More than two decades after Mariah Carey released her Christmas classic, “All I Want For Christmas Is You,” the song continues to dominate the holiday season. This year was another good one: As per TMZ, the song now owns the all-time record for the biggest, single-day stream in Spotify history, tallying a shocking 17.223 million streams on Christmas Eve alone. The previous champion was Ariana Grande’s “7 Rings,” which was streamed 14.966 million times on the first day of its release in January 2019.
.@MariahCarey‘s “All I Want For Christmas Is You” breaks the all-time record for the biggest single day streams in Spotify history with 17.223 million streams.
WOW I know people think I’m making “coin” (lil’ secret: artists make very little from streams) but the real reason I’m sitting here in astonishment & gratitude is seeing the joy this little song I wrote brings to people. THANK YOU & MERRY CHRISTMAS!!! https://t.co/jlhrtiN0h1
After hearing the news, Carey shared her excitement in a tweet. “WOW,” she wrote, followed by a trio of enthusiastic emojis. “I know people think I’m making ‘coin’ (lil’ secret: artists make very little from streams) but the real reason I’m sitting here in astonishment & gratitude is seeing the joy this little song I wrote brings to people.” She added, “THANK YOU & MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!”
The new Spotify record comes just over a week after Carey’s song topped the Billboard singles chart for the second time in as many years. The track also anded the No. 1 spot last December, albeit for the first time in the song’s 25-year lifetime. With its return to the top once this year, it’s clear that this could become a Christmas tradition.
In the spring, many New York City residents fled the metropolis, seeking refuge from the endlessly ringing sirens and the unshakeable feeling of loss. At that time, it was as if the city could be split into three groups: those hunkered down in their homes, the essential workers and emergency first-responders who were helping people, and those who were sick. Between travel restrictions and dread, New York became a place to avoid.
But Safi Rauf, a Navy veteran and Georgetown pre-med student, traveled upstream to help pull New York City back from its worst days. Rauf, who remained a Navy reserve corpsman, had been keeping tabs on the spread of the novel coronavirus through Asia through the winter via a Department of Defense database. When he saw that potentially infected travelers were being allowed to take commercial airlines around the country back to their homes, he knew things were about to get bad.
“It just didn’t seem right,” Rauf says, “and fast forward, it started spiking in the U.S.”
Around that same time, Georgetown went virtual, and Rauf began volunteering locally at the Arlington County Public health office as a contact tracer. In early April, the Expeditionary Medical Facility Bethesda, in which Rauf serves, was mobilized to help set up a field hospital at the Javits Center in Manhattan.
There, Rauf and his colleagues worked 13 to 14-hour shifts completely in isolation, with only one break to use the restroom or have a meal so that the unit could “minimize wasting the personal protective equipment.” What Rauf saw when he got to the city was a clear picture of who was mostly being afflicted with the deadly virus. At the Javits Center, which was “like a big warehouse,” Rauf mostly cared for unsheltered folks and immigrants, many of whom had never seen a doctor in their lives or were not fluent in English. Despite serving as a translator and cultural advisor with Special Operations units in Afghanistan, Rauf found himself unable to communicate with many of his sickest patients. “We just gave them everything, monitored their body fluids, and hoped for the best,” he says.
Now, Rauf is back at Georgetown, where he is part of the 2020 class of Tillman Scholars and the president of the Georgetown University Student Veterans Association and studies antibiotics treatments. It just so happened that the incredible test of human strength that he experienced in New York in the spring served him well as he interviewed to earn a scholarship from the Tillman Foundation, a nonprofit named after the football star turned military hero, Pat Tillman, that empowers service men and women and their families through education and community.
Rauf, who was born in an Afghani refugee camp in Pakistan and moved to America when he was 16, had a powerful backstory and history of military service that was already exemplary, but he believes the experience in New York put his application over the top.
“Us Tillman Scholars, we don’t feel like any one of us is good enough, but at the end of the day, every single one of the Tillman Scholars has a unique aspect to them,” Rauf says. “You won’t find two Tillman Scholars who have the same story.”
Tillman Foundation
On the other side of the interview process was Marie Tillman, the chair of the foundation and wife to the late Pat. The team had to make the selection process virtual this year, and reschedule its annual charity run in Phoenix near Pat’s alma mater of Arizona State University. As 2020 continued, though, Tillman was proud to see that from public health to social justice to politics and everything else that has bubbled up during this chaotic year, there always seemed to be a Tillman Scholar leading.
“If something’s going on, we more than likely have a scholar who’s right there trying to have an impact on that issue,” Tillman says.
Shortly after Pat’s death in April 2004, the foundation was formed to help the next generation of armed forces members and empower a new generation of leaders. The first class of scholars came in 2009, and as the scholars have gotten older and gone out into the world, their impact has been manifold.
Take Chris Diaz, a Navy veteran and 2011 Tillman Scholar who started Action Tank, a veteran-led non-profit in Philadelphia that brings people of different disciplines together to tackle a significant societal issue through a yearlong project, alongside two of his fellow scholars. After jobs in sports and medicine as a performance psychologist, Diaz is now also volunteering as an executive secretary of the agency review team for veterans’ affairs on the Biden transition team.
There are countless others like Rauf and Diaz. Shreveport mayor Adrian Perkins is a Tillman Scholar. Kimberly Jung, an entrepreneur and “Shark Tank” contestant who got an investment from Mark Cuban for her Afghan saffron company Rumi Spice, is a Tillman Scholar. And this year’s Make Your Mark award winner, Jackie Munn, is a colleague of Rauf’s at Arlington County Public Health, as well as a mother looking after her children while her husband, a former Green Beret, was away for work.
What comes through from Tillman Scholars — and trickles down from Marie, as well as foundation CEO Dan Futrell — is not only a steadfast belief in leadership, but a resounding optimism. Particularly in 2020, it seems almost impossible that a group of people could wake up every day with a belief that better is on the horizon. Yet that’s exactly what this community of veteran leaders has.
“If all great crucibles, we need those things in our lives to rise as leaders, then this is no different than that,” says Diaz, who led Action Tank’s work restoring Philadelphia tree canopies in 2020, “so I view it quite frankly as a blessing that I’ve gotten this opportunity to hone and sharpen my own leadership abilities through this time of crisis because that’s what always has happened.”
That resonant positivity, says Futrell, who was a 2013 Tillman Scholar before becoming CEO, comes from a desire to live up to Pat Tillman’s legacy, which includes leaving a career as an athlete behind to enlist in the Army and his eventual death by friendly fire in Afghanistan.
“I and 695 other Tillman scholars have committed ourselves to have an impact in the name of somebody who lived before us and lived a good life that we were motivated by,” Futrell says, “so you know it’s not lost on us that, as, as the years continue to take on after his death, that, that there will be fewer people that might know his name.”
The foundation has helped foster community and connection among its scholars this year by hosting virtual events including leadership talks as well as simple meet-and-greets for networking. Guest speakers have come in to lend a voice and support scholars as they continue on the front lines of the world’s many struggles.
“The thing about building community, and a responsibility that the foundation has taken on, is creating an environment where the connections can happen,” says Diaz.
Yet in sifting through all the through-lines of 2020, another is that America again had to determine what its relationship with the military was. The presidential election polarized the nation, often with discussions over military service at the center. One of the brilliant things about a big, diverse group like the Tillman Scholars, and the veteran community more broadly, is that it is not monolithic in its politics or its view of the world.
There are Tillman Scholars who helped run Veterans for Trump and others who led the Veterans for Biden organization, and folks who have supported all sorts of candidates in the past. The Tillman Foundation itself is, as a non-profit, inherently apolitical, but nevertheless derives value from its diverse viewpoints on politics and society.
“That’s where we want to be,” Futrell says. “Because we know that our scholars are carrying the right set of values, and are going to have a discussion with each other and ideally in the world that is respectful and that is … built to advance the conversation and not just tear each other down.”
It’s a principle core to Action Tank’s work in Philadelphia and Diaz’s worldview, too, in large part due to a curiosity and wisdom forged through multiple military deployments.
“The military is a small microcosm of the country,” says Diaz, “so it’s made up of every color, race and creed, and you’re able to take from that experience and see the full breadth of the human experience, both in all of its heights and all of the pain and depravity and suffering that is war.”
Leading then becomes easier when people can join one another on common ground and bring the best out of one another. The Tillman Foundation believes creating and supporting leaders creates the largest possible impact.
“We always talk about, because we invest on an annual basis in a relatively small amount of people, the impact those people have through the work that they do and the leadership roles that they’re taking has such a huge impact,” says Tillman. “Being able to leverage what we’re able to give and support, the fact that it is in the leadership sector, there’s an amplification of that.”
Since returning to Georgetown, Rauf has heard from many students, some veterans and some not, asking for advice about a career in medicine or how to nab a Tillman scholarship. He organized the large annual Veteran’s Day celebration on Georgetown’s campus in a socially distant and mostly virtual capacity and got some wiggle room from trusting professors to design his own research.
Some day, Rauf hopes to become a surgeon but will keep seeking out ways to lead in his field. Doing just that, though, he may only be able to help his own patients. But as a leader in his military unit or medical team, there is no end to the impact he could have.
“If I can influence that type of policy in a leadership position, I can help millions of people,” says Rauf.
In one sense, it might seem odd that Melania Trump, a former model, has not been a fixture of magazine covers over the last four years. But in other ways, it’s not surprising: Her husband has been a relentless source of controversy, and Melania, while often quiet or lurking behind the scenes, has done her share to add to that unpleasant mystique. (Then again, she’s never more relatable than when she appears to despise him and his children.) But there’s one person who thinks the media should have been treated like a goddess: her husband, Donald Trump.
The outgoing president spent Christmas Day as he spends most days: golfing and rage-tweeting. In this case, it was a quote-tweet of one of his sycophantic media outlets, Breitbart, who published an article calling out the “elitist snobs in the fashion press” who have “kept the most elegant First Lady in American history off the covers of their magazines for 4 consecutive years.”
Trump added some brief, albeit autopilot, thoughts of his own, seeming to call his wife the “greatest of all time” and throwing in a vaguely directed chorus of “Fake news!” As ever with the 45th president, don’t try to parse the logic of what exactly was “fake news” about magazine covers not granting prime real estate to a woman who dismissed immigrant children being caged.
Perhaps it was all a ploy to stop her from leaving him once he’s out of office and subject to all manner of financial and legal duress. Whatever the case, it was one of the only tweets he’s made in weeks to not get flagged by Twitter’s top brass for spreading misinformation, so maybe he’s right?
Warning: This post contains spoilers for Wonder Woman 1984.
End credits scenes have been de rigueur for comic book movies ever since the first Iron Man, and they tend to fall into one of two categories: surprise reveals of characters who will play a role in coming adventures or nudge-nudgey jokes. Wonder Woman 1984 has one that’s neither. Instead, it goes above and beyond, bringing back a legend of comic book media.
At first the scene seems like more of our hero, Gal Gadot’s Diana Prince, saving yet another life. We see a dark-haired woman rescuing a group of bystanders from a falling pole. But when one of them goes to thank her, she turns around, revealing that she’s in fact Lynda Carter, aka the first actress to play Wonder Woman, in the CBS show that ran from 1975 to 1979. (HBO Max made the program’s three seasons available a few days before 1984 dropped.) She says her name is Asteria and that she’s been “doing this for a long time.”
Carter is on record praising Gadot’s cucumber cool work as Diana, telling People back in 2017, ““I just said that she knows who this character is. Because Wonder Woman — it’s the idea of her. It’s not about superpowers, it’s about her intellect and compassion. It’s so much more than some comic book character, because we identify with it.”
Wonder Woman 1984 is now streaming on HBO Max and is in any movie theaters that are open.
Kawhi has received stitches for a cut on his mouth after colliding with teammate Serge Ibaka, and Tyronn Lue is optimistic about his recovery.
Kawhi Leonard had 8 stitches to treat a mouth laceration after colliding with Serge Ibaka, the team says. After the game, coach Ty Lue said he believed Leonard will be “fine.”
In the final contest of the Christmas Day slate, the Los Angeles Clippers had been clinging to a healthy lead for most of the second half, right up until the Denver Nuggets tried to stage a furious rally late and close the gap to under double digits. But in the midst of all that, we had a scary moment as the two teams battled for a rebound.
Jamal Murray came up with the loose ball and bolted down court before getting fouled, but it was the play right before that which left Kawhi Leonard bloodied on the floor after colliding with teammate Serge Ibaka as they both went up for a rebound on the other end.
Kawhi lay on the ground for several minutes with blood covering his face and shoulders as he was being attended to and was eventually taken to the locker room for medical care.
It remains unclear exactly what the nature of the injury is, but Kawhi obviously took a very hard blow to the face that will require extra caution. We’ll continue to update the situation as more information becomes available. The Clippers came away with the 121-108 victory to remain undefeated on the season.
The NBA’s Christmas Day slate is always the best way to celebrate the holiday season, even when the actual contests aren’t particularly competitive. Heading into the prime-time showdown between the Lakers and Mavs, we’d already witnessed three double-digit blowout wins, so there was still hope we’d get treated to at least one barn-burner before it was said and done.
Alas, that was not to be, as the Lakers walked away with a 138-115 win, marking their first victory on the young season after dropping their opener against the Clippers earlier in the week. LeBron posted a casual 22 points, 10 rebounds, and seven assists on the night, as Anthony Davis led the way with 28 points, eight rebounds, and five assists.
But far more noteworthy were the contributions they got from their newest offseason additions, who represent what they hope will be significant roster upgrades as they look to defend their title against what appears to be a growing gauntlet of contenders who are announcing their arrival early this season.
Speaking to Rachel Nichols after the game, LeBron offered high praise to Dennis Schroder and Montrezl Harrell for coming up big in their Christmas Day win.
Talking to LeBron James after the Lakers blast the Mavericks on Christmas Day – he says it’s a balance to both manage his minutes with the fact that “we want to win every game,” but that the Lakers’ new additions are giving the whole team energy: pic.twitter.com/6kocjX4QUD
Harrell was particularly impactful against Dallas on Friday, scoring 22 points on efficient 10-of-13 shooting from the field and snagging seven rebounds in his 28 minutes of action. Schroder was equally impressive, finishing with 18 points and six assists and a comparably efficient 7-of-11 on the night.
According to Adrian Wojnarowski, the Lakers have already engaged in contract extension talks with Schroder, as they look to keep him around for the long-term. Schroder had previously turned down their two-year, $34 million extension offer prior to the season. After February 16, Schroder becomes eligible for an extension in the range of four years, $83 million, though it remains to be seen whether the Lakers will be willing to go that high.
Regardless, he and Harrell have already started to pay dividends and give a taste of what this new-look Lakers squad might be capable of this season as they look to repeat as champs.
Alvin Kamara is a very good football player. Even by the standard he has set for himself, the New Orleans Saints running back had the game of his life on Friday against the Minnesota Vikings. Kamara rushed for six touchdowns, a record-tying amount and something that had not been achieved since before World War II.
Per @ESPNStatsInfo: Alvin Kamara’s 6 Rush TD are tied with Ernie Nevers (1929 Chicago Cardinals) for most in a game in NFL history
The Saints ended up winning comfortably, 52-33, behind Kamara’s 155 rushing yards and six scored. But a ton of other folks also either got a major gift or a gigantic lump of coal from Kamara’s record-setting day: fantasy football players. As was noted in a few places, Kamara’s game was a fantasy football owner’s dream or nightmare, depending on what side of the equation you’re on.
The greatest fantasy football performance in Week 16, of all-time, is @JerryRice with 59.9 in 1995. With his SIXTH(!) touchdown Alvin Kamara now has 56.2 points. It is the BEST RB game of Week 16 of ALL-TIME and the 3rd best of any position ever. Legend.
For an added twist this week, many fantasy football leagues are crowning their champions this week, and if Kamara was on your team or on the other side, his performance very well could have swung the title before anyone else plays. And as a result, a ton of fantasy football players had reactions that were all over the place to his game.
I’m playing against Alvin Kamara in my fantasy championship this week so it’s safe to say my Christmas is completely ruined
I’m 0-5 the past two years in fantasy championship games. Looks like I’m trending towards 0-6. Surprises my win percentage is 25% after Kamara’s performance pic.twitter.com/dUWNVKabSx
Well my best Christmas gift this year was definitely from Alvin Kamara! 6 TD’s that is insane!! I’m hoping this means smooth sailing for the rest of my Fantasy Super Bowl #ThankYouKamara
Lost my fantasy semi final matchup last week by half a point due to a bad spot by the official on a play in the Steelers game and I’ve got Kamara and Cook as my running backs smh https://t.co/jWw1pkrJOH
Things could have been better or worse for these folks, though. With four minutes left and Kamara sitting on five scores, the Saints had the ball on the doorstep for a third down. Instead of handing it to Kamara, though, Sean Payton Sean Payton’d it up and brought in Taysom Hill, who punched it in from a yard out.
Now, New Orleans could have given the ball to Kamara and he could have theoretically gotten seven, but he was more than happy to give the ball to his quarterback/tight end/special teams ace/whatever else Hill plays (I have lost track at this point).
Alvin Kamara was asked whether he was on Sean Payton to put him in on 3rd & 1 to get his 6th TD.
Don’t look now, but the Brooklyn Nets look like they might end up being really, really good. After trucking the Golden State Warriors on opening night, the team went to Boston on Christmas Day for a high-profile matchup with the Celtics. Things were tight for a half, but eventually, Brooklyn came out on top in convincing fashion, 123-95.
Kevin Durant continues to look like he isn’t coming off of what is normally a devastating injury — he had 29 points on 9-for-16 shooting with four rebounds, three assists, and two steals — but the big story on Friday was Kyrie Irving in his return to Beantown. Irving was out of his mind, scoring 37 points on 13-for-21 shooting from the field and 7-for-10 shooting from deep. He also pitched in eight assists and six rebounds for good measure.
Irving’s performance set a Christmas Day record for the Nets, as no one in franchise history had ever scored more on Dec. 25. He also tied a Christmas Day record by making seven triples.
From NetsPR
Kyrie Irving’s 37 points represent the most points scored by a Net on Christmas Day in franchise history.
Previous high: 36 points for Micheal Ray Richardson in 1984 at New York.
After the game, Irving was asked about Durant, and made it a point to say that he is impressed by the team as a whole, and did the Nets marketing department an impromptu favor.
Kyrie on Nets’ supporting cast: “It’s not just about us two. We introduced the world to 7-11, but it’s not just about us. It’s a great team over here. We have a great collection of individuals where every single day we are pushing each other to be better.”
Teams will inevitably hit peaks and valleys, so things will not, in all likelihood, go this well for the Nets all season. But the early returns could not be more promising, in large part because Irving looks healthy and rejuvenated playing next to Durant, for whom those same words apply. Next up for Brooklyn is a Sunday night trip to Charlotte to take on the Hornets.
The Golden State Warriors are 0-2 on the season with both of those loses being extremely one-sided. The team fell on opening night to the Brooklyn Nets, and on Christmas Day, the Dubs got ran off the floor by the Milwaukee Bucks, losing 138-99 in a game that was as convincing as the final score indicated.
The whole thing was jarring, but after years of being perpetually elite on that end of the floor, it was strange watching the Warriors’ offense look totally limp against the Bucks. In fairness, Milwaukee makes everyone look terrible because of what they can do on defense, but the numbers don’t lie: Golden State shot 34-for-99 from the field, 10-for-45 from three, and had almost as many turnovers (11) as assists (14).
Following the game, Steph Curry spoke to the media and criticized the team’s approach on offense when they get stuck in the mud, saying their “collective IQ” as a group tanks.
Steph Curry on the offensive answer: “I don’t know. We just have to focus more on what we’re trying to do. Sometimes when you miss shots, you tend to force and press and not think. Our group’s collective IQ has to get a lot better in those moments where you’re not making shots.”
Here’s a moment that probably serves as an example. Kelly Oubre Jr. drives into traffic and hoists up a completely hopeless layup, and after he misses, the camera cuts to Curry laughing.
Steph Curry and Steve Kerr’s reactions to Kelly Oubre shooting while surrounded by 3 defenders. pic.twitter.com/wLRxlYfBqX
This also isn’t Curry’s first critique of the team’s offense, as he had this curious quote following the loss to Brooklyn.
Steph Curry: “I know I can get shots off pick-and-rolls. But when I give the ball up and the other team is trying to play high side making sure I don’t get it back, we (need to) continue to create good offense. I gotta see the floor a little better when I don’t have the ball.” pic.twitter.com/dkZoMNIX4i
To be clear, Curry has not been anywhere near the standard he has set for himself this season. Through the admittedly tiny sample size of two games, Curry is at 19.5 points and eight assist per game on 34.2 percent shooting from the field and 20 percent shooting from three. It is, of course, easy to focus on him when guys around him aren’t giving a ton of anything on offense, but Curry is one of those guys who has always been able to make things happen for everyone else. It’s been fascinating to watch through the first two games of the year, and with how cutthroat the Western Conference is going to be this season, the Dubs have to find a way to get back on track as soon as possible.
Following up the 2019 release of Jesus Is Born on Christmas, this year he’s released a five-track EP called Emmanuel. Both releases stray from the hip-hop/rap side of things and toward choral and gospel music that he’s been working toward with his Sunday Service projects. The cover art for the project was done by Nick Knight, and the project is independently distributed by the New Jersey-based platform Vydia.
Emmanuel, which translates to “God with us,” is a mix of English and Latin, and was composed and executive produced by Kanye. This isn’t the only new music from the hip-hop icon to drop today — his feature on Playboi Carti’s Whole Lotta Red for the track “Go2DaMoon” was also a surprise. That song is much more in the traditional realm of a Kanye verse, and not the pristine choral composition he dropped on his own today. Stream Emmanuel below.
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