.7 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 1.5 blocks per game, Durant’s performed like an MVP candidate when healthy this season. He’s one of the five or so best players in the league and amidst the first year of a four-year, $194 million deal.

Phoenix will probably be shaky until Durant returns from a sprained MCL post-All-Star Break, but the West’s jumbled nature is a boon for its ability to stay afloat in the interim. When the 13-time All-Star does eventually don Suns purple and orange, his widespread talent will be an obvious windfall. More than that, though, his specific skillset addresses many needs that confronted Phoenix during its last two playoff defeats.

Broadly, the team relied far too much on Chris Paul’s pick-and-roll creation, which was stunted by the Dallas Mavericks last year and the Milwaukee Bucks two years ago. Rangy defenders took away his pull-up jumpers and passing windows. The pockets of space he covets and exploits dissipated. Both teams exploited his insufficient lateral movement defensively and attacked him in space on or off the ball. The Suns didn’t have a better option and needed to squeeze whatever offensive juice it could from his game, so it tried to weather his shortcomings.

Dallas’ exquisite hedging on Booker’s patented handoffs bothered him over the second half of the 2022 Western Conference Semifinals as well. Phoenix was left to keep trusting him because the alternative, Paul, could barely handle on-ball work at that juncture in the series. Booker’s a very good scorer and playmaker, but has gaps in his arsenal and the Mavericks pinpointed them.

Durant remedies those conundrums. Booker is not the lone legitimate creator anymore, nor is he the leading one; containing his DHOs will be second on the to-do list moving forward. Bridges is a stupendous role player, but the emphasis to bestow him grander on-ball duties this year stemmed from previous failures and spoke to the roster’s offensive limitations, though he displayed considerable progress the past few months.

Paul, who remains a brilliant passer, can drift into an even larger table-setter role and avoid being tasked with full-fledged initiating. He’s hoisting catch-and-shoot threes at his highest rate (11.9 percent) since NBA.com started tracking them in 2013-14 and has netted a sizzling 54.5 percent of them. His overall three-point rate this year (.400) is only exceeded by his two seasons with the Houston Rockets. As he presumably steps aside for Durant and Booker against stingy playoff defenses and continues to age, that subtle growth is worth monitoring.

Flowing off of pindowns, veer actions, ram screens, and other off-ball actions, Durant excels beginning possessions away from the play before commandeering things. Booker is similar. They’re by no means a one-to-one comparison, but there is undoubtedly significant overlap in some of their tendencies and deployment. Durant’s history operating alongside proficient off-ball scorers in Kyrie Irving and Stephen Curry should accelerate his tango with Booker a bit. His own on-ball talents will enable Booker to be selective in his creation reps whereas Paul’s issues against Dallas and Milwaukee in the playoffs stripped away that optionality.

Much like ancillary cogs in Bridges or Paul were prone to let Booker boogie off the ball before punctuating possessions, Royce O’Neale and Ben Simmons often served a similar purpose for Durant. The two star scorers love operating on the move, most notably around pindown screens, and leveraging their high release point against mismatches. That transition will be seamless for Durant and the Suns as they become accommodated with one another’s inclinations.

Not only that, but he’s well-versed in operating out of Chicago action, Delay series, and Wide action. The Suns and Nets trust their bigs to facilitate these sets. Whereas Booker typically functioned as the handoff/screen recipient, Durant has the size and shooting chops to replace Bridges or Johnson as his pick man. Of course, he’ll fill Booker’s role regularly, but there’s a duality to his prowess. While he’s not the movement shooter of Johnson, his off-the-bounce jazz is far superior. The ethos of how Phoenix and Brooklyn utilize them are similar, albeit not identical in arrangement.

Durant eases the burden for Booker and Paul, and exponentially heightens the potency of this offense. That much is evident. He’s also comfortable fading into a smaller designation and enhancing sets with his off-ball game akin to Bridges and Johnson. Due to the sheer fact he is unable to be two players at once, he won’t mitigate the entirety of their departures. That said, he’s primed to periodically assume their jobs as floor-spacers, screeners, cutters, and secondary ball-handlers. He’s cozy working from the corner and reading defenses, a la Bridges. He’s a dynamite spot-up threat (98th percentile in points per possession, per Synergy), a la Johnson. He can puncture reckless closeouts as a driver or pull-up sniper, a la Bridges and Johnson. Booker and Paul will still garner their touches. When they do, Durant’s value won’t be erased. He’ll plug a hole elsewhere.

I’m curious to see how much of Bridges’ secondary scoring usage he gleans, given their commonalities as lanky wings with high release points and deft midrange touch. Bridges saw a good deal of focal point opportunities spearheading bench-heavy units. Those opportunities could be Durant’s in an array of manners, as well as posting mismatches like Booker and Bridges are known to do.

His potential as weakside release valve, popper in Double Drag and early offense angle pick-and-roll screener for Paul entice me. Bridges performed all three responsibilities. The nuance and timing of these plays were qualities Bridges mastered. It may be a bit before Durant settles in as snugly as Bridges did. He also has a much bigger margin for error in certain regards because he’s an all-time great.

Durant is a simple fit in so much of the Suns’ base schematic principles. They love to run sets from the elbows and out of Horns, areas in which he’s experienced. A bunch of Spain pick-and-roll variations are in the playbook. Aforementioned actions like Double Drag, Delay, and Chicago are mainstays; Durant is fluent there.

Exit screens as a primary choice or to grease up Paul-Deandre Ayton pick-and-rolls are common. To what degree can Booker or Durant emulate Johnson and Bridges as a movement shooter in those situations? Surely, opponents will worry as much about them as they did Johnson and Bridges. At least, that’s the hope for Phoenix, though not a make-or-break component of this partnership’s success by any stretch.

The former MVP also provides sought-after frontcourt creation and mismatch scoring. Ayton’s mercurial scoring approach presents problems when switches neutralize Paul and/or Booker. Bridges isn’t that level of bucket-getter at the moment either, despite his improvements. I like screening actions involving two of Booker, Durant, and Paul. The latter seems to be used more as a screener this season, but both he and Booker are quite good at it.

Booker and Durant will be a headache to switch against. Bigger defenders will grapple with Booker’s burst, deceleration, and quick vertical pop. Smaller defenders will wrestle with Durant’s blend of size, shooting, and mobility. The possibility of second-side actions involving Durant or Booker as Paul, Booker/Durant, and Ayton potentially lead the strong-side is intriguing.

Off-ball screening, such as flex actions or pindowns, between Durant and Booker hints at bountiful results, too. Delay sets where Durant sets a flare screen on the wing for Booker and they swing into an angle ball-screen could be a doozy for defenses. Capitalizing on their immense gravity and keen screen usage, while Paul’s historically good passing and processing locates ideal openings, feels paramount to maximizing all of them together.

Snug pick-and-rolls involving Durant and Ayton should be a feature. Durant is a stellar interior passer and developed rapport with Nicolas Claxton and Andre Drummond the past two years. He could amplify Ayton, foster synergy and render his play-finishing less dependent on Paul, whose on-ball aptitude has declined in recent years at key spots.

The Suns didn’t leave the 2021 and 2022 playoffs ringless solely because of offensive foibles. Its defensive rating against the Mavericks was 114.3. Its defensive rating against the Bucks a year prior was 114.9. Both marks were more than four points higher per 100 possessions than their regular season defensive ratings.

The existence of multiple rim protectors in the rotation has linked together some of the most effective postseason defenses over the past decade (2022 Warriors, 2021 Bucks, 2020 Lakers, for instance). The Suns didn’t holster that aspect until now. It was costly against dominant slashers, Luka Doncic, and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Durant has been a sensational defender in a litany of avenues this season. I broke it all down a month ago here.

Among his exploits is secondary rim protection. Players are shooting 8.2 percent worse than their average within 6 feet of the basket when Durant is the primary defender. No longer is Ayton the lone representative on the backline. That’s a huge addition.

Durant isn’t of Bridges’ ilk as a perimeter stopper, particularly when wiggling around screens, but he’s quite good nonetheless. His 7-foot-5 wingspan allows him to slink off assignments without removing himself from their airspace. He’s constantly deterring or influencing shots against high-level dudes and touts dexterous limbs.

At their apex, Bridges and Ayton formed a premier defensive connection together. Durant and Ayton’s imprint will unfold differently and probably not as productively. Yet it could still trouble a bunch of good offenses if Ayton reaches pre-2022-23 levels again.

Durant’s a very good on-ball defender who does it across the positional spectrum, which bodes well with the Suns frequently switching 1-4. He even dabbles in the small-ball 5 world while retaining big man traits defensively. They shouldn’t be hesitant to embrace that wrinkle occasionally.

Durant’s arrival bolsters the Suns substantially. I do, however, wonder how they fill out the backend of the rotation — although it wouldn’t be a surprise to see them be a player on the soon-to-be robust buyout market given their sudden stature as a favorite for players to hunt a ring with.

Torrey Craig, Damion Lee, Cameron Payne, TJ Warren, Darius Bazley, Jock Landale and Bismack Biyombo (among others) isn’t a group flush with trusty playoff players to construct spots 5-9. I don’t want to harp on that too much, but it’s a question to answer. People beyond Durant, Booker, Paul, and Ayton still have to absorb minutes and not be completely over their head deep into the playoffs.

Williams has gravitated toward bench-heavy units. Those must be exiled. Depth wasn’t a strongsuit of the roster before acquiring Durant. It’s very much not now. Constantly keeping two of the Big Four on the court and deciphering how to best stagger their minutes is imperative.

Nothing is ever perfect when building an NBA roster. That’s why winning a title is so rare and arduous. These are, though, the sorts of ambiguities a playoff team will gladly welcome to bring in Durant, a malleable megastar who reopens the Suns’ championship window and dramatically reshapes their identity for the better.

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Pam Grier Says She Turned Down ‘Octopussy’ Because She Didn’t Want To Be An ‘Afterthought’ Bond Girl

Get ready for one of those Hollywood stories that’s deeply satisfying and not at all surprising. Pam Grier has been legit since day one, so it’s no shock that she took her swagger into a meeting with the Broccoli family and other Bond producers when they were casting Octopussy and asked them to do better. Although initially reluctant to even take the meeting, Grier showed up and requested the character she was set to play be more than eye candy.

“What am I going to do? Am I going to help rescue him? Is he rescuing me? A Bond girl is an afterthought, a CliffsNote, perhaps,” she told Entertainment Weekly. “I asked, ‘Am I challenging Bond? Am I out to kill him? Will I kill him before he kills me?’ They hadn’t thought of that. I gave them other ideas, which were much more profound and interesting than what they were doing.”

This was a full decade after she’d established herself as an action star making Blaxploitation flicks, so taking on a conventional Bond girl role would have been like asking Arnold Schwarzenegger to sit still and look pretty.

The role ultimately went to Maud Adams, and while the character Octopussy was slightly more active and involved in the plot (as much as a character named Octopussy can be), the film was one of the more cartoonish installments, coasting on the fumes of the 1970s. The armchair agent here might say that being a Bond girl might have done wonders for Grier’s career at the time. But would it, really? Why? It might have seriously watered down her public persona.

On the other hand, it would have been wild in 1983 to watch Foxy Brown rescue James Bond. If only they’d listened.

(via Entertainment Weekly)

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The Winners And Losers From The 2023 NBA Trade Deadline

Trade deadline week in the NBA began fairly quietly, as aside from Kyrie Irving getting moved to Dallas, there wasn’t a lot of indication that a massive flurry of deals was on the horizon.

Fast forward to 3 p.m. ET on Thursday, and the league has seen a seismic shift, as nearly every team made moves ahead of the deadline, including some truly massive trades — none bigger than Kevin Durant getting moved to Phoenix, seven months after his initial trade request.

The truth of the matter is, I think a lot of teams did perfectly fine and I fully understand what they were doing. Those teams won’t get a full mention here, but a lot of the West teams like Minnesota, Utah, Memphis, L.A. (Clippers), Golden State, and Denver made moves I understand or even like, they just weren’t moves that I think change their position dramatically — the Clippers, particularly, were very active but I’m not sure how much better they got. There are others that stayed quiet and I understand why. Teams like Sacramento and Cleveland are happy to just keep the good vibes rolling in their locker rooms, particularly given they’re a touch ahead of schedule.

We tracked who went where already, but now it’s time to grade out who did the best, whose deadline moves didn’t make much sense, and who fell behind by simply doing nothing.

WINNERS

Phoenix Suns

When you add Kevin Durant to your team, you are a winner at the deadline. They certainly gave up some depth in the process, but they are now, pending Durant’s health, firmly back in the title contender realm. Not only were they deadline winners, but I’d expect them to be buyout market winners as well, because players who get bought out that are looking to title hunt will zero in on Phoenix now as the best place to do that. On top of what it means for this season, adding Durant is a signal from new owner Mat Ishbia that this is no longer a franchise that will be run the way Robert Sarver ran them. The Suns now have a monster luxury tax bill and he happily will eat that to have a team that can contend. That’s all fans can really ask for out of ownership — well, that and not to be a despicable human — and Suns fans have to be thrilled about the beginning of this new regime.

Los Angeles Lakers

The Lakers did quite well at the deadline, and for all of the roster building mishaps under Rob Pelinka, he deserves some credit here for making a few solid moves. It was a problem of their own creation that they did not have shooters around LeBron James, but they at least realized that was a losing formula and addressed it in a big way. Almost everyone they brought in is a shooter, headlined by D’Angelo Russell’s return, and they also add some much needed defense and rebounding juice in the form of Jarred Vanderbilt. The center rotation is still a bit of a question mark, as I’m not much of a Mo Bamba believer, but if Thomas Bryant wanted out, they did fairly well to get a potential locker room issue out and bring in players who will at the very least want to be there and should fall in line. We’ll see what all they can do with this group, but they should be a play-in team in the West. That’s all you can ask for at this point, and with LeBron James, any shot at the postseason means you have a chance at something.

Milwaukee Bucks/Philadelphia 76ers/Boston Celtics

The Bucks, Sixers, and Celtics all made smaller moves, with Milwaukee’s acquisition of Jae Crowder being the splashiest of the three, but all of them are winners just by virtue of how the rest of the East failed to make any ground-shaking moves. The Bucks will hope Crowder can be this year’s PJ Tucker in a 3-and-D wing that bolsters their title hopes. The Sixers flipped Matisse Thybulle for Jalen McDaniels, who is a better offensive fit for what Philly needs. Boston adds some needed frontcourt depth in Mike Muscala, who can space the floor and provide some minutes to take the load off of Al Horford and Robert Williams in the regular season. All three got a bit better, while also seeing the Nets bow out of contender status and no one else really make a move that should threaten the status quo at the top of the East.

New York Knicks

The Knicks made a solid move by adding Josh Hart, which had former Villanova teammate Jalen Brunson very fired up. Hart brings another versatile wing defender, which Tom Thibodeau will love, and it’s certainly an upgrade over Cam Reddish, who was not really part of the rotation. There were rumblings they were discussing a Zach LaVine trade, but instead just let teams around them get a little bit worse and now have to feel very good about their chances of a top-6 spot in the East with Brooklyn now expected to tumble considerably in the standings.

Guys Who Didn’t Sell Their House

There are a lot of players getting reunited with their former teams this week — D’Angelo Russell with the Lakers, Spencer Dinwiddie in Brooklyn, Gary Payton II with the Warriors, George Hill in Indiana, Eric Gordon with the Clippers, TJ Warren in Phoenix, Bruno Fernando with the Hawks, and Jakob Poeltl in Toronto. If any of those guys held on to their homes or condos from their past stints in those cities, they are a winner because that will ease the stress on trade movement.

THE TORONTO RAPTORS TIER

Toronto Raptors

I genuinely don’t know what to think of the Raptors deadline. They got better on the court, because they added a very good center in Jakob Poeltl for a player who wasn’t part of the rotation in Khem Birch and some picks. They also were the team everyone figured would be sellers at the deadline, but instead became buyers and now have some awkward chemistry things to patch together after guys like OG Anunoby, Fred VanVleet, and Gary Trent Jr. spent the last month-plus hearing their names in rumors. It seems that they’re banking on some other teams in the East getting worse (namely the Nets) and opening up a play-in spot for them, but they exist in their own tier given how wildly off script they went at the deadline.

LOSERS

Brooklyn Nets

The Nets held firm this summer after both of their stars tried to muscle their way out, but they apparently could not stop the inevitable from happening. I think they did fine in recouping some assets, particularly for Irving as did better than I expected given Kyrie’s off-court baggage and the fact that he’s a free agent at the end of the year. That said, any time you lose Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving as the current 5-seed in the East, that is going to make you a loser. The roster is now a bit of a jumbled mess of wings because they made the Kyrie trade with still having KD in mind, only for KD to ask out (again) and them to have to get the best package possible from Phoenix, who only had wings to offer.

As such, they now have Mikal Bridges, Cam Johnson, Dorian Finney-Smith, Royce O’Neale, Joe Harris, Edmond Sumner, and Yuta Watanabe occupying the same two positions on the depth chart. That’s suboptimal, but it’ll be fascinating to see what Frankenstein lineups Jacque Vaughn pieces together for the second half of the season.

It’s fascinating to think how differently this would’ve gone had the Nets waited to find out where KD’s head was at after the Kyrie request, because it’s hard to imagine they’d have taken that Mavs offer over a more future-facing one knowing Durant also would get moved. Still, this isn’t a team that’s completely out of the play-in hunt given there’s still talent on the roster, albeit talent that doesn’t exactly fit together. Being unable to do more to clarify that situation on Thursday was, it feels like, a bit of a misstep, but they at least have a firm understanding of their future and no longer are beholden to the whims of their stars (until they trade for other ones with all those picks).

Chicago Bulls

The Bulls are in such a weird spot given they can’t actively tank because Orlando has their pick this year from the Nikola Vucevic trade, but the lack of activity from Chicago was still fairly surprising. This is a team that’s just got very little positive going for it and even just trying to shuffle something around could’ve brought a bit of freshness into the locker room. Instead, they stand pat and, while they’re still probably a play-in team, the complete lack of action at the deadline feels like punting on this season rather than trying to go in at least a slightly new direction, which isn’t inspiring for fans. That said, they didn’t make a panic move to make their cap or asset situation worse, so it’s not a disaster, just a disappointment.

John Collins

For the third straight year, John Collins remains with the Hawks through the deadline despite being on the block for months. The situation in Atlanta is not ideal for him and he’s on a contract that makes that production dip look even worse, which means if the Hawks are going to trade him, they have to do so for a package that makes them worse in the immediate. They aren’t willing to do that, which means we do this same song and dance over and over again. Collins’ biggest issue on the market is he’s a player that’s not a plug-and-play in any system or situation, and as such it further narrows the scope to find teams that will be interested in him.

I’m not putting the Hawks as a loser because they didn’t sell low on him and make themselves worse, although they also didn’t do anything to get better, but Collins has to be pretty tired of being dangled in trade talks only to have to continue playing on a team he doesn’t really fit on.

Houston Rockets/Charlotte Hornets/Detroit Pistons

I’ll preface this by saying I’m not even sure how much of this is a trade deadline issue or more that it reminded me how bleak the outlook feels for these teams outlook right now, which is why I’m just lumping them all together. All three are in play for Victor Wembanyama or Scoot Henderson, holding three of the four worst records in the NBA. However, that’s going to be a 14 percent chance at best, and all three teams made moves at the deadline that were just…confusing. For Houston in particular, at some point you have to start learning how to win — something they proved again on Wednesday night is just not a strength right now — and nothing they did at the deadline can address that and they didn’t exactly add considerable assets. The Rockets finally moved Eric Gordon and got a pick-swap out of it (as they can now swap their Milwaukee pick with L.A.’s, which should gain them at least a few spots in the 20s), but will buyout two of the four players they added at the deadline.

Brian Windhorst said it in a more blunt manner:

The Hornets’ situation feels arguably even more bleak, which is wild considering where they were a year ago as a team with a budding star in LaMelo Ball. They made two moves that brought in a couple of second rounders and Reggie Jackson, who (if he sticks around) feels redundant with Terry Rozier. Mason Plumlee was always on his way out, but moving Jalen McDaniels, a solid young player, for a couple seconds just raises questions about what the plan is in Charlotte. A not insignificant portion of the Hornets problems were caused by things out of their control, but they, like Houston, feel rather desperate for one of those top-2 picks, which will be far from a guarantee. This deadline wasn’t the cause of their problems — or a place that really presented great solutions — but didn’t do much to change the feeling that they are solidly at the bottom of the NBA pecking order.

The Pistons also get a mention here because I have no idea why they are adding James Wiseman, considering they already have a considerable amount invested in Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart. It’s a very Troy Weaver move to add a former high draft pick who hasn’t panned out, but the track record of success Detroit’s had in trying out those reclamation projects is fairly low. Marvin Bagley has not impressed in Year 2 in Detroit after they paid him this offseason, and it’s hard to see Wiseman flourishing immediately with their guard situation sans Cade Cunningham. He should be better outside a Warriors system that is just a horrid fit for his skillset, but even so, it’s just a weird allocation of resources at a position they’ve already invested two first round picks in the last three years. On top of that, they didn’t move Bojan Bogdanovic, who maybe they re-sign this summer but will have to beat out other teams pursuing him as an unrestricted free agent to do so.

All three of these teams have a considerable talent — Cade Cunningham, LaMelo Ball, and Jalen Green (the most unproven of the three) — but none of them are building confidence that they can put a coherent roster around them to maximize their talents.

People Who Wanted To Go To Bed At A Decent Hour

Some of us thought it was safe to go to sleep before 1 a.m. ET on Wednesday night. The Lakers deal was done, all the games had ended for the night, there wasn’t even any indication another big trade was on the horizon. We woke up to learn Kevin Durant was a member of the Phoenix Suns (and, to a lesser extent, Jakob Poeltl was a Raptor again). It’s not a huge deal in the grand scheme, but some of us are just trying to get a healthy 8 hours out here, and Woj and Shams refuse to let that happen.