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How To Watch Bellator 255: Free Live Stream, Start Time, And Full Card

Bellator MMA will make its highly-anticipated debut on Showtime Friday, April 2, with the prelims kicking off at 6 p.m. ET and the main card starting at 9 p.m. ET.

The entire card will be streamed live here at Uproxx for free from the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Connecticut.

The main event features Bellator double-champion Patricio “Pitbull” Freire facing off in a rematch with Emmanuel Sanchez for the 145-pound belt and a spot in the finals of the Featherweight World Grand Prix Tournament against the unbeaten A.J. McKee. Freire was named Bellator’s top pound-for-pound fighter in the organization’s inaugural rankings earlier this week and he’s rattled off six-consecutive wins. He faces off against Sanchez, who presented the champ’s toughest test over the last three years, pushing him to a decision.

The main card also features unbeaten Usman Nurmagomedov, the cousin of UFC’s retired lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov, who makes his Bellator debut against Mike Hamel.

Bellator 255 Main Card:

  • Featherweight title: Patricio Freire vs. Emmanuel Sanchez in the semifinals of the Featherweight World Grand Prix Tournament
  • Neiman Gracie vs. Jason Jackson
  • Tyrell Fortune vs. Jack May
  • Usman Nurmagomedov vs. Mike Hamel

Bellator 255 Preliminary Card

  • Kana Watanabe vs. Alejandra Lara
  • Jose Augusto vs. Jonathan Wilson
  • Fabio Aguiar vs. Khalid Murtazaliev
  • Jordan Newman vs. Branko Busick
  • Roman Faraldo vs. Trevor Gudde
  • Cee Jay Hamilton vs. Magomed Magomedov
  • Mandel Nallo vs. Ricardo Seixas
  • Roger Huerta vs. Chris Gonzalez

Bellator 255 kicks off three consecutive weeks of fights, with Bellator 256 scheduled for April 9 and Bellator 257 on April 16.

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Taylor Swift Fans Seem To Have Quickly Cracked The Decoding Challenge Swift Gave Them

Taylor Swift loves to hide Easter eggs and other mysteries in her work for finds to find and evaluate. Now, she’s not even hiding them in a song or music video anymore, as Swift took to Twitter today to present her fans with a decoding challenge, which they seem to have already cracked.

Swift shared a video of a golden vault and wrote, “The vault door is about to be as unhinged as you’ll think I am after you watch this video. Level: Expert. Happy decoding!” In the clip, the vault door opens and a seemingly nonsensical series of fake words flies toward the viewer. Swift has been training her fans to look for Easter eggs for years, so it appears they quickly got to the bottom of this.

Fans started sharing their conclusions on Twitter, and a prevailing theory is that the words are jumbled parts of song titles, specifically the titles of the bonus tracks from Fearless (Taylor’s Version). The supposed titles are “You All Over Me” (which is already confirmed as the Maren Morris-featuring song as already been released), “Mr. Perfectly Fine,” “That’s When,” “We Were Happy,” “Bye Bye Baby,” and either “Don’t You” or “You Don’t.” Additionally, it seems one of those songs also features Keith Urban, who became a trending topic on Twitter following the video’s release.

Check out some fan tweets about Swift’s video below.

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TOGETHXR Wants To Disrupt The ‘Vicious Cycle’ Women’s Sports Are Stuck In

At the beginning of March, a quartet of Olympic gold medal winners — Alex Morgan, Sue Bird, Chloe Kim, and Simone Manuel — announced a new media endeavor, TOGETHXR. The goal was simple: Create an outlet that will cover women’s sports and tell the stories that are so often not covered by major sports outlets.

To head up content, they brought in Jessica Robertson, the former head of content at the Players Tribune, to be their Chief Content Officer and help them put together a plan for launch and beyond, identifying the stories and series they wanted to promote from the start. Among the first of those was the “More Than A Name” series, which chronicles young athletes who are related to famous male athletes and are both following in their footsteps while also trying to carve out a name for themselves. The debut episode was on UCLA freshman softball star Maya Brady, who is the niece of Tom Brady and Kevin Youkilis, as well as the daughter of Maureen Brady, a softball star at Fresno State in her college days.

Robertson recently spoke with Uproxx about the series and how the inspiration for it started with Kobe and Gianna Bryant, as well as how TOGETHXR is looking do create a new lane for outlets to talk about women’s sports and culture, what they have planned for this year, and how Draymond Green’s recent comments fail to see efforts like TOGETHXR’s to create the interest and break the “vicious cycle” of women’s sports.

Hey Jessica, how are you?

I’m good. I’m not gonna lie, I just saw Draymond Green’s response to, I guess the response to his tweets last night. That’s a fascinating take he has [laughs].

That’s certainly a word for it.

I don’t know. Did you see what he said last night?

Yeah, the thing about how he’s tired of hearing women complain about equal pay.

[sighs] Yeah.

Honestly, I think it’s actually a good place to start because it is kind of the reason y’all started this company. You want to shine a light on women’s sports and tell these stories. How did you come to join this and when y’all were coming together with an early plan of what you wanted to do, what were the conversations like and what were the things y’all were excited to be able to do with TOGETHXR?

I always start with Alex, Alex Morgan. I think this has been an ambition of hers for years now. Obviously existing firsthand in equity in the sports landscape throughout her career and I think she’s had a few sort of pivotal moments where she’s looked around and she’s like, “Wait, we’re, we’re winning or generating revenue, we’re selling out, we’re selling out merch, like we keep doing all the things we say we can’t do or that we need to do to prove our worth. But there’s no real investment coming back in.”

But more importantly, you know, I think she and Sue and Chloe and Simone, the rest of the co-founders, outside of the women they stand next to in their own experiences every single day, they’re thinking about the next generation. I think certainly Alex, becoming a mother and having a daughter, Charlie, she thinks about her future, just to personalize it. But holistically, they’re thinking about what the next generation will experience and how they can impact change across the board.

We talk a lot about this sort of vicious cycle that happens in women’s sports which is, you know the stuff, there’s four percent visibility and media coverage. So what I say is, if there’s no media coverage — if no one’s growing visibility — then it’s really hard to generate viewership, to grow fan bases and communities in women’s sports. And if there aren’t people in the seats, if there aren’t people tuned in, if the fandom isn’t growing, then brands and other people with dollars to invest aren’t going to invest. And if people don’t think that there’s no dollars to be made, then media companies will not cover the sport because they aren’t going to profit off of that coverage.

So for us it’s about disrupting that cycle. You know, we’re entering a big white space, I think. There are some brands that cover women’s sports, but they’re small. It’s not even just about the coverage, it’s the type of coverage, it’s the quality of coverage, the breadth of coverage. There are some brands that have built large communities around women, they tend to be lifestyle and beauty or wellness focused, but there’s a huge white space where I think TOGETHXR enters into to bring sport and culture together for women. And our goal is, like I said, to disrupt that cycle.

Consciously we think about that, but more importantly, we just want to tell really great stories that happen to center women. And, you know over time, while we feel like a first, I think there will be seconds and thirds and fourths, and, you know, maybe Charlie, when she grows up, this is just the norm. It doesn’t feel radical.

And I think the thing that is the most frustrating about comments like Draymond’s is where he says they’re not offering a plan, they’re not offering steps, but there is a plan there. Like, people have been offering these concepts for a while and like you said this is part of the plan. This is part of that plan of here’s how we grow this thing, and it starts with something like this.

Exactly. We’re just gonna do it. Which is very much like a woman, right? I also think Draymond is blaming the wrong people. To your point, there are plans, there’s been a lot of solutions offered. I would say there’s receipts, and he’s actually targeting the wrong group of people. I would trust his intent, but I would say he probably should listen first. I think personally it’s decision-makers at brands, at media companies, and elsewhere — governing bodies — and questions of their level of investment and why decisions haven’t been made to consciously and consistently invest. I think we see it every four years around the World Cup or around the Olympics, but we don’t see it consistently every single day.

I also think that culturally, some of the cultural reckonings and social reckonings we’ve needed to have for a long time around race, sexuality, gender, we’re having them, and I think culture is catching up to the women’s sports landscape a little bit. Because women’s sports is sort of ground zero for a lot of these -isms and conversation. So it’s hard to talk about why there hasn’t been an investment without, one, talking about decision makers, but, two, just sort of talking about massaging in all the other isms that surround this space. But TOGETHXR, actually, embraces that and knows that if we can just tell really incredible, powerful stories consistently, people will show up because of the content that’s there right now.

This “More Than A Name” series that starts with Maya Brady, I thought was a terrific start for that in terms of this particular series. When you were coming up with with early ideas you wanted to do, how did this series come together and shuffle its way into something you want to do early on? And, obviously Maya was a really great first subject for that?

It started actually with Kobe and Gigi. A year ago, well, over a year ago — we’ve been in build mode for a year and a half so you have to forgive me, time is a flat circle — we were thinking about format franchise IP concepts, and I worked with Kobe for quite some time at The Players Tribune. Once he retired, obviously his interest and investment was particularly in women’s basketball, I think, generally because of who he was, but also especially because of his daughter. And I was thinking, Kenyon Martin talks about his own kids and Shaquille O’Neal has a couple of incredible daughters who are playing it at elite level in college and in high school, and I was like, it would be really interesting to sort of do a series on the women who carry big last names and have big shoes to fill, but celebrate them as individuals and their own accomplishments for who they are. So that was the ambition. Obviously, you know, tragic events changed [things] and sort of the original intent, but I think the idea of finding these incredible athletes who happen to be related to famous male athletes so excited us, because we want to celebrate them as individuals.

And Maya Brady was I think the person perfect launch for the series, because obviously the legacy of her uncle. But you know, he even says that she’s the best athlete in the family. I think there’s a lot of layers to her story in particular, outside of being an incredible athlete and having a huge future in front of her. She comes from one incredible athlete and her family with Tom Brady, but Kevin Youkilis and her mom, too, her mom was one of the best pitchers in the country at Fresno State. And I think we wanted to contextualize maybe her athletic ability, but really celebrate her and her identity for who she is.

It’s a story, yes, about family legacy, but it’s also a story about a freshman girl in college who’s doing things her own way and and sort of exploring what identity means to her especially being a biracial woman in this world. I think it was powerful, it was resonant, and she was such a fascinating figure.

Yeah, and when you were mentioning all the -isms that that work within women’s sports I thought about, like you said, the end her at the end of video when she says, “I always knew that we were different from the rest of the family and how we looked, but it didn’t really become a thing until later.” And then going to UCLA where she has more Black teammates and it seems like she’s embracing this identity as somebody who can break down some of those barriers for Black women and bring more Black girls in the softball. And I thought that was a really interesting portion towards the end of that, and like you said, an important way to kind of shift it to, this is what she’s now doing and how she sees herself beyond that family connection.

Yeah and I think it’s also easy to compare women athletes generally to male athletes, especially if they’re related to famous male athletes. So we really wanted to elevate her as an individual, and where she stands and the power that she holds in herself and also her ability as an athlete. Softball in the past, I think it’s been a predominantly white sport, it’s increasingly changing, which is incredible to see. I think the same thing is happening in soccer and for her to lean into that and and celebrate it and own it is really powerful, especially for, I think the rest of the softball to see.

But also, what we want to do is to continue to create these “see it, be it” moments. Telling Maya Brady’s story may radically change a 9-year-old girl’s life. And if we’re not there to tell it and no one’s there to tell it, then think about all the lives that can’t be impacted. So hers is resonant for so many reasons, especially the one that you highlighted.

The entire premise I found really interesting, because I recently did an interview with Lexie Brown about being the face of the retro release of the the Reebok Pumps which her dad had made famous in the ’91 Dunk Contest. And we talked about some of the same things, which is embracing the legacy but also wanting to do your own thing. I think there’s … everybody’s relationship with their name and with their family is different, so I guess the question is, is that something you think is going to make this series unique, because each episodes going to tell a different story and I think you can kind of show how everybody handles that differently?

Yeah, I think it can be a weight, probably. For a lot of people, a burden. It’s also an opportunity, I think sometimes that last name can open doors for you. But when that door’s open, then ultimately, it’s you as an individual that has to step through it and then deliver, right? We’re talking about your legacy, not the legacy of the name that’s on your back every single day. That’s part of your legacy and that’s part of the power that you have, but the question is, like, as an individual who are you? I would imagine, obviously I don’t have that experience, but I would imagine, navigating this world with the weight of a big last name that’s literally on your back sometimes can be complicated. Because people associate you with someone else’s greatness first, and not necessarily your own. So I think it’s probably a life’s mission to establish yourself and your own greatness apart from that name. Even as that name, like I said, it’s sometimes a really big opportunity.

Finally, you mentioned that y’all have been in this build mode for some time. What are the things that folks can be looking forward to and what’s going to be coming from y’all in this first year here, as y’all continue to put out new series and new content that you personally are really excited about?

How much time do you have [laughs]? Some of the things I’m not allowed to say on record yet, but I can sort of talk around them, and we’re gonna have one new big show every single month that drops on YouTube. The next one that we do have premiering in mid-April is called Surf Girls Kaikaina — kaikaina means little sister in Hawaiian. It’s about this cool surf collective in Hawaii. It’s about their friendship, their sisterhood, but also their competitiveness. They compete against one another, but they’re also friends, and, they also embrace the legacy of Hawaiian surf culture and want to see it thrive and carry on beyond themselves. It’s beautiful, it’s cool these girls are really compelling and I can’t wait for the world to see them and meet them.

We’re paying attention to the culture calendar a lot, so we have some really exciting franchises coming up around Pride Month, around the 25th anniversary of the WNBA — that’s gonna be a big tentpole for us. An incredible series, and I can’t wait to share, I would say it’s one of our co founders in the lead-up to Tokyo. So, when I can share more information I’ll be happy to do that.

And then a big priority for us is really leaning in the longform in addition to some of these episodic series that you’re seeing on our channel. We just announced yesterday, we’re doing a narrative long form podcast with Alex and Sue executive producing that revisits and retells the history of the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. I say it’s probably one of the most important, if not the most important moment in women’s sports history. It’s also an opportunity to look back and see how far we’ve come, or how far we haven’t come, and kind of look to the future. Especially as they go into these Tokyo Games and this’ll be the 25th anniversary of that. We have a couple of big documentary projects in development.

I would love to share more there, but just know that these will feel like big impactful cultural stories that happen to step through a sport prism, but more to come on those. We’re excited about them.

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Netflix’s ‘Yasuke’ Trailer Previews Lakeith Stanfield As The Voice Of The First African Samurai

The streaming services continue to maneuver for anime supremacy, and although the Crunchyroll and Funimation services can’t be beat for both dub-and-sub sheer quantity, Netflix is emerging as quite a contender. The service streams several quality selections (including Death Note, which is an excellent gateway series and might get you hooked on anime streaming), and Keanu Reeves is developing a Brzrkr series (which he wrote and will star in), but before that happens, Netflix is bringing us the first trailer for Yasuke from Japanese animation studio MAPPA (Attack on Titan: The Final Season).

The series arrives with quite a pedigree, given that LaKeith Stanfield executive produces and voices the title character. The score will arrive courtesy of Flying Lotus, who also produces, and creator/director/producer LeSean Thomas will build upon his proven track record (The Boondocks, Cannon Buster, and Black Dynamite) of interweaving anime and Black culture. As for the story, Stanfield voices a character who’s based upon the real-life first African samurai. From the show’s synopsis:

The tale is set in a war-torn feudal Japan filled with mechs and magic, the greatest ronin never known, Yasuke, struggles to maintain a peaceful existence after a past life of violence. But when a local village becomes the center of social upheaval between warring daimyo, Yasuke must take up his sword and transport a mysterious child who is the target of dark forces and bloodthirsty warlords.

Netflix will stream Yasuke on April 29.

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We asked three people about how vaccines have impacted their lives. Here’s what they said.

Since March of 2020, over 29 million Americans have been diagnosed with COVID-19, according to the CDC. Over 540,000 have died in the United States as this unprecedented pandemic has swept the globe. And yet, by the end of 2020, it looked like science was winning: vaccines had been developed.

In celebration of the power of science we spoke to three people: an individual, a medical provider, and a vaccine scientist about how vaccines have impacted them throughout their lives. Here are their answers:

John Scully, 79, resident of Florida

Photo courtesy of John Scully

When John Scully was born, America was in the midst of an epidemic: tens of thousands of children in the United States were falling ill with paralytic poliomyelitis — otherwise known as polio, a disease that attacks the central nervous system and often leaves its victims partially or fully paralyzed.

“As kids, we were all afraid of getting polio,” he says, “because if you got polio, you could end up in the dreaded iron lung and we were all terrified of those.” Iron lungs were respirators that enclosed most of a person’s body, and which people with severe cases would end up in as they fought for their lives.

John remembers going to see matinee showings of cowboy movies on Saturdays and, before the movie, shorts would run. “Usually they showed the news,” he says, “but I just remember seeing this one clip warning us about Polio and it just showed all these kids in iron lungs.” If kids survived the iron lung, they’d often come back to school on crutches, in leg braces, or in wheelchairs.

“We all tried to be really careful in the summer — or, as we called it back then, ‘polio season,'” John says. This was because every year around Memorial Day, major outbreaks would begin to emerge and they’d spike sometime around August. People weren’t really sure how the disease spread at the time, but many believed it traveled through the water. There was no cure — and every child was susceptible to getting sick with it.

“We couldn’t swim in hot weather,” he remembers,” and the municipal outdoor pool would close down in August.”

Then, in 1954 clinical trials began for Dr. Jonas Salk’s vaccine against polio and within a year, his vaccine was announced safe. “I got that vaccine at school,” John says. Within two years, U.S. polio cases had dropped 85-95 percent — even before a second vaccine was developed by Dr. Albert Sabin in the 1960s. “I remember how much better things got after the vaccines came out. They changed everything,” John says.

In March of 2020, the world shut down because the coronavirus pandemic was raging across the country and the world. Once again, people didn’t know much about the virus — and they didn’t really know how to keep themselves safe, except to just lock themselves in their homes and avoid other people, so John and his wife hunkered down in their Florida condo, miles away from their children.

“The most challenging aspect of the shutdown was just the feeling of helplessness,” he says, especially as the pandemic began to take a toll on his family.

“My son’s a pilot and hasn’t been able to fly since the lockdowns started,” he says “My daughter and her husband had to work from home while taking care of their 9-month old baby because their daycare had shut down. Then later, both lost their jobs.”

The hardest thing, though, was being unable to visit his mother, who was 104 and living in Minnesota in an assisted living facility for all of 2020. They talked on the phone every day, though, to help her cope with the isolation but it took a toll on her. By January of 2021, her eyesight had deteriorated, she had a few bad falls, and it was clear she needed extra care. So he and his siblings made the decision to move her into a nursing home.

Within a week, she was diagnosed with COVID-19 and she died on January 30 after a 10-day battle with the virus. “I was angry when my mother got COVID,” he says, “because it felt like massive incompetence. Over 100 residents and staff got COVID in the facility where she died.”

It hurt too that this loss came around the same time as hope seemed to be in sight: Vaccines had arrived and he and his wife were eligible. They got their shots at a drive-thru site. He celebrated by seeing his grandson — who was now 21 months old — for the first time since December of 2019. “We got to be there for his first swimming lesson in our pool,” he says.

For John, his experiences living through both the polio epidemic and COVID-19 pandemic in his lifetime have driven home the importance of vaccines for public health. “I am much less worried than I was in 2020, and I am becoming more optimistic as the success of the vaccine effort is being realized, but I am still concerned about how many will resist getting the vaccination,” John says. “And I’m worried about the viruses out there that we don’t know about.”

“But I’m confident science can find a way,” he adds. “I’m hopeful for the future.”

Dr. Alvin Cantero, nurse practitioner and CEO of Alvin Clinica Familiar in Houston, Texas

Photo provided by Walden University

Dr. Alvin Cantero has always wanted to help others. He had been a physician in his native Cuba and, after immigrating to the United States in 2009, he decided to get his degree in nursing practice to provide for his family back home. He also wanted to help underserved communities, so while he was working towards his master’s in nursing science and doctoral degree in nursing practice at Walden University, he opened a clinic in a Hispanic and African neighborhood of Houston, Texas.

“The aim was to provide quality care to underserved people, like the homeless, veterans, immigrants, refugees, and all the people who don’t have enough resources to find other care,” he says.

When the pandemic hit Houston, a number of clinics like his shut down. But he refused to shut his doors. He knew his patients didn’t have anywhere else to go.

“A lot of my patients got very scared. They had nowhere to go and they started getting infected after believing that the pandemic was just like the typical flu or a cold,” he says. “Then, when people started dying, they got even more scared.”

“My patients increased from 10 to 15 patients a day to 50-60 a day,” he continues.

“I offer my clinic as a shelter for those patients,” he says. And in the process, he says, he fulfills an important role when he gains their trust: he helps educate them about the importance of preventative care while combating misinformation about science, healthcare, and the role of vaccines in keeping people safe.

He first encountered this kind of misinformation when he was working on his doctoral thesis on Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines at Walden University. HPV is the most common sexually transmitted infection in the United States, which can lead to six types of cancers later in life. He encountered a number of parents that were hesitant to administer the vaccine to their children. “They were afraid it would induce early sexual relationships,” he says, “or have negative psychological effects.”

This experience with vaccine hesitancy, he says, was invaluable in helping shape how he would later approach educational efforts about preventative care with his patients at his clinic — especially after the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines.

“I have some patients that told me they don’t want the [COVID-19] vaccination because they heard things that aren’t right,” he says, “They believed a lot of conspiracy theories.”

So he does what he can to educate them — which begins by telling them why he got vaccinated, himself. “I tell them, I have to protect you, I have to protect my family, I have to protect my community, so I got the vaccine” he explains. “I show them my vaccination card and then I explain about the benefits of vaccination and why the conspiracy theories are not true.”

“You cannot be pushy,” he continues. “You have to be patient. You have to do it through family intervention and you also have to do it through the community.” That’s why, Alvin says, he regularly goes to the YMCA and local churches to speak about the importance of vaccines.

“Vaccinations are a very important part of preventative care nationwide and we still have a long way to go in educating the population and discontinuing the spread of misleading information that has no scientific basis,” he says. That’s why it’s important to “work closely with community leaders who can help us change negative perceptions of vaccines within underserved communities. This can prevent further outbreaks of preventable diseases, such as measles.”

So far, Alvin is optimistic that the future of medicine will see less fear around vaccines. “More patients and families are coming into my practice seeking help and guidance to register for their COVID-19 vaccinations,” he says, “and they’re also inquiring about continuing regular immunization schedules for their children and teenagers.”

“I’m very optimistic,” he continues, when asked whether he thinks these educational efforts will pay off post-pandemic. “There will be a huge positive change in primary care moving forward.”

Ingrid Lea Scully, Pfizer Scientist specializing in immunology

Photo courtesy of Ingrid Lea Scully

Pfizer scientist Ingrid Lea Scully (no relation to John Scully) has never doubted the importance of vaccines.

“To paraphrase a great scientist in the field of vaccines, after the provision of safe drinking water, vaccines have had the greatest impact on human health,” she says.

In fact, this is part of why Ingrid went to work in vaccine research and development after her postdoctoral fellowship.

“I have always loved the natural world and we watched a lot of PBS at home,” she says. “My grandparents bought me National Geographic books, and I would memorize facts about different animals.” Later in life, educators helped continue to foster her love for science, including one who introduced her to immunology, the study of the immune system.

“What I loved most about immunology is that everything is connected,” she says.

Ingrid has been working at Pfizer for 16 years now. “I lead teams that develop tests to see if the vaccines we are developing ‘work,’ — whether the vaccines cause the body to make an immune response that ‘kills’ the germ, or pathogen,” she says. “We are trying to understand what immune response patterns correlate with protection against a given pathogen.”

“The ultimate goal is to be able to predict whether a vaccine will be protective early on in development, and to be able to tailor the immune response to a pathogen and to a certain population,” she continues. “One exciting new application is the development of vaccines for pregnant women, to protect their newborn babies from disease, like respiratory syncytial virus, which makes it hard to breathe, and group B streptococcus, which causes sepsis in newborns.”

In addition, she says, “I’m very excited about our ability to harness mRNA technology for vaccines. This is a very flexible platform that has the potential to revolutionize vaccines.”

For Ingrid, the most exciting moment in her career has been working on the COVID-19 vaccine — and being a part of a critical rollout. “[It’s] humbling, exhilarating, exhausting. Maybe not in that order,” she says.

“We’ve seen this past year what a profound impact infectious disease can have on everyday lives, how much energy is required to stay safe,” she continues. “We have not seen so clearly the impact of what we do as we have in the past year. It drives us on.”

That’s why she’s confident that science will win — and make the world better by improving human health.

“I hope that the silver lining of the pandemic is that more young people, from all backgrounds, will choose to become scientists,” Ingrid says. “The best thing in the world was when my 6-year-old daughter told me, ‘Mama, I’m so proud of you. You’re beating the virus.'”

That gives her hope.

“When we put our minds to it, we are empowered through science to find the solution to healthcare problems,” she says. “There are thousands of dedicated scientists working on vaccines. We do this job because we want to make the world a better place. To save the lives of babies and grandparents around the world. To unlock human potential by reducing disease.”

*Editorial Note: John Scully is the author’s father.

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Lil Wayne Helps Kick Off The New Baseball Season With ‘Ball Game’

Baseball is back as the MLB began its 2021 season yesterday. The league got some help kicking things off courtesy of Lil Wayne: To help get fans excited for a new year of baseball, the rapper made an original new song called “Ball Game,” which is a take on the classic “Take Me Out To The Ball Game.”

The track packs in a bunch of lyrical references to baseball. Wayne begins, “Take me out to the game, yeah / Take me out to the ball park / This a home run, I hit it far-far / Knock it out the park, hit a parked car / Root, root for the home team / It’s a cool game with a warm heart / And some high heat in the sweet spot / It’s a grand slam, it’s a walk off.”

Wayne has a bit of experience on the diamond, as he threw out the first pith at a Miami Marlins game in 2018. Some celebrity first pitches live in infamy, but Wayne’s was fairly innocuous: He one-hopped his throw, but it went right over the plate and was an uneventful moment, which is about as good an outcome as a first pitch thrower can hope for.

All in all, the new song is a far stronger effort than Wayne put in with his recent Burger King promotion.

Check out “Ball Game” above.

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No. 1 Recruit Chet Holmgren Doesn’t Want His High School Success To ‘Be An End Goal’

It is obvious when watching Chet Holmgren play basketball why he’s the No. 1 high school recruit in the country. The five-star prospect out of Minnesota — who, as of now, is not committed to a college basketball program — is more or less a seven-foot point-center, capable of breaking an opponent down off the dribble and hitting a jumper in their eye on one end before turning around and sending their shot into the fifth row of the bleachers on the other. In an era when the phrase “unicorn” is thrown around for basically anyone whose game exists outside of what basketball fans consider normal, Holmgren is legitimately one of the most unique players in the world, regardless of age.

That skill set, when mixed with his never-ending desire to be great, has led to waves of praise getting heaped onto Holmgren. The latest came on Thursday, when the Minneapolis native was named the 2021 Morgan Wootten Player of the Year alongside UConn commit Azzi Fudd. The award is given annually to a pair of high school standouts who, per a release, “demonstrate outstanding character, exhibit leadership and embody the values of being a student-athlete through schoolwork and community affairs.”

“It’s definitely an honor,” Holmgren told Dime over a Zoom call. “I feel like it’s still kinda sinking in, but I’m taking it day-by-day.”

Dime caught up with Holmgren and discussed his game, what the future holds, the success his longtime friend Jalen Suggs has had for the top-ranked Gonzaga Bulldogs, and what likes to do off the court.

As a broad thing, how does it feel to know that when people look at the list of people who are McDonald’s All Americans, Chet Holmgren’s name is gonna be on there?

It’s a long list of great basketball players, to have my name up there with them is definitely an honor. But I don’t want that to kind of be an end goal for me — it wasn’t for them, lots of people have gone on to do great things in their career, I’m gonna work to do the same.

Obviously the bummer news that they’re not gonna have the game this year, when did you hear about that, what went through your head when you heard that?

I don’t remember the exact date I heard it, but it was definitely a bummer when I did hear it. It’s kind of been a dream to play in that game, looking forward to it for many years, was definitely a driving factor in continuing to push and work every day, to be in the game. So it was definitely a hit for me when it was announced that it wasn’t gonna be played, but it’s still an honor to be part of the game.

I wanna ask about your game, how would you describe it to someone who hasn’t seen you play yet?

To put it simply, I’d say on both ends, do whatever it takes to help win. Could be anything — playing point guard, playing power forward, playing small forward, wherever I’m needed, whether I’ve gotta be a facilitator, scorer, primary defender, help-side defender, anything.

What’s the thing in your game you take the most pride in?

Definitely defense. I feel like if you score 30, but someone scores 30 on you, I don’t really see the hype in scoring 30 in a loss. Definitely don’t like getting scored on, definitely take pride in playing defense, cause defense wins championships.

When you talk to coaches, scouts, players in college, the NBA, whatever, what’s the feedback that you get about what they want you to work the most on as you get ready to make a jump in competition?

I just know my game’s not polished, not finished in any way, and I’ve just got to continue to keep getting better every day. That starts in the gym, I’ve been working a lot on my body, getting stronger, more explosive, better balance. And then on top of that, I’ve been working on my ball-handling, getting a better handle. Need to work on my shot and my decision-making as well, with the ball in my hands and without it, and my lateral speed on defense.

Who are your favorite players to watch, whether it’s other people in high school or people in college or the NBA, and what do you like about their game?

I’ve got friends in college right now playing. My guy Jalen’s doing great things in March right now, shout out to him. But also, in the NBA, I just like to watch basketball in general, not just one player. I like to take different things from different guys, definitely watch a lot of Kevin Durant, not only this year, I go back and pull out the old tapes. I watch a lot of LeBron, how he leads, how he makes guys better, how he kind of controls the whole game. Many different things from many different players. I watch a lot of Steph Curry, who doesn’t?

I’m glad you mentioned KD because when I watch him and I watch you, it’s that similar body type, it’s that similar mentality on both ends of the court. What’s the thing you admire most about him and what’s the thing about about him you take the most pride in having in your game?

It’s hard to pick out one thing, he does so many things as such a high level. But his ability to score at all three levels and do it efficiently, he doesn’t need 10 dribbles to get to where he wants to go, he gets to his spots. No matter what the defense does, he can score.

One thing I didn’t know until recently was you and Jalen were high school teammates. What is your favorite thing about watching him as Gonzaga’s gone on this run and he’s been a stud the entire time?

Not just high school teammates, pretty much lifelong teammates until this year. Since I started playing basketball in third grade, we’ve been playing on the same team for the most part. It kinda came as a surprise to everybody what he’s doing this year, but I could have told you last year it would have gone like this. He’s a high-level competitor, a high-level athlete, he just makes special plays on the basketball court.

What’s the thing that we, as the basketball watching public, don’t know about him that you think we need to know? It can be something about him as an athlete, a competitor, a person, if he’s a goofball, anything.

I think it’s just … he’s pretty much good at everything he does. He’s one of the best Call of Duty players I’ve ever seen up close, and multiple sports, too. A lot of people know he’s really good at football, but pretty much any ball he picks up, he’s better than you at. He’s just a great all-around athlete and a great person as well.

Something I hate in these interviews is someone always tries to go, “Hey, where are you going to college.” But the thing I do wanna know is, what are the things that are most important to you as you’re preparing to make this jump to another level of basketball?

There’s a lot of factors, but at the end of the day, it’s gonna come down to fit. How do I fit into their style of play? How do I fit into their offense? How do I fit into their defense? How do I fit in with the other players on the roster, not only on the court, but off the court? How do I fit in with the coaches? All that basketball stuff comes first, but then it comes down to how do I fit into the school and everything along with that.

What are some interests you have outside of basketball?

I put a lot of time into basketball, but there are other things. I like to definitely play video games as well. I like to cook … I mean, I like to eat, but cooking goes along with that, so I think I could throw down in the kitchen a little bit. I used to fish a good bit, but I kinda got too busy for that, had to put that on the back seat, but I’ll get back to it.

What video games? I’d guess Call of Duty since you and Jalen play that, no?

Yeah, it’s mostly Call of Duty. Not too many new games coming out right now, but a lot of the battle royale-style games, they kinda come in and … like Apex Legends, that kinda came for a little bit then died out. Everybody knows Fortnite, that got overplayed. But yeah, right now, it’s pretty much Call of Duty right now.

I know all the recruiting services have you as the No. 1 basketball player in the country, are you also the No. 1 Call of Duty player in the country?

No, no. [laughs]

Who’s got you?

Just a pastime. I bet a lot of people got me. I just hop on there for fun sometimes.

Everyone’s always gonna ask you about basketball, but who are the people that you admire outside of basketball, the people you admire away from the court?

There’s a pretty good list. I’d like to start with my parents, definitely great role models, do a lot of good things for me. My sister, other people as well. Then people like LeBron James, Chris Paul, Kyrie Irving does a lot of great things off the court that I don’t think he gets enough credit for, kinda gets overshadowed by some other things, unfortunately. But he’s definitely a great person off the court as well.

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Let’s Talk About ‘The Falcon And The Winter Soldier’s Unexpected Cameo

SPOILERS for ‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’ will be found below.

So far, Disney+ has given us three episodes of the long-awaited “buddy comedy” with Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes, and we’re getting a lot more than adventurous hijinks. Don’t get me wrong, we’re getting plenty of what we’d expect from an action-oriented Marvel Cinematic Universe series. Yet this show’s investing plenty of airtime into blending lighthearted moments with heavier issues that tie directly into Sam and Bucky’s respective plights and reintegration into society after The Snap. It’s marvelous how the show’s pulling off the juxtaposition, too, as with showing Sam grappling with the effects of systemic racism, along a side of couple’s therapy, and also venturing into Bucky’s lingering trauma after his decades as the homicidal Winter Soldier.

Speaking of Bucky’s recovery, we got a lot more hints about that in Episode 3. He and Sam traveled to Germany, where Bucky helped free Zemo from a prison, so that the trio could travel to Madripoor and trace the source of the super-serum that has the Flag Smashers all jacked up. Madripoor also happens to be where Sharon Carter’s living now, so we saw her ass-kicking after pointing the guys in the right direction, but the Zemo history with Bucky is significant, to the point where it worried Sam: Zemo was previously capable (as seen in Captain America: Civil War) of placing Bucky back into HYDRA brainwash-state by uttering some key words, but Bucky’s recovery has progressed to the point where he can resist Zemo’s attempts. Also, there’s a major Black Panther connection with Zemo, since he framed Bucky for the murder of Wakanda’s T’Chaka (by detonating a bomb during the signing of the Sovokia Accords).

This all led to a major cameo during the episode’s wind-down, when Bucky broke away from Sam and Zemo to take a walk, presumably to clear his head. However, it quickly becomes clear that Bucky’s scooping up some Wakandan “breadcrumbs” on his walk, and those shiny little nuggets eventually put him face-to-face with an old friend, who’s not looking so friendly. Mind you, this person’s beef is not with Bucky. It’s Ayo (portrayed by Florence Kasumba), a member of the Dora Milaje (the group of personal bodyguards who served Chadwick Boseman’s King T’Challa), and she’s looking for Zemo.

Disney+

Naturally, we can expect that it won’t end well for Zemo when Ayo (who previously was not kind to Black Widow during her brief onscreen introduction in Civil War) finally tracks him down. This will undoubtedly happen with or without the help of Bucky, but we can guess that Bucky will cooperate. For one thing, he didn’t look surprised to see Wakandan technology on a European street. He also didn’t look shocked to see Ayo (“I was wondering when you were gonna show up”), so one wonders how much of this meeting was even pre-planned. For another thing, Bucky is pretty much obliged to help, given that he spent years with the Wakandans, who helped free him from his HYDRA mind-shackles and fitted him with a new vibranium arm.

In hindsight, we saw a hint last week that a Black Panther reference might be on the horizon due to some banter between Sam and Bucky. This chatter included Sam joking about Bucky being the “White Panther,” and Bucky correcting him, saying that he’s the “White Wolf.” Sam didn’t know what the heck to think of his partner’s grumbling, and Bucky didn’t elaborate at the time. However, he was referring to the nickname that Wakandans gave Bucky during his time there, as revealed in a Black Panther post-credits scene.

Nicknames aside, one thing is certain: Ayo’s appearance on the scene is a spectacular development that could potentially draw more of the MCU into The Falcon and the Winter Soldier with all the interconnectedness that we’ve come to expect from Kevin Feige’s storytelling sorcery. Oh, and watch out, Zemo.

Disney+ streams new ‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’ episodes on Fridays.

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James Gunn Says He ‘Got Every Character’ He Wanted In ‘The Suicide Squad,’ Even Some ‘WTF’ Ones

The Suicide Squad news has come fast and furious this last fortnight, with a pair of trailers and a slew of movie posters surfacing in recent days and giving fans plenty to pour over as they try to figure out what direction James Gunn’s film will head later this summer.

The movie’s marketing has stressed the “horribly beautiful mind” of director Gunn, which is an interesting turn of phrase and also notable in the wake of the Zack Snyder’s Justice League release on HBO Max. Director’s visions for superhero blockbusters are all the rage these days, so it was and so helpful when Gunn answered some questions about the film’s theatrical trailer when he shared it on social media Thursday.

As Gunn explained on Twitter, he didn’t have any complaints when it came to his vision for this version of The Suicide Squad, including all the obscure characters he wanted when it came to the script. Asked if Gunn “got” to feature the villains he wanted in his Suicide Squad, he made it clear on Twitter that his vision was not compromised here.

“I got every character I asked for,” Gunn wrote. “Even though sometimes they were like WTF?

While King Shark may have stolen the show in Thursday’s trailer, the trailer did give us some confirmation that some WTF characters are definitely appearing in the film. Nathan Fillion, for example, almost certainly appears to be playing a character called Arm-Fall-Off-Boy, also known as The Detachable Kid.

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The thread has some other interesting details as well, including a note that some of the rats in the movie are real, and a bit of character inspiration.

In other words, what we get in August is very unlikely to have a four-hour cut of it coming a few years after the fact. Which is definitely good news for Gunn, and likely exactly what DC fans want to hear.

[via THR]

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Barack Obama Explains Why A Song From Jay-Z’s ‘The Black Album’ Means So Much To Him

Barack Obama hasn’t been the president of the United States for over four years now, but he still has plenty of admirers who are eager to hear from him. That especially true of his music preferences, as he often shares well-received playlists. Fans were surely delighted a few weeks ago, then, when the former POTUS made a post on Instagram asking for questions from his followers. In his response to one of those questions, he explained why a particular Jay-Z song from The Black Album means to much to him.

Complex cited Obama’s well-known love of hip-hop and asked, “Do you have one verse you can recite by heart? Obama responded with a video, which Complex shared. In the clip, Obama begins, “First of all, Complex: you do not want to hear me rap. When I have tried to rap, my daughters have rolled their eyes, covered their ears. They think it’s painful. They even think my dancing is better than my rapping.”

He went on to speak about The Black Album‘s closing track, “My 1st Song”:

“Now, having said that, I’ve mentioned a couple of songs that even when I was running for president came up a lot on my iPod. One of them was ‘My 1st Song’ by Jay-Z, which is a song that I love because it talks about the struggle of just trying to make it. And sometimes you have to resort to false bravado and hustle and tamping down your insecurities, and when I was running for president, obviously, at that point, I didn’t know whether I was gonna make it, so somehow, that inspired me.

There’s a line in there, ‘Treat my first as my last and my last as my first and my thirst is the same as when I came.’ And I actually kept on listening to that song during the presidency because it was a reminder that — even when you do make it — having a little bit of that sense of still being hungry, still having to work hard, still having to prove something, that’s what keeps propelling you forward.

But, I’m still not gonna rap it.”

Watch a snippet of Obama’s answer below.