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The Rock Showed Up Shirtless At Summer Game Fest And Brought Extremely Chaotic Energy

When Dwyane “The Rock” Johnson shows up, everyone pays attention. Not only because he has that kind of charisma, but because you know there is usually an announcement of some kind coming with him. Whether it’s a new movie, video game, or whatever product he happens to be working with at that time.

So when Johnson appeared at Summer Game Fest 2022 everyone immediately began to hang on his every word. Not only because he might be announcing a new video game, but also because he was shirtless inside his own personal gym recording from what was most likely his phone.

So what did Johnson have to say? Well, a lot of things! He told us about his energy drink brand, how he’s delivered a ton of pizzas, and then how excited he was to be starring in Black Adam. From that point on a trailer for Black Adam played and his promo cut was done.

The only way to really describe this moment is chaotic. Everything from Johnson recording this shirtless from the gym, to him using his three plus minutes to promote every product he could think of, and then ending it on not a video game trailer but for a movie is a rather wild use of time in a video game showcase.

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Breakthrough study says $500 worth of therapy and $200 cash saves men from a life of crime

“What if I told you that roughly $500 for therapy + a little cash helped the most troubled young men in West Africa drop their crime and violence by half. For at least 10 years,” Chris Blattman, professor of global conflict studies at the University of Chicago, opens a stunning tweet thread introducing the results of a study he began 13 years ago.

Blattman traveled to Liberia in 2009 with his wife as she did research on reintegrating ex-fighters from the war. Blattman had free time so he met up with Johnson Borh.

“He was a combatant in the war and now ran some kind of NGO. He seemed to know everyone and be able to go everywhere. So I asked him to show me around how the crime and drug markets worked,” Blattman tweeted.

Blattman couldn’t get over the fact that wherever they went, men would run over to Borh and give him a big hug. “How do you know Borh?” he asked them and every time he heard a similar response.

“I used to be like them,” and they’d point to the drug den or pickpockets. “But then I went through Borh’s program.”


For 15 years, Borh and his colleagues ran the STYL: Sustainable Transformation of Youth in Liberia program to help transform the most dangerous men in the city. “They met in abandoned buildings, in groups of maybe 20, for a couple of hours a day. Johnson trained some counselors, and they eked out a living on the program,” Blattman wrote.

Blattman got his team of researchers together to do a larger version of a similar program using the cognitive behavioral therapy techniques used by Borh. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an approach for reducing self-destructive beliefs and behaviors and promoting positive ones.

“Things looked really good. So I recruit my coauthors to help run a large-scale study,” Blattman tweeted. “We scaled up, raised a million dollars, and ran a huge randomized controlled trial with 999 of the toughest men in Monrovia.”

The therapy sessions focused on three types of behavioral change. The first was an attempt to get the men to “behave and self-identify as normal society members rather than as an outcast or criminal.” The second was to foster future orientation over present-biased behavior. The program taught skills to “manage emotions, reduce impulsivity, become more conscientious and persevering, and become more planful and goal-oriented in their daily activities.”

Finally, the team worked to teach the men how to deal with anger, interpersonal violence and threatening situations.

The researchers also held a cash lottery where some men were randomly selected to win $200. The men were told they could do anything with the money but were encouraged to use it to start a business or make home improvements.

The team followed up a year later and the results were inspiring.

Those who received the CBT and the cash slashed their antisocial behaviors by 50%. Those who had just therapy saw decreasing results over time, but those who received the cash and therapy had their new, positive behaviors more deeply entrenched.

Ten years later, the team was a little uneasy about seeing if the impact had lasted.

“I was pessimistic,” Blattman said. “We surveyed experts in advance. Almost all expected CBT Only or Cash Only to have no effect whatsoever after 10 years. For Therapy plus Cash, one-third of the experts predicted no effect at all. 2/3 predicted steeply diminished impacts.”

However, the researchers found that crime and violence were still down by 50% with those who got the CBT and cash.

“The therapy helped participants change their intentions, identity and behavior, and provided almost daily commitment and reinforcement,” the study’s conclusion states. “After eight weeks of therapy, the grant provided some men with the cash they needed to maintain their new identity—to avoid homelessness, to feed themselves, and to continue to dress decently.”

Blattman believed that his team’s findings are important and should be put into practice today in America for two reasons. “Gun violence is spiking in the Americas,” he tweeted. “Cities need solutions. They’re searching for ones that don’t involve coercion.”

Second, it works.

“All the evidence suggests CBT-informed programs are fast, effective, hyper-targeted, non-coercive ways to reduce violence,” he wrote.

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Kyle Banks Delivers A Laid-Back Performance Of ‘Bogus’ For ‘UPROXX Sessions’

For yesterday’s edition of UPROXX Sessions, I wrote about how much I love it when artists bring their own props. Truly, not enough of them do this and it’s always entertaining whether it’s something simple like a red cup, or something much more dramatic. Remember when Dana Dentata brought a whole fake murder scene? Good times.

But what I love even more than those are the ones where artists bring musicians with them, because it heightens the actual music as well as the performance. There’s just something about cramming extra people into the set along with their instruments that just livens things up. Kyle Banks apparently got the memo, bringing a keyboardist to his performance of “Bogus,” a groovy, laid-back rap&B cut that sounds perfect for two-stepping on an LA summer night. It fits because Banks is an LA-based artist who has worked with some of the city’s finest, including fellow Sessions alums Bino Rideaux, BlueBucksClan, and Kalan.FrFr.

Watch Kyle Banks’s UPROXX Sessions performance of “Bogus” above.

UPROXX Sessions is Uproxx’s performance show featuring the hottest up-and-coming acts you should keep an eye on. Featuring creative direction from LA promotion collective, Ham On Everything, and taking place on our “bathroom” set designed and painted by Julian Gross, UPROXX Sessions is a showcase of some of our favorite performers, who just might soon be yours, too.

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Trump’s Air Force One Paint Job Is A Huge Headache That Could Prevent The President From Being Informed Of World War 3

Donald Trump is still causing headaches for the White House, over a year after begrudgingly leaving office. In 2018, the former-president ordered Boeing to build two new Air Force One aircrafts, which the company’s CEO recently called “a very unique set of risks that Boeing probably shouldn’t have taken.” It could set them back $660 million, mostly because Trump wanted the airplanes to be painted red, white, and blue instead of the blue and white color scheme that’s been used since the 1960s.

But, CNN reports, “it turns out the darker blue — which some observers say is similar to the color scheme on one of Trump’s personal jets — poses challenges to the military planes’ sophisticated electronics system that ensures the president can stay in secure communication with officials on the ground — even in the case of a nuclear attack.” The darker color “might contribute to temperatures exceeding the current qualification limits,” potentially turning the plane into a flying tanning booth. (It all makes sense now.)

Here’s more:

Painting is typically among the final stages of completion before a plane is delivered, so it’s unlikely the new jets will need to be repainted. The Air Force did not disclose when there will be a decision on the colors to be used, or what options are under consideration. The Air Force also didn’t say how the problem was discovered. The General Accountability Office said in a report issued Wednesday that the planes undergo a comprehensive series of tests as part of the multi-year process of upgrading two 747s for use by the president and other national security officials.

Look, I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t know anything about planes, like how they stay in the air or why Con Air isn’t considered the greatest airplane movie of all-time. But it seems that the electronics system can’t be too “sophisticated” if the only thing standing between safety and the president learning about a nuclear attack is the color blue.

Meanwhile, Trump has no issues with trucks.

(Via CNN)

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Marjorie Taylor Greene Claimed Her Rights Are Being ‘Fragrantly Violated’ And People Are Having A Field Day

Marjorie Taylor Greene is back to mangle the English language once again. While addressing Congress and railing against a new gun control bill being proposed in the wake of the Uvalde school shooting, Greene pulled from her “peach tree dish” of garbled sayings to claim that her rights are being “fragrantly violated.”

As an apparently odiferous supporter of the Second Amendment, the die-hard MAGA congresswoman is opposed to any and all gun control laws even if they could prevent another school shooting like the one in Uvalde. As Greene not-so-eloquently put it, her gun rights are what’s most important here.

Naturally, Twitter had a field day with Greene’s latest pronunciation faux-pas. Folks went to town on her stinky grasp of how words work. You can see some of the reactions below:

As for Greene’s stance on the recent slate of gun control laws, she proudly boasted on Twitter that she’ll be voting “No” on the proposed measures and shared a video of her remarks, which notably left out the “fragrantly violated” slip-up.

You can read her full thoughts below, which are fragrant, and not in a good way.

“Well, we don’t agree on much these days here in Congress, but I know there’s one thing we all agree on. We all agree that we really like guns,” Greene told Congress. “See, we’re the special privilege elites. We’re the ones in this chamber being protected by guns while the American people don’t have men and women outside their homes. Of course, not at any gun-free school zones they’re not protected nor at work. But here in Congress, the same Congress that’s voting to send just millions and millions of dollars worth of guns to Ukraines [sic] so they can defend themselves, is the same Congress that’s working as hard as possible to take away the Second Amendment rights from Americans. You see, our job here is to protect rights like due process and the Second Amendment rights of Americans, not strip them away. Red flag gun laws violate American’s due process rights, and this is the type of thing that we shouldn’t be passing in this Congress. Especially while we enjoy the very privileged, elite, special protection of guns.”

(Via Aaron Rupar on Twitter)

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Questlove’s Documentary, ‘Summer Of Soul,’ Wins A Peabody Award

Questlove’s documentary, Summer Of Soul (…Or When The Revolution Could Not Be Televised) was one of two music documentaries that received Peabody Awards this year. In Summer Of Soul, Questlove details the events of the 1969 Harlem Cultural festival, which has gone largely overlooked in history.

“It was an honor to do this film and it’s an honor to receive this accolade,” said Quest during his acceptance speech (per Billboard), “and not just for my ego or for my personal achievement, but it was an honor to serve history.”

The award was presented to Questlove by Alicia Keys. Melissa Haizlip, who directed the PBS documentary Mr. Soul — which recounts the life of her uncle, Ellis Haizlip — also won a Peabody Award for her music documentary, and was presented with her award by Morgan Freeman. Ellis Haizlip was the creator, producer and host of the 1968-73 TV series Soul, which was known for showcasing Black music, dance, and culture.

“Whether exposing injustice, detailing uncomfortable truths, or making us laugh uncontrollably, all of the winners demonstrated how to tell a compelling story,” said Jeffrey Jones, executive director of Peabody, in a statement. “With an ongoing pandemic, political obstructionism, and senseless wars continuing to take and disrupt lives, these programs pushed past many obstacles to tell important stories that will stand the test of time. Peabody is proud to honor their incredible work.”

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Happy Pride! Rebel Wilson Debuted Her New Girlfriend On Instagram With A Sweet And Cheesy Caption (Just Like The Rest Of Us)

After taking a slight break from Hollywood over the past few years (possibly due to the Cats debacle), Rebel Wilson eagerly returned earlier this spring with her “older adult goes back to high school” comedy Senior Year. Now, it seems like Wilson is debuting something else: a new girlfriend just in time for pride month.

In a cute and only slightly corny post on Instagram, the Pitch Perfect star showed off her girlfriend Ramona Arguma, with the caption: “I thought I was searching for a Disney Prince… but maybe what I really needed all this time was a Disney Princess 💗🌈💗#loveislove.” The post is complete with emojis and a Disney reference, which is cute, even if Disney has had a weird year on that front. Still!

It seems like Wilson and Arguma, who owns a clothing shop in California, have been together for quite some time–the two even attended the Oscars together earlier this year. Wilson has never publically commented on her sexuality, but she did previously date the billionaire heir to the Anheuser-Busch fortune before stating she was single last February.

In addition to starring in Netflix’s Senior Year, Wilson is set to star in her first non-comedy role in The Almond And The Seahorse, based on the play of the same name. Hopefully, this isn’t a sign that she is done singing, because we could really use some more entries in the Pitch Perfect Cinematic Universe.

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Small Screens: ‘NBA Finals’ Game 3 Review

Body horror, unsettling extras abruptly cut to mid-scene, hints at an alternate timeline unfolding — ‘Game 3’ of The NBA Finals did away with any semblance of the story arc continuity and character development we’ve seen thus far in the series.

A bold choice by showrunner Adam Silver, executed daringly by joint director Ime Udoka, was to entirely upend and change the setting of the action in this episode. The last two episodes took place on a relatively demure, almost bland wood piazza, encircled by a live audience that did not interfere with the action of each scene. That went out the window last night when the characters were thrust onto what appeared a gigantic approximation of a living room floor amidst a loud, crowded and overtly hostile audience.

There were many, many middle aged men loosely holding to plastic cups of half finished beer barely six minutes into the episode, how glazed their eyes were not dulling at all the ferocity sparking in them. Indeed, this was the first episode where it was revealed that the live audience is in fact a feature of the show’s setting, as vital to the energy and outcome of each scene as each Finals character. It was some of the most high-definition camera work we’ve seen so far in the show, offering up exacting, at times distressing details of the crowd — green wigs, layers and layers of lacquered green beads roped around reddening necks, so much screaming — why would Silver spend such a huge chunk of the show’s production budget on this if it were not to further the visceral experience Finals is going for?

Much like the growth of setting as a major storyline component in ‘Game 3,’ this episode brought with it continued beats on the theme of transition. We saw shifts from one end of the floor to the other, repeated so many times that the rhythm of each character running, fumbling, colliding, and running back to do it all again at the other end of the floor became hypnotic. Like previous productions in Silver’s past Finals has focused on power and control — who has it, who wants it, and all the way it changes hands over the course of a series.

Something Finals delights in is communicating the energy of a scene without any dialogue. Robert Williams III (Robert Williams III) is excellent at this, with arms that are able to hyper-extend on cue in homage to the more surrealist styles of David Lynch or even early Ridley Scott. Silver is adept at finding actors most skilled at this controlled physicality, able to blend an array of physical theater, stunts and occasional physical comedy to drive the story forward through movement instead of relying on writers. Ironically, Silver has been criticized in the past on claims that his past series’ have been too scripted, that the outcomes seem obvious and easy to determine. While that doesn’t appear to be the case with Finals, it feels even less likely given the work that Draymond Green (Draymond Green) has been doing on the show.

There were hints of the chaos Draymond Green was weaving in ‘Game 2’ but ‘Game 3’ saw even more blatant examples of a character with motivations actively running against (and sometimes physically running the wrong way) those of his organization, the Warriors.

Even when the objective of the Warriors aren’t clear, this is a group that tends to perform best when clustered together. There were times in ‘Game 3’ when Draymond Green hung well behind his co-stars, or seemed to lose all awareness of where he was within a scene. It’s unclear whether this lackadaisical shift in motivation is supposed to signal someone at the end of their rope, perhaps worn down by being the “fixer” so far in the series. We got no conclusion to this theory in ‘Game 3’ because Draymond Green vanished before the end of the episode.

Another deceptive character is Derrick White (Derrick White), who pairs his cherubic face and patently innocent expressions with the focus and intent of a demon, and Al Horford (Al Horford), who introduced body horror to the show when he unexpectedly dove and appeared to recline on Silver’s recurring series star Steph Curry’s (Steph Curry) leg. Is Al Horford turning into a late antagonist solely based on environmental circumstance, or is this going to be the slow realization of a villain awakening? Moreover, do we believe it?

Contrary to public discussions around the show that have run rampant since ‘Game 1’ debuted that the Warriors group appears too casual, hardly reacting defensively to what the Celtics group has accused them of, Andrew Wiggins (Andrew Wiggins) to many major sleights this episode. He was seen smacking the ball out of the hands of his co-stars again and again.

Beyond the Draymond Green theory, Finals has introduced easter eggs and open-ended speculation with none of it actually paying off yet. There were references in ‘Game 3’ of the Warriors reverting to a zone that’s become distorted, were those hints at an alternate reality timeline unfolding in the show? There’s also been a lot of emphasis placed on what the narrators of the show colloquially refer to as the “third quarter,” a period of time that sees the Warriors group reviving, no matter how badly things have gone for them. There’s no obvious reason for it that director Steve Kerr has made clear, but like a lot of what we’re learning in NBA Finals, explanations and rationale are not often tied to the in-scene action.

Perhaps the most bizarre example of this came when a man who appeared important to the lore of the story, sitting front row way off to the side of the action, was left hanging when he asked for a high-five from a fellow “studio audience” extra.

Overall, while the drama and stakes of ‘Game 3’ have ratcheted up, with the panicky narrators panicking even more than usual and pleading to no one in particular with disjointed lines like, “They cannot give them life by turning the basketball over” and, “They are just pounding them, with very little resistant, at the rim,” things do not seem as dire as they’ve been framed. Fundamental questions — like who is this series true villain and is existing in two realities what’s making Klay Thompson (Klay Thompson) so tired? — remain, but Silver still has at least two episodes to deliver us the answers in.

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‘The Boys’ Fans Can Barely Stomach The Evil That Homelander’s Been Doing This Season

(Spoilers for Season 3 of The Boys will be found below.)

Amazon’s The Boys finished up Season 2 by seemingly putting Homelander in his place — that place being the top of a skyscraper, where he (after being told by Queen Maeve that he deserved to be abandoned by everyone) proceeded to unleash his Little Homelanders upon those who were unfortunate enough to be at ground level. Don’t expect, however, that he’s feeling downtrodden and unable to come back from that. Rather, Season 3 presents Homelander in even worse form than we’ve ever seen. His sadistic tendencies explode, prompting him to (in the season premiere) make a girl commit suicide on his birthday, and then things grow more visceral.

A few weeks into this season, Homelander unleashes his contempt upon The Deep. It’s not only pure evil in a nutshell but also passive aggressive and truly revolting and made me (as I previously related in an inarticulate manner) wish I hadn’t eaten dinner before hitting “play.” I’m referring to the scene where Homelander decides to make The Deep eat one of his still-alive ocean friends, Timothy the Octopus.

Given how horribly The Deep began this show (he forced Starlight to perform oral sex on him), it’s rather remarkable that Antony Starr’s character could make anyone feel sorry for the tan-line-sporting Aquaman parody. Chace Crawford has actually done a fantastic job of showing The Deep receive payback already (those gill scenes, for one thing), and so it’s almost heartbreaking (amid all of the revolt) to see what Homelander forced him to do. To recap, here’s how I reacted:

– The Deep… oh my god
– And Homelander, no, what a f*cking sadist
– Eeeek, don’t do that to The Deep
– I can’t keep watching this
– Holy sh*t
– You should stop watching this
– Breathe, lady, breathe
– Why did I eat dinner before this episode?
– Ew, Homelander
– EW EW EW, no no no noooo
– [Stares into space for a few minutes]
– God, I love this show

As I suspected, reactions from the audience took a similar turn.

And yes, it’s not really a surprise to see Homelander being completely reprehensible (as seen below, when he shoved his own kid off a roof), but the writers impressively continue to one-up his evil, making us all wonder what’s in store for the world next.

The Boys is currently releasing weekly Season 3 episodes on Amazon.

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Is This Super Expensive 20-Year-Old Rye Whiskey Worth The Price Of Admission? We Dig In

Spending a few hundred dollars on a bottle of rye whiskey feels a tad absurd. Yet, it’s not out of the ordinary for rye lovers with cash to burn. Expensive and rare whiskeys have been around for ages. Today, you pay a hefty price for one-of-a-kind rarities that you may never see again. And that’s exactly what Chicken Cock Cotton Club Rye Whiskey Aged 20 Years is.

Chicken Cock — which, let’s face it, is a hilarious name for anything, let alone a whiskey — has dug deep into select stocks of a Canadian distillery and found a few barrels of 20-year-old rye whiskey to build a bespoke and very rare expression around. That’s pretty much Chicken Cock’s whole vibe. They have standard releases of both rye and bourbon in their throwback 1920s apothecary bottles and then a long list of very limited and rare releases of barrels that we will never see again.

The release I’m reviewing below dropped at the very end of last year and kind of flew under the radar. Part of that is that Chicken Cock is fairly new, even though it’s a revival brand. Another part is that Canadian whiskey hasn’t caught on in the U.S. quite as much as it should have… yet. For now, it’s mostly being built into American brands — Barrell, WhistlePig, Cotton Club — and not finding its own footing outside of those labels really. That’s a shame but, hey, at least we still get to drink the tipple from Canada even if it is under a U.S. company’s branding.

Okay, enough preamble, let’s jump into what’s in this bottle.

Also Read: The Top Five Rye Whiskey from the Last Six Months on UPROXX

Chicken Cock Cotton Club Rye Whiskey Aged 20 Years

Chicken Cock Cotton Club 20
Grain and Barrel Spirits

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $616

The Whiskey:

The juice in this bottle is made with a 90 percent rye and ten percent malted barley mash bill, which is a standard you see with other big-name Canadian brands (cough, cough, Crown Royal Northern Harvest Rye, cough, cough). In this case, that hot juice was left to mellow in ex-bourbon barrels for 20 long years somewhere in Canada (cough, cough, Manitoba, cough, cough). The barrels are then vatted and proofed down to 100 proof before bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Green and wet grass mingle with a stack of pine firewood on the nose as a pink bubble gum sweetness leads to a vanilla-heavy cream soda with a whiff of Orange Julius. The palate leans into the orange with a zesty vibe as a lemon meringue pie tartness and creaminess kicks in next to dried ginger, floral honey, and a sweet pine resin. The mid-palate really leans into the honey while adding in candied orange peels with a hint of allspice and anise leading toward a dry white pepper and old cinnamon sticks soaked in tart apple cider before a final rush of old cellar beams and dry black soil round out the end.

The Bottle:

Chicken Cock chose a throwback bottle design with a slightly lifted glass ridging in a large flask, reminiscent of an old medicine bottle. The bottle comes in a tin box, which is a nod to the old Cotton Club in Harlem in the 1920s where Chicken Cock whiskey was widely drunk savored out of tin cans (due to smuggling practices during Prohibition).

Then there’s the label which is pretty minimalist all things considered. The most important information is listed and there’s an old-school “cock” crowing away. That’s it. It’s simple but distinct.

Is It Worth The Price?

This is a very even-keeled sip of whiskey. It’s deeply layered, takes you on a journey (from bright sweetness and fresh grass to moldy cellars), and has a good balance of sweet, sharp, and lush.

But $500 to $600 (depending on where you find the bottle) is a big ask. I’m going to drink mine on special occasions because I had to open it. Otherwise, this might be more of an investment bottle than a sipping one.

That said, this is worth tasting at a high-end whiskey bar or tasting if you do come across it. It’s a totally different rye than the standard 95/5 American ryes that have dominated the conversation over the last decade with their “spicy” nature. This feels subtler than those and leaves you with a bit of a warming yet familiar feeling of comfort. It’s a nice feeling.