01.16.2023

Sunday, January 16th, 2022 

Onslow, Western Australia, reports the hottest day in recorded Australian history, reaching a high of 50.7°C (123.3°F). (The Guardian) 

Russian involvement suspected in cyberattack against Ukraine Microsoft has detected dangerous malware infecting dozens of government and private Ukrainian computer networks, the tech giant warned Saturday. The still-unidentified hackers behind the attack also left a message warning Ukrainians to “be afraid and expect the worst.” Ukrainian officials say they suspect Russian involvement. Russia previously launched cyberattacks against Ukraine in 2014, 2015, and 2017. Talks between the U.S. and Russia broke down around the time of the attack, after Russian diplomats refused demands to withdraw troops from the Ukrainian border. Intelligence analysts have warned that Russia is preparing a “false flag” operation to justify an invasion of Ukraine very soon. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Djokovic forced to leave Australia after court upholds visa cancellation Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic left Australia Sunday night after a court ruling upheld the immigration minister’s decision to cancel Djokovic’s visa. Djokovic traveled to Australia on Jan. 5 but was denied entry because he has not been vaccinated against COVID-19. After the Serbian champion won an initial appeal, Immigration Minister Alex Hawke invoked his ministerial discretion to cancel Djokovic’s visa, arguing that the unvaccinated athlete’s presence in the country would stoke “anti-vaccination sentiment” and lead to “civil unrest.” Djokovic, who was scheduled to play his first match of the Australian Open Monday, said he was “extremely disappointed.” NPR 

Trump mocks and criticizes Biden at rally in Arizona Former President Donald Trump repeated his baseless claims of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election and castigated President Biden for his handling of inflation, supply chain issues, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the southern border at a rally in Florence, Arizona, Saturday. Trump also did an impression of his successor, pounding the podium with his fist in an accurate approximation of Biden’s gestures and saying “I’m gonna get rid of COVID. I’m gonna get ri-i-id of COVID!” in a much less accurate approximation of Biden’s voice. The former president did not, however, reveal whether he plans to run for a second term in 2024. Trump is expected to announce his decision after the 2022 midterms. NEWSWEEK 

Over 2,400 Sunday flights canceled as winter storm strikes East Coast According to tracking site FlightAware, airlines canceled more than 2,400 into, out of, or within the United States as winter storms struck the Southeast. North Carolina’s Charlotte/Douglas International Airport, a hub for American Airlines, canceled almost 90 percent of its flights. American Airlines announced it will allow travelers affected by the weather to rebook flights with no fee. In anticipation of the storm, the governors of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia all declared states of emergency Saturday. CNN BUSINESSFLIGHTAWARE 

Official death toll from Kazakhstan unrest stands at 225 Kazakhstan’s prosecutor general’s office announced Saturday that the death toll from last week’s unrest now stands at 225, including 19 members of state security forces. The protests began to die down when a contingent of mostly Russian troops from the Collective Security Treaty Organization, of which both Russia and Kazakhstan are members, arrived in the country. CSTO troops began withdrawing from the Central Asian former Soviet republic Thursday and are expected to be completely out by Jan. 23. REUTERS 

The death toll from the civil unrest in Kazakhstan increases to 225, including 19 members of the security forces, according to a statement from the Prosecutor General’s Office. (Reuters) 

Rail trade between China and North Korea resumes A train from North Korea pulled into a Chinese station Sunday, marking the end of a long period of particularly intense North Korean isolation. Chinese brokers said North Korea was planning to re-open its border to rail trade with China Monday, but the timetable appears to have been moved up. “My business partner in North Korea told me on Friday that the land border will reopen to cargo freight on Jan. 17,” one Chinese commodities trader said. North Korea closed its borders in January 2020 to prevent the spread of COVID-19. This self-imposed isolation has led to food shortages, while restrictions on internal movement have cut down on defections to South Korea. REUTERS 

Suspect dead and all hostages safe after FBI storms Texas synagogue An FBI hostage rescue team stormed a Texas synagogue Saturday night, ending an almost 11-hour standoff with a hostage-taker who claimed to have a bomb and may have ties to al-Qaeda. The suspect was shot and killed. Four people, including the congregation’s rabbi, were held hostage Saturday at Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas. The suspect released one hostage around 5:00 p.m. The other three were freed following the FBI raid, which started around 10:00 p.m. According to FBI Dallas Special Agent in Charge Matthew DeSarno, the suspect has been identified, but authorities are not yet ready to reveal his name. CNN 

An armed man claiming to be the brother of Pakistani Al-Qaeda suspect Aafia Siddiqui holds congregants hostage at Congregation Beth Israel Synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, United States. (Fort Worth Star-Telegram) 

Extent of tsunami damage in Tonga remains unclear The extent of tsunami damage in the Polyneasian archipelago nation of Tonga remains unclear as ash obstructs the view from the sky and the submarine cable that connects Tonga to the outside world remains out of commission. New Zealand’s government has pledged the equivalent of around $340,000 to aid in recovery with the promise of more to follow. Tonga was struck by a tsunami Saturday after an undersea volcano erupted 40 miles south of the capital city on the main island of Tongatapu. The volcano, called Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai, shot smoke and ash more than 12 miles into the sky and produced a shockwave felt as far away as New Zealand. AL JAZEERA 

‘Biden’ blames Spider-Man for political setbacks in SNL cold open In the most recent Saturday Night Live cold open, James Austin Johnson gave a press conference as President Biden in which he offered a solution to the ongoing pandemic. “There is one simple thing you can do to make this whole virus go away,” Johnson-as-Biden said. “Stop seeing Spider-Man!” He went on to explain that, because the release of Spider-Man: No Way Home coincided perfectly with the beginning of the Omicron wave, it must have caused it. Seeing other movies, he told “reporters,” was fine. Johnson-as-Biden also blamed his other political setbacks on the latest Marvel film: “You think people can focus on voting rights when Spider-Man’s Aunt May is a freakin’ smokeshow?” THE WEEK 

Glenn Youngkin sworn in as governor of Virginia Glenn Youngkin (R), who defeated former Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) last November in a race that attracted national attention, was sworn in as Virginia’s 74th governor around noon Saturday. One of his first executive orders banned “the use of divisive concepts, including Critical Race Theory, in public education.” Youngkin takes office with a divided state government: Democrats hold a 3-seat majority in the Senate, while Republicans control the Assembly 52 to 48. Winsome Sears (R) was also sworn in as Virginia’s lieutenant governor, becoming the first woman of color to hold that office. Jason Miyares, also a Republican, took office as the commonwealth’s first Hispanic attorney general. THE WEEK 

Saturday, January 15th, 2022 

Australia detains Djokovic again The Australian government canceled Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic’s visa for the second time and placed him back in immigration detention. Australian Immigration Minister Alex Hawke said Friday that he canceled Djokovic’s visa again on “health and good order grounds, on the basis that it was in the public interest to do so,” given Djokovic’s refusal to get vaccinated against COVID-19. A federal court will hear his case Sunday. Djokovic is scheduled to play his first match in the Australian Open Monday. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Students walk out of class over Omicron concerns Hundreds of students in Boston, Chicago, and other U.S. school districts staged walkouts Friday, demanding a return to remote instruction as Omicron cases continue to spike. “It was like: ‘This person has COVID. That person has COVID. Another person has COVID,’” said one of the students organizing a walkout in Montgomery County, Maryland. Many of the protesting students claim schools need to do more to provide them with COVID tests and high-quality masks, while others insist that in-person learning should be suspended altogether. The Omicron-driven surge in new infections has not produced a corresponding increase in deaths from COVID. REUTERS 

Insurance now covers at-home COVID tests Americans who have health insurance are entitled to receive up to eight rapid, at-home COVID tests per household member per month for free under a new Biden administration policy that took effect Saturday. Consumers can purchase tests over the counter and file for reimbursement or order tests for free on a special government website. The White House said Friday that this site will be live by Wednesday and that 500 million free tests are available. USA TODAY 

Russia may be preparing a ‘false-flag’ operation as pretext to Ukraine invasion The U.S. has information indicating Russia to be preparing a “false-flag operation in eastern Ukraine,” per a U.S. official, in an attempt at creating pretext for an invasion of the former Soviet republic. The official also said the U.S. has evidence that Russia has pre-positioned operatives “trained in urban warfare and in using explosives to carry out acts of sabotage against Russia’s own proxy forces,” CNN reports. A false-flag attack is one designed to look as though it were carried out someone other than the person (or, in this case, country) responsible. Adolf Hitler used a similar tactic to justify Germany’s invasion of Poland in 1939. CNN 

Pence compares Biden’s voting bills to Jan. 6 Former Vice President Mike Pence published an op-ed in The Washington Post Friday with the headline, “Jan. 6 was a power grab. So is busting the filibuster to nationalize elections.” In the piece, Pence contrasted President Biden’s voting rights bills, which Pence said would give the federal government too much control, with his own behavior following the 2020 election. Former President Donald Trump’s fiercest supporters turned against Pence when he refused to overturn the 2020 election by rejecting slates of electors from states Biden won. Videos of the Jan. 6 attack show protesters chanting “Hang Mike Pence” and constructing a gallows. Pence also wrote that Biden’s bills, if passed, would deliver “an irreversible victory for the radical left.” THE GUARDIAN 

Dem organizers prepare for uphill battle after Biden’s voting bills fail After opposition from Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) killed President Biden’s push to pass federal voting rights legislation by removing the filibuster, Democratic organizers are preparing for a difficult road ahead. Biden’s bills would have superseded the election security laws that many Republican-controlled states, spurred by former President Donald Trump’s baseless accusations of widespread voter fraud, have passed since the 2020 election. With those bills remaining in place, Democrats say they could be forced to redirect hundreds of millions of dollars from candidates to voter registration and turnout drives. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Portland police presentation mocked ‘dirty hippy’ protesters and encouraged violence Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler announced Friday that the Portland Police Bureau has launched an internal investigation into a training slideshow that included comical descriptions of violence against “dirty hippy” protesters. The 100-page PowerPoint presentation from 2018 provided straightforward guidance on how to handle mass protests and riots, but the final slide reflected a shift in tone. It featured an image of an officer in riot gear striking a seemingly unarmed protester. “They may christen your heads with hickory, and anoint your faces with pepper spray,” the mock-biblical text accompanying the image read, along with a reference to protesters being “stitched and bandaged.” CNN 

Southern states brace for severe winter storms The governors of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia declared states of emergency ahead of a winter storm system expected to strike the southeastern United States Saturday. According to the National Weather Service, the storm will “move eastward to the Southeast by Sunday morning, then head northeastward to the northern mid-Atlantic by Monday.” Stores are selling out of essentials while road crews desperately work to avoid a repeat of the situation in Virginia that left thousands stranded on I-95 earlier this month. CNN 

Supreme Court to hear case of high school football coach fired for praying on field The U.S. Supreme Court said Friday that it would hear the case of Joe Kennedy, who lost his job as a high school football coach for praying with players after games. Bremerton School District in Washington state fired Kennedy in 2015. “He led the team in prayer in the locker room before each game, and some players began to join him for his post-game prayer, too, where his practice ultimately evolved to include full-blown religious speeches to, and prayers with, players from both teams after the game,” wrote a judge from the Ninth Circuit Court, which ruled against Kennedy. Kennedy claims his rights to free speech and free exercise of religion were trampled, while the district argues Kennedy’s actions violated the First Amendment’s establishment clause.   FOX NEWS 

Tonga is hit by ashfall and a tsunami after the eruption of Hunga Tonga, destroying homes as locals struggle to find higher ground. Major flooding is reported in the capital Nukuʻalofa. Shock waves from the eruption are detected as far away as Alaska, United States. Other Pacific countries have also advised their citizens to seek higher ground. Internet access has reportedly been disrupted in Tonga. (The Sydney Morning Herald) 

Tsunami strikes Tonga after undersea volcanic eruption The Polynesian archipelago nation of Tonga was struck by a tsunami Saturday after an undersea volcano erupted 40 miles south of the capital city on the main island of Tongatapu. No injuries or fatalities have yet been reported, but videos show large waves striking the shore and swirling around houses as people flee to higher ground. King Tupou VI has been evacuated from his palace by the sea. The extent of the damage is still unclear due to spotty communications. Tonga has a population of just over 100,000 people, of whom 70 percent live on the main island. BBC 

King Tupou VI is evacuated from the Royal Palace by His Majesty’s Armed Forces. (CNN) 

Iran reports its first three confirmed deaths related to the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in people from the cities of Tabriz, Yazd and Shahrekord. (CNA) 

The Philippines reports a record for the third consecutive day of 39,004 new cases of COVID-19, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 3,168,379. (Rappler) 

In an extraordinary session, the Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo votes to ban Kosovo Serbs from voting in Serbia‘s upcoming constitutional referendum on Kosovan territory. (Reuters) 

In American football, the Cincinnati Bengals defeat the Las Vegas Raiders, 26-19, ending their 31-year playoff drought and winning a playoff game for the first time since 1991. (BBC Sport) 

Friday,  January 14th, 2022 

Australian minister cancels Djokovic’s visa, again Australia’s immigration minister, Alex Hawke, canceled tennis star Novak Djokovic’s visa on Friday, citing the need to protect “health and good order.” Djokovic is unvaccinated against the coronavirus, but he entered the country last week with a medical exemption, based on the fact that he already had COVID-19 in December. The world’s top-ranked men’s player, who is seeking a record 21st Grand Slam title in the upcoming Australian Open, was detained after authorities determined he did not have documents adequately supporting the exemption, invalidating his visa, but a judge ordered his release. Authorities then found there was false information on his travel declaration. Djokovic has apologized for what he says was “human error” on the form, and his lawyers said they would appeal Hawke’s decision. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Russia says Ukraine talks at impasse as fear of war rises Russia said Ukraine talks were hitting a dead end but diplomacy would continue, while Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau warned that “the risk of war” in Europe is the greatest it has been in 30 years. Russia has deployed about 100,000 troops to its border with Ukraine. The United States and Western allies fear Moscow is preparing to invade. Talks in three European cities this week were hampered by Russia’s call for the West to bar Ukraine from joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which the U.S. and NATO said was a “non-starter.” Russian Ambassador Alexander Lukashevich warned there could be “catastrophic consequences” without agreement on what Moscow says are security red lines. “The threat of military invasion is high,” White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said. REUTERS 

Up to 70 Ukrainian Government websites are hit by cyberattacks. (BBC News) 

Talks between NATO and Russia over Ukraine hit a breaking point as Poland warns of possible war. (Al Jazeera) 

The U.S. Senate rejects a bill that would sanction the Nord Stream pipeline amidst fears of a possible Russian invasion of Ukraine. (The New York Times) 

The Philippine Department of Transportation issues a memorandum banning unvaccinated individuals from using all forms of public transportation in the National Capital Region beginning on January 17. (Philippine Daily Inquirer) 

The Philippine Department of the Interior and Local Government issues an administrative order to all barangays in the Philippines to submit a list of unvaccinated residents in order to prevent their movement in response to the recent increase in cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (GMA News) 

The Philippines reports a record of 34,021 new cases of COVID-19, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 3,092,409. This is the highest reported number of cases in a day since the start of the pandemic. (GMA News) 

As part of the fallout from his ongoing civil sexual assault trial, Prince Andrew hands back all of his royal patronages and military titles to the Queen and drops the use of the title “His Royal Highness” in an official capacity. (BBC News) 

The End Sunday 

The Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Alex Hawke, invokes his ministerial powers under the Migration Act 1958 to cancel Novak Djokovic’s visa on “health and good order grounds”. (ABC News Australia) 

Supreme Court blocks Biden vaccine mandate for large companies The Supreme Court on Thursday blocked President Biden’s coronavirus vaccine-or-test mandate for workers at large companies, but let a similar requirement stand for health-care workers. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s emergency measure, which applied to businesses with 100 or more employees and would affect 80 million workers, required workers to get vaccinated or show a negative COVID-19 test weekly. It also required non-vaccinated workers to wear masks at indoor workplaces. The court’s conservative majority said Congress had “indisputably” given OSHA power to regulate occupational dangers, but not “to regulate public health more broadly.” Liberal Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan dissented, saying the majority was telling “the agency charged with protecting worker safety that it may not do so.” CNBC 

Biden says administration will buy another 500 million COVID tests President Biden announced Thursday that his administration would buy 500 million more COVID-19 tests for Americans, and dispatch military medical teams to help at hospitals overwhelmed with patients sickened in the Omicron coronavirus variant wave. The test purchases will double the number of kits the Biden administration plans to distribute to people free of charge. The 120 military medical personnel will go to six states where medical facilities have been swamped with new COVID-19 cases. Biden also promised to unveil a plan next week to provide high-quality N95 and KN95 masks, also free of charge, as part of an effort to increase protection and slow the spread of the virus. “As I’ve said in the last two years, please wear a mask,” Biden said. “I think it’s part of your patriotic duty.” THE NEW YORK TIMESUSA TODAY 

Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Facebook, Google, Reddit, Twitter records The House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack has subpoenaed Google-parent Alphabet, Facebook- and Instagram-parent Meta Platforms, Reddit, and Twitter, seeking records on the spread of misinformation, efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, domestic extremism, and foreign meddling in the 2020 election. The select committee’s chair, Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), said in a statement that the panel was trying to determine “how the spread of misinformation and violent extremism contributed to the violent attack on our democracy, and what steps — if any — social media companies took to prevent their platforms from being breeding grounds for radicalizing people to violence.” He said the committee had been seeking the documents for months. Meta said it had provided the requested documents and would continue to cooperate. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Oath Keepers founder indicted on seditious conspiracy charges Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the extremist Oath Keepers group, has been indicted and arrested for his alleged role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a mob of then-President Donald Trump’s supporters, according to indictments unsealed Thursday. Rhodes, 56, was at the Capitol during the insurrection but has denied entering the building. The Oath Keepers leader is the most high-profile suspect charged to date in the investigation of the riot. Rhodes and 10 other Oath Keepers and associates have been charged with seditious conspiracy. Prosecutors say the suspects developed and participated in a plan to try to disrupt lawmakers on the day they certified President Biden’s 2020 election victory over Trump. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Queen strips Prince Andrew of military titles, patronages Prince Andrew has been stripped of his military titles and remaining royal patronages after failing to get a sexual abuse lawsuit against him dismissed. Buckingham Palace said Thursday that Andrew gave them up with the “approval and agreement” of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. Andrew will no longer use the “His Royal Highness” title in an official capacity. The queen will redistribute his roles immediately to other members of the royal family, a source told CNN. The changes came a day after a U.S. judge ruled that a sex-abuse lawsuit filed by Virginia Giuffre can proceed. Giuffre says she was forced into sex with Andrew when she was 17 by convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who died in prison while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. Andrew denies the allegations. CNN 

Newsom rejects parole for Sirhan Sirhan California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) on Thursday denied parole to Sirhan Sirhan, the 77-year-old Palestinian immigrant who assassinated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.) in 1968. Kennedy, who was running for the Democratic presidential nomination, had just made a speech at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles and was walking through the hotel’s pantry when Sirhan, then 24, walked up from behind and shot him point-blank in the back of the head. Sirhan has said he didn’t remember the shooting and suggested he must have been hypnotized. Despite a parole board release recommendation, Newsom said that Sirhan has “failed to address the deficiencies that led him to assassinate Sen. Kennedy,” so there’s no guarantee he would not still pose a threat. POLITICOTHE WASHINGTON POST 

Navient Corp. agrees to cancel $1.7 billion in student debt Navient Corp., a former unit of Sallie Mae, said Thursday it would cancel $1.7 billion in private student debt to settle allegations of deceptive lending practices. The agreement, which Navient reached with 40 state attorneys general, will affect about 66,000 borrowers. Nearly all the canceled loans originated at Sallie Mae from 2002 to 2010, when Navient serviced accounts at the student loan giant as student debt soared. Most of the affected loans, all of which were in default, were taken out by borrowers with poor credit who went to for-profit schools and other insitutions with less-than-stellar records, according to a website run by the settlement administrator. Navient denied it hurt any borrowers. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Biden picks 3 nominees for Fed board President Biden has settled on three nominees for the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors, including former Fed official Sarah Bloom Raskin and Lisa Cook, who would be the first Black woman to serve on the central bank’s board, The Associated Press reported Friday, citing a person familiar with the decision. Biden also will nominate economist Phillip Jefferson, dean of faculty at North Carolina’s Davidson College and a former Fed researcher. The nominees, if confirmed by the Senate, will join the Fed as it tries to raise interest rates and taper its asset purchases to curb high inflation, without hampering the economic recovery from the damage of the coronavirus pandemic. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly got engaged and ‘drank each other’s blood’ We’ve been hoping for a Jennifer’s Body sequel for years, but this isn’t quite what we had in mind. Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly have announced their engagement, with Fox sharing a video on Instagram of the rapper getting down on one knee. They confirmed their relationship in summer 2020. “Somehow a year and a half later, having walked through hell together, and having laughed more than I ever imagined possible, he asked me to marry him,” the Transformers star wrote, concluding with the extremely casual declaration, “…and then we drank each other’s blood.” Sure, makes sense, no follow-up questions here! Last year, Kelly revealed “I wear [Fox’s] blood around my neck” after she gave him a vial before going off to shoot a movie. You know, as you do. “Some people give like a handkerchief to their partner or whatever,” he said. “She gave me her DNA.”  ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY 

Jason Momoa and Lisa Bonet split Jason Momoa and Lisa Bonet are parting like the sea. The Aquaman and The Cosby Show stars announced they’re getting divorced after over four years of marriage and 16 years together. In a rather sweeping and dramatic joint statement, Momoa and Bonet, who have two children, said “we have all felt the squeeze and changes of these transformational times,” declaring that a “revolution is unfolding — and our family is of no exception.” Although they’ll be “parting ways in marriage,” Momoa and Bonet said that the “love between us carries on, evolving in ways it wishes to be known and lived,” and “we free each other — to be who are learning to become.” Naturally, Game of Thrones fans waited approximately five minutes before plastering their Jason Momoa and Emilia Clarke shipping dreams all over Twitter.  TMZNBC NEWS 

Kanye West is reportedly under investigation for criminal battery Kanye West is reportedly under investigation for punching someone, and believe it or not, it wasn’t Pete Davidson. The Los Angeles Police Department is reportedly investigating West for criminal battery after he allegedly punched a fan in downtown L.A. at about 3 a.m. The news was first reported by FOX 11, which said a fan told police he approached West to ask for an autograph when the rapper “jumped out of his car” and “punched him, knocking him to the ground,” FOX 11 reporter Gigi Graciette said. A police report was reportedly filed, though West was apparently no longer at the scene when police arrived. Misdemeanor battery, TMZ notes, carries a maximum sentence of six months in jail.  TMZPAGE SIX 

Jesse Plemons got ‘pissed’ after Benedict Cumberbatch called him a ‘big boy’ Benedict Cumberbatch became the latest Oscar hopeful to utilize method acting on the set of The Power of the Dog, and Jesse Plemons’ feelings were harmed in the process. Plemons recalled to Variety a moment Cumberbatch got “under my skin” while immersed in character. “He was like, ‘Hey, big boy.’ It wasn’t ‘fatso.’ I feel like a few people in life have been like, ‘Hey, big boy,’ and I was like, ‘Goddamn it. What the f—.” Cumberbatch’s character in the film bullies Plemons’, but after shooting, Plemons told his co-star the comment “pissed me off,” prompting an apology. “He was like, ‘I’m so sorry,’” Plemons said. “I was like, ‘No, don’t worry. It was great.’” Considering certain other actors have been known to mail used condoms and anal beads to people when they go method, we’d say Plemons got off easy.  VARIETYINSIDER 

Thursday, January 13th, 2022 

NATO-Russia talks on Ukraine end in stalemate Russia and NATO ended four hours of talks in Brussels about Ukraine with no resolution on Wednesday, in the second round of discussions aimed at preventing Moscow from invading Ukraine again. The U.S. and Russia held talks in Geneva on Sunday and Monday, and Ukraine will participate on Thursday, when Russian diplomats meet in Vienna with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has sent 100,000 troops to the Ukraine border, is demanding that NATO guarantee Ukraine and Georgia never join the alliance. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said that all 30 NATO members agreed that NATO can’t let Russia dictate who can join, and warned there was “a real risk of a new armed conflict in Europe.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

Talks between NATO and Russia over Ukraine hit a breaking point as Poland warns of possible war. (Al Jazeera) 

Vladimir Putin warns that Russia will cut ties with the United States if sanctions are placed upon him. (Business Insider) 

Unidentified militants launch several rockets at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq, injuring a woman and a child. (CNN) 

The Nigerian government lifts its Twitter ban, which was implemented in June 2021, after Twitter agreed to pay an “applicable tax” and also establish a legal entity within the country sometime in the first quarter of the year. (The Guardian Nigeria) 

Germany reports a record for the second consecutive day of 81,417 new cases of COVID-19. (Anadolu Agency) 

Sweden reports a record 25,215 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (U.S. News and World Report) 

Bangladesh bans all public gatherings, restricts the capacity of public transportation to 50%, and mandates that face masks be worn in all public places in an attempt to reduce the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (The Business Standard) 

South Korea receives their first shipment of Pfizer’s Paxlovid anti-COVID-19 oral drug. (AP) 

The WHO guideline development group of international experts recommends the use of rheumatoid arthritis drug Baricitinib for severe and critical COVID-19 patients in combination with corticosteroids. (The Times of India) 

Italy imposes a six-month ban of hunting and other activities involving direct or indirect contact with infected boars in 114 rural areas in the north-western regions of Piedmont and Liguria, where the spread African swine fever has infected the animals. (Reuters) 

The French Senate votes 249–63, with 26 abstentions, to approve a bill that would ban unvaccinated people from entering bars, restaurants, and other public places and also from using long-distance public transport. However, the modified bill would only apply to people over the age of 18 years and would only be in effect if the number of hospitalized patients exceeds 10,000 nationwide. (The Independent) 

As part of the fallout from his ongoing civil sexual assault trial, Prince Andrew hands back all of his royal patronages and military titles to the Queen and drops the use of the title “His Royal Highness” in an official capacity. (BBC News) 

Israel and the Argentine foreign ministry separately issue condemnations against the presence of Iranian minister Mohsen Rezai at the inauguration of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega. Rezai is wanted by Argentina for his alleged connections to the 1994 AMIA bombing. (The Jerusalem Post) 

The Federal Court of Australia orders that Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic be released from immigration detention and allowed to compete in the Australian Open in order to defend his Championship, and also orders the federal government to pay Djokovic’s legal fees. (BBC News) 

In American football, Georgia defeats Alabama to win the national championship, its first since 1980(CBS News) 

Kristen Stewart shockingly get snubbed at the SAG Awards Did erstwhile Oscar frontrunner Kristen Stewart just get knocked out of the Best Actress race? Stewart was long the favorite to win Best Actress at the 2022 Oscars for playing Princess Diana in Spencer. But on Wednesday, Stewart was shockingly left off the lead actress nominations list for the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Instead, the nominees were Jessica Chastain for The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Olivia Colman for The Lost Daughter, Lady Gaga for House of Gucci, Jennifer Hudson for Respect, and Nicole Kidman for Being the Ricardos. It was a major setback for Stewart considering, as awards pundit Nathaniel Rogers noted, nobody has ever won Best Actress at the Oscars without first getting a SAG nod, though Regina King did so in the supporting category. It seems Golden Globe-winner Kidman may be the frontrunner now. Perhaps Stewart can still get back in the race, but maybe she shouldn’t start writing that acceptance speech just yet.  VARIETY 

Documentary on Evan Rachel Wood and her Marilyn Manson allegations to debut at Sundance A new documentary on Evan Rachel Wood and her decision to come forward with abuse allegations against Marilyn Manson is set to debut at the Sundance Film Festival. The documentary, Phoenix Rising, “intimately charts her journey as she moves toward naming her infamous abuser for the first time,” as the Westworld star seeks to “reclaim her story in a culture that instinctively blames women,” Sundance said. Director Amy Berg has reportedly been working with Wood on the documentary for over two years, going back to before she came forward in 2021 to allege Manson “horrifically abused me for years.” Wood’s allegations prompted numerous other women to publicly accuse the rock star of sexual abuse. “[Wood is] so candid with us,” Berg told Variety. “And it’s very personal.” The documentary will also air on HBO. 

Manhattan rents surge to highest ever recorded in month of December Manhattan’s median rent rose to nearly $3,400 in December as vaccination rates rose and affluent renters returned to New York City, according to a new report from brokerage Douglas Elliman. The December median marked the highest ever recorded in the normally slow month. The median net-effective rent, adjusted for concessions from landlords, was $3,392, up 21 percent from the same period last year. The highest median rent for any month reached $3,540 a month in April 2020. Slowing lease activity suggested that rental activity is starting to return to pre-pandemic norms after the surge, said Jonathan J. Miller, an appraiser and the report’s author. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Consumer prices rise at fastest pace in 4 decades U.S. inflation rose to an annual rate of 7 percent last year, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. The jump in the consumer price index in December, compared to a year earlier, was the fastest since 1982. It was the third straight month with an annual inflation rate above 6 percent. Pandemic-related supply problems contributed to the slight increase from November’s 6.8 percent pace. The core price index, which excludes volatile food and energy costs, rose by 5.5 percent in December compared to a year earlier, the fastest since 1991. “While inflation is likely to peak in the next few months, the overall pace is going to remain a challenge for consumers, businesses, and policy,” said Sarah House, director and senior economist at Wells Fargo. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Federal deficit fell to 2-year low in December The Treasury Department reported Wednesday that the federal government’s December deficit was $21.3 billion, the smallest monthly shortfall in two years. The shift came as the economy rebounded from the worst damage of the coronavirus pandemic, boosting tax receipts while spending on COVID-19 relief programs declined. The government has posted a $377.7 billion deficit since Oct. 1 in the first three months of the budget year, a 30.1 percent drop compared to the same period a year ago, when Washington was spending trillions to support families and businesses struggling to stay afloat through the coronavirus pandemic. Those programs are being used less now, and some have expired. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Trump hangs up on NPR interviewer who pressed him about false election claims Former President Donald Trump hung up nine minutes into what was supposed to be a 15-minute interview after NPR’s Steve Inskeep pressed him on his false claims that election fraud cost him the 2020 presidential election. Trump insisted during the interview that the only way to hold legitimate elections is to “solve the problem of the presidential rigged election of 2020.” Trump repeated his criticism of Republican Sen. Mike Rounds (S.D.), who said Sunday that the 2020 election was fair, saying that Rounds was “totally wrong” and that some Republican senators are turning on him “because Mitch McConnell is a loser.” Inskeep noted that numerous judges have rejected efforts by Trump allies to overturn 2020 election results, finding no evidence fraud affected the results. CBS NEWS 

McCarthy refuses to talk to House Jan. 6 committee House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Wednesday turned down a request for an interview with the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, calling the panel “illegitimate” and accusing it of “abuse of power.” The committee earlier in the day sent McCarthy a request for an interview about his communication with then-President Donald Trump and his White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, during and after the insurrection. “You have acknowledged speaking directly with the former president while the violence was underway on Jan. 6,” the panel’s chair, Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), wrote in the letter. Thompson said McCarthy also reportedly talked with Trump after the mob stormed the Capitol seeking to prevent lawmakers from certifying President Biden’s election victory. AXIOS 

U.S. imposes sanctions after North Korea missile tests The Treasury Department on Wednesday announced it was imposing sanctions on six North Koreans, one Russian, and a Russian company for helping Pyongyang acquire supplies for its weapons program from Russia and China. The penalties came after North Korea completed a series of missile launches, including two last week. These are the first sanctions directly targeting North Korea’s weapons programs that the Biden administration has imposed. U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said the U.S. is still committed to seeking diplomatic solutions to the standoff with Pyongyang over its nuclear weapons and missile programs, although so far Biden administration efforts to restart a dialogue have not succeeded. REUTERS 

Biden administration to send schools 10 million COVID tests monthly The Biden administration will provide schools with 5 million COVID-19 rapid tests and 5 million more sensitive, lab-based PCR tests each month, starting this month, to counter supply shortages and help schools stay open, the White House announced Wednesday. Dr. Tom Inglesby, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health, will join the administration’s pandemic-response team to supervise the testing push. The Biden administration also recently announced that it was requiring private insurers to reimburse Americans for COVID tests, and launching a website where people will be able to order free tests to be shipped to them. The increase in the supply of tests comes as the Omicron-variant-fueled wave of new cases is nearing its expected peak. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice ‘extremely unwell’ with COVID West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice (R) postponed his State of the State address, which had been scheduled for Wednesday, after testing positive for COVID-19. Justice, 70, said he was “extremely unwell” but “thankful to the Lord above that I’ve been vaccinated, I’ve been boosted, and that I have an incredible support system, especially my loving family.” Justice added that his wife, Cathy, tested negative for the virus. Justice’s office said he was experiencing moderate symptoms, including headache, fever, congestion, and coughing. He received a monoclonal antibody treatment and is recovering at home. West Virginia’s top COVID-19 adviser, Dr. Clay Marsh, said he has “full confidence that Gov. Justice will recover quickly, and it’s because he chose to receive the COVID-19 vaccine and his booster shot.” NPR 

Judge declines to dismiss sex-abuse lawsuit against Prince Andrew A federal judge on Wednesday declined to dismiss a lawsuit filed by an American woman, Virginia Giuffre, against Britain’s Prince Andrew over her allegation that he sexually abused her when she was 17. The prince’s lawyers argued that the lawsuit should be dismissed because of an old legal settlement between Giuffre and the late financier Jeffrey Epstein, who Giuffre said arranged the abusive encounters. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan said that the lawsuit could proceed because the settlement between Giuffre and Epstein didn’t involve Prince Andrew. Giuffre said Andrew sexually abused her in encounters arranged by Epstein, who died in prison awaiting a sex-trafficking trial, and his companion Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted last month for luring girls for Epstein to abuse. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Pop singer Ronnie Spector dies at 78 Ronnie Spector, leader of ’60s girl group the Ronettes, died Wednesday following a short battle with cancer. She was 78. Born Veronica, Spector started the Ronettes in the late 1950s with her sister, Estelle Bennett, and cousin, Nedra Talley. Their debut — and only — album, Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica, was released in 1964. Their hits included “Be My Baby” and “Baby I Love You,” and they toured England with the Rolling Stones. The Ronettes broke up in 1967 after touring Germany, and Spector went on to release four solo albums. Spector, known for her style and love of bee-hives, wrote in her memoir, Be My Baby: How I Survived Mascara, Miniskirts, and Madness, that the Ronettes “weren’t afraid to be hot. That was our gimmick.” LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Jamie Lynn Spears insists she helped Britney during conservatorship battle Jamie Lynn Spears is commenting on Britney Spears’ conservatorship battle, insisting to Good Morning America that she did try to help her sister. “I’ve always been my sister’s biggest supporter,” the Zoey 101 star said, “so when she needed help, I set up ways to do so, went out of my way to make sure that she had the contacts she needed.” Spears’ conservatorship finally ended in November, and Jamie Lynn said she was “happy” about this, adding she “didn’t understand what was happening” when the conservatorship was set up 13 years ago. Britney Spears has repeatedly slammed her family’s handling of the conservatorship and recently unfollowed Jamie Lynn on Instagram. Britney also criticized that her sister “performed MY SONGS” at an awards show in 2017, adding, “My so-called support system hurt me deeply !!!!” Jamie Lynn tearfully told ABC of their rift, “I don’t know why we’re in this position right now.”  GOOD MORNING AMERICA 

Diane Kruger says Quentin Tarantino didn’t want to cast her in ‘Inglourious Basterds’ Quentin Tarantino almost said arrivederci to Diane Kruger while casting Inglourious Basterds. In a new podcast interview, Kruger revealed the director originally didn’t want to cast her as Bridget von Hammersmark in his 2009 war film, explaining, “He saw a movie that I was in he didn’t like. So he didn’t believe in me from the get-go.” In fact, Kruger says she only got an audition because “there was no one left,” and she recalls having to ” jump through all these hoops” to get the role, including paying for her own flight to Germany because Taratino wouldn’t meet with her in the United States. “But I was like, ‘You know what? F— him!” Kruger said. “I’m just gonna do that and prove to him that I can do it.’ And thankfully it all worked out.” Back in 2018, she said the experience of working on Inglourious Basterds was “pure joy,” adding Tarantino “treated me with utter respect.”  THE NEW YORK POST 

U.S. college enrollment drops again U.S. college enrollment dropped by 465,300 students, or 3.1 percent, in the fall compared to a year earlier, according to a report released Thursday by the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. The decline, which came as universities took steps back to normal operations, continued a trend that began earlier in the coronavirus pandemic, with more than 1 million students now missing from U.S. campuses as attitudes shift about the value of a college education, potentially altering a generation’s career prospects. “The longer this continues, the more it starts to build its own momentum as a cultural shift and not just a short-term effect of the of the pandemic disruptions,” Doug Shapiro, executive director of the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, told The Washington PostTHE WASHINGTON POST 

The End

01.12.2022

Wednesday, January 12th, 2022 

Kim Kardashian reportedly changed vacation destination to avoid Kanye West Kim Kardashian is apparently now secretly tweaking vacation plans because her estranged husband Kanye West might show up uninvited. Page Six reports West has been “deliberately showing up” places Kardashian will be, even though he’s now dating Uncut Gems actress Julia Fox. This includes on New Year’s Eve, when he went to Miami reportedly because he thought Kardashian would join her boyfriend Pete Davidson there at his show with Miley Cyrus. But Page Six also reports Kardashian originally planned to go on vacation with Davidson in the Dominican Republic until West “got wind of it and was talking about showing up there too,” so she “secretly changed the destination to the Bahamas.” Fox recently wrote in Interview magazine about her romance with West, saying she’s “loving the ride” — but Page Six‘s sources allege the relationship is just a “ploy to get under ex Kim Kardashian’s skin.”  PAGE SIXBUZZFEED NEWS 

Fauci clashes with Sen. Rand Paul over coronavirus misinformation Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s top medical adviser, clashed with Sen. Rand Paul on Tuesday, accusing the Kentucky Republican of spreading misinformation about the coronavirus pandemic that has sparked death threats against him. Fauci also said Paul was distorting the truth about COVID-19 “for political reasons,” including fundraising. “It distracts from what we’re all trying to do here today, [which] is get our arms around the epidemic and the pandemic that we’re dealing with, not something imaginary,” Fauci said. Paul’s website accuses Fauci of “lying about everything from masks to the contagiousness of the virus.” Paul said Fauci was trying to smear anyone who disagreed with him. REUTERS 

Pfizer moving ahead with plans for Omicron-targeted vaccine Pfizer officials said this week that they were pushing to produce 50 million to 100 million doses of a version of the company’s coronavirus vaccine adapted to target the new Omicron variant that is driving an unprecedented wave of infections. The drugmaker is testing larger doses and hybrid vaccines to fight multiple strains. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said the company is developing the vaccines “at risk,” meaning it will absorb the costs if they are not needed. The weeks it will take to develop and distribute the vaccines mean that they won’t be available until after the point later this month when public health officials have predicted the Omicron surge will peak, but Bourla said if the Omicron-targeted vaccine is needed, Pfizer will have it ready. THE WASHINGTON POST 

China’s new COVID-19 lockdowns threaten more supply problems New lockdowns China has imposed in several cities to counter the latest coronavirus surge have clogged ports and forced companies to shut factories, threatening to cause fresh supply-chain disruptions just as global bottlenecks were starting to clear, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. Due to China’s zero-tolerance policy, for example, about two dozen COVID-19 cases prompted restrictions on trucks and warehouses that threaten to worsen backlogs at the world’s third-busiest container port of Ningbo-Zhoushan. The lockdowns and mass testing currently in effect in China are the most aggressive in nearly two years. The measures already have caused production problems for numerous companies, including memory-chip maker Samsung Electronics, German automaker Volkswagen, and a textile supplier to Nike and Adidas. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Federal officials defend COVID response hampered by test shortage Top Biden administration health officials defended the government’s efforts to fight the Omicron coronavirus variant as lawmakers grilled them about a shortage of coronavirus tests and shifting guidance on how long infected people should wait before resuming normal activities. “This is an extraordinary virus, the likes of which we have not seen even close to in well over 100 years,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, told lawmakers. “We’re doing the best we possibly can.” Lawmakers said during the hearing that the Biden administration had not accurately assessed the need for tests and would not be able to distribute the 500 million tests it was buying until the Omicron wave has started to subside. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

CDC weighs changing mask guidance to urge N95, KN95 use The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering changing its guidance on masks to urge people to wear the N95 or KN95 face coverings that health workers wear, The Washington Post reported Tuesday, citing an official close to the discussions. The move would be part of an effort to increase protection for Americans as the Omicron coronavirus variant spreads quickly across the country, driving a record wave of infections and raising daily hospitalizations and deaths. “We know these masks provide better filtration,” the official said. The CDC’s initial mask guidance stopped short of recommending the highly protective face protection due to fear of shortages at hospitals and other medical facilities. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Hospitals cut capacity as COVID-19 wave limits staff Rising numbers of health-care workers are calling in sick across the country as the seven-day average of new daily coronavirus infections rises above 700,000, forcing many hospitals to cut capacity, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. The staff shortages have forced hospitals to leave beds empty because they lack staff to safely provide care, and a tight labor market has prevented them from finding replacements, according to industry officials. The University Hospitals system in Ohio, for example, has closed up to 16 percent of its intensive-care beds recently. “It’s definitely a brutal situation,” said Dr. Joseph Chang, chief medical officer at Parkland Health & Hospital System in Dallas, which had to shut 30 of 900 beds. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Arctic air brings coldest weather in 3 years to Upper Midwest, Northeast Millions of Americans faced the coldest day in three years on Tuesday in parts of the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes, and Northeast. Air temperatures fell below zero in some areas, with a blast of Arctic air sending wind chills as low as 30 degrees below zero in northern New England. High temperatures were as much as 30 degrees below average. Boston’s public school system was closed on Tuesday due to extreme cold. New Hampshire’s Department of Health had to close four COVID-19 testing sites. Temperatures were expected to rise on Wednesday, with warmer days at the end of the week. The cold snap followed the warmest December on record, which helped make 2021 the fourth hottest year on record. NBC NEWS 

DOJ forms new domestic terrorism unit as threats rise The Justice Department is creating a domestic terrorism unit to counter rising threats from U.S.-based extremists, Matthew G. Olsen, the head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division, said Tuesday. Olsen told members of the Senate Judiciary Committee that the new unit would “augment our existing approach,” which has assigned counterterrorism attorneys to work on domestic and international cases. The news came days after the first anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, which some lawmakers have pointed to as proof that the FBI has failed to do enough to address domestic terrorists and violent far-right groups. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Powell says Fed will counter inflation threat with rate hikes as needed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said in Tuesday’s Senate hearing on his confirmation to a second term that the U.S. economy is strong enough that the Fed can start ending its aggressive stimulus measures. Powell said high inflation had become a “severe threat” to the recovery from the damage of the coronavirus pandemic, and the central bank would start tapering its asset purchases and raising interest rates to prevent the economy from overheating. Powell said supply-chain bottlenecks that have contributed to rising prices should ease this year, but that if inflation persists and “we have to raise interest rates more over time, we will.” Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) said he feared “the Fed missed the boat on addressing inflation sooner.”  THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Djokovic acknowledges mistake on travel documents he gave Australia Novak Djokovic, the world’s No. 1-ranked men’s tennis player, conceded Wednesday that the travel documents he gave Australian border officials falsely claimed he hadn’t traveled internationally before he arrived in Australia last week. He blamed an “administrative mistake.” Djokovic also acknowledged participating in an interview and a photoshoot in his native Serbia after he tested positive for a coronavirus infection last month, contrary to the country’s COVID-19 protocols. Djokovic, who is unvaccinated, won an appeal of a decision by Australian authorities to revoke his visa, but immigration officials are continuing to investigate whether he poses a public health threat and should be deported. Djokovic is in the country seeking a record 21st Grand Slam title at the Australian Open. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Bank of America cuts overdraft fees Bank of America announced Tuesday that it is ending fees for insufficient funds, and cutting overdraft fees from $35 to $10. The bank said the bounced check fee will disappear next month, and the overdraft fee cut will take effect in May. Once the changes are in place, the institution’s fees for overdrafts will be reduced by 97 percent from 2009 levels. Bank of America’s president of retail banking, Holly O’Neill, said the changes were part of an effort to “help clients manage their deposit accounts and overall finances responsibly.” The news came just over a month after Capital One, the sixth biggest U.S. bank by assets, announced that it would stop penalizing customers who withdraw or write checks for more money than they have in their accounts. CNN 

Lady Gaga suggests Patrizia Reggiani sent ‘large swarms of flies’ to follow her  Be afraid. Be very afraid. Lady Gaga chatted with W magazine about playing Patrizia Reggiani in House of Gucci, and she recalled the bizarre moment she knew it was time to let go of the character: when she became convinced Reggiani was sending swarms of flies after her. “On the last day of filming, I was on the balcony of my apartment in Rome, and I was blasting Dean Martin singing ‘Mambo Italiano,’ and I had a cigarette hanging out of my mouth,” Gaga said. “I was Patrizia. But I knew I had to say goodbye to her: Large swarms of flies kept following me around, and I truly began to believe that she had sent them. I was ready to let her go.” Gaga has previously detailed her intense method acting process, even having a psychiatric nurse on the set. Apparently, some fly repellent also would have been useful.  W MAGAZINETHE WEEK 

House Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Trump speechwriter, 2 other allies  The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack has subpoenaed records and testimony from Andy Surabian and Arthur Schwartz, strategists who advised Donald Trump Jr., and Ross Worthington, a former White House official believed to have helped draft former President Donald Trump’s speech at a rally before the insurrection. “We have reason to believe the individuals we’ve subpoenaed today have relevant information and we expect them to join the more than 340 individuals who have spoken with the Select Committee as we push ahead to investigate this attack on our democracy and ensure nothing like this ever happens again,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the panel’s chair. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Biden backs changing filibuster to pass voting rights bill President Biden on Tuesday called on lawmakers to pass voting rights and election reform bills to counter new voting restrictions in some GOP-led states, and urged them to alter Senate rules, if necessary, to prevent Republicans from blocking the legislation with a filibuster. “I’m tired of being quiet!” Biden said. Passing the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act would “restore the strength of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the one President Johnson signed after John Lewis was beaten, nearly killed, on ‘Bloody Sunday,’” Biden said. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) accused Biden of invoking “the brutal racial hatred of Jim Crow Segregation to smear” new state voting laws. Republicans accuse Democrats of trying to pass federal voting laws to gain unfair advantages. CNNTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Tuesday, January 11th, 2022 

Israel condemns the presence of Iranian government minister Mohsen Rezai at the inauguration of Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua. Rezai is wanted by Argentina for alleged connections with the 1994 AMIA bombing, whose foreign ministry also condemned his presence and demanded from Iran “immediate cooperation” with the investigation. Rezai is the subject of a red notice of Interpol requested by Argentina. (The Jerusalem Post) 

The Israeli Health ministry approves a reduction of the isolation period for asymptomatic positive COVID-19 patients from ten to seven days in order to keep the economy running despite an increase in the number of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant cases. The changes will be in effect on January 13. (The Times of Israel) 

U.S. hits average of over 700,000 new COVID-19 cases per day  New U.S. coronavirus infections have risen to an average of more than 700,000 per day, USA Today reported Sunday, citing an analysis of Johns Hopkins University data. The last five days leading up to Saturday brought the five highest single-day counts of new cases since the start of the pandemic, with a total of 4.91 million cases in the week that ended Saturday. That was a higher total than in April, May, June, and July 2021 combined. “I would not be surprised at all if we go over a million cases per day,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, told News 4 New York in an interview Saturday. Fauci predicted that case numbers from the fast-spreading Omicron variant would start to come down in late January. USA TODAY 

Airlines cancel more flights due to pandemic-related staff shortages Airlines canceled flights over the weekend as harsh winter weather and staff shortages due to coronavirus infections continued to disrupt travel. About 5,000 flights were scrapped on Friday, data tracking service FlightAware said. Daily cancellations declined over the weekend, however, as airlines struggled to restore their normal schedules. The disruptions began shortly before Christmas, as the U.S. was hit with severe winter storms just as the nation was also slammed by a wave of coronavirus infections driven by the fast-spreading Omicron variant. SkyWest, which operates flights for United, Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and Alaska Airlines, said the cuts were meant to “ensure we’re able to adequately staff our remaining flying as we work to recover in the coming weeks.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

The Oscars will bring back a host after last year’s ratings catastrophe And this year’s Oscars host is … somebody! ABC revealed Tuesday the Academy Awards will actually have a host this year, for the first time since 2018. The recent streak of host-free events began in 2019, when comedian Kevin Hart stepped down due to controversy over homophobic jokes and tweets. In the end, some pundits preferred not having a host and the ratings went up, so the Oscars stuck with the format. Perhaps the Academy now hopes bringing back a host will generate more interest after 2021’s show was a complete ratings disaster. So who might the Academy hire? It’s not clear, although Spider-Man: No Way Home star Tom Holland was recently asked if he would do it. He initially said he didn’t think he’d have time, only to backtrack, saying, “What kind of f—ing idiot wouldn’t host the Oscars? So yeah, if they ask me to, I would, and it would be very fun.”  VARIETY

A car bombing kills at least eight people in Mogadishu. (Reuters) 

Germany reports a record 80,430 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 7,661,811. (Euronews) 

Saudi Arabia reports a record 5,362 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 593,545. (Al Arabiya English) 

South Korea authorizes the use of the protein-based Novavax COVID-19 vaccine for adults, making it the fifth vaccine to be approved to use in the country. (The Washington Post) 

France reports a record 368,149 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (CNBC) 

Italy reports a record 220,532 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 7.77 million. (Agenzia Italia) 

Turkey reports a record 74,266 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (Anadolu Agency) 

Argentina reports a record 134,439 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 6,533,635. (Infobae) 

Bolivian vice president David Choquehuanca tests positive for COVID-19 for the third time. Six government ministers also test positive for COVID-19. (France 24) 

President of the European Parliament David Sassoli dies in Aviano, Italy and is succeeded by Maltese MEP Roberta Metsola, who becomes the first Maltese person to hold this position. (Politico) 

Dylan Minnette defends himself against ‘everyone absolutely demolishing me’ for underdressing Don’t you know the wardrobe rules?! Dylan Minnette is defending himself after getting thoroughly roasted for his casual attire at a recent event for the new Scream movie. “To everyone absolutely demolishing me for ‘underdressing’ to the ‘Scream premiere red carpet’ … it wasn’t a premiere,” the 13 Reasons Why star tweeted. “Our premiere was (sadly) cancelled. Of course I would’ve dressed for the occasion of a premiere sillies!!” Instead, Minnette clarified images of him on a red carpet were just from a “standard press junket day where there’s no pressure on a dress code.” It did make for an awkward image, though, when he appeared in a sweater and jeans while his co-stars showed up in suits. But Minnette said he had “no idea there would be a red carpet” at all, which we’re hoping turns out to be some sort of hazing ritual on the original cast’s part.   INSIDER 

Monday,  January 10th, 2022 

Goldman Sachs says Fed likely to hike interest rates 4 times in 2022 Goldman Sachs says it now expects the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates four times this year to keep the economy from overheating as inflation remains high and the nation nears full employment. “We continue to see hikes in March, June, and September, and have now added a hike in December,” Goldman’s Jan Hatzius said in a research note. The change came after newly released minutes from the Fed’s December meeting indicated that Fed leaders support speeding up plans to dial back their efforts to boost the recovery from pandemic-era economic problems with near-zero interest rates and monthly asset purchases. BLOOMBERG 

Russia and the U.S. begin a series of talks in Geneva in a effort to defuse tensions between both countries and Ukraine. (The Guardian) 

Russia, U.S. dampen expectations of breakthrough as Ukraine talks begin Russia and the United States on Monday will launch a week of what a top Russian diplomat predicted would be “difficult” talks in Geneva over Russia’s military buildup near Ukraine. After a working dinner on Sunday to kick off the discussions, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Moscow would “not make any concessions under pressure.” The meetings mark a first step toward a dialogue on defusing tensions over Russia’s deployment of 100,000 troops along its border with Ukraine, which has stoked concerns of a Russian invasion. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told ABC’s This Week that he was not counting on any breakthroughs during the bilateral talks or during conversations in Brussels later this week at a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council. REUTERS 

Ukrainian authorities arrest an alleged Russian intelligence agent who was claimed to have attempted to recruit others to launch attacks in the city of Odessa. (MSN) 

Kazakhstan authorities say 164 people have died in protests At least 164 people have died in a week of anti-government protests in Kazakhstan, authorities in the former Soviet republic said Sunday. The dead included a 4-year-old girl. The office of President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said that nearly 6,000 people have been arrested in the worst unrest the nation has experienced since gaining its independence 30 years ago. The demonstrations broke out on Jan. 2 over rising fuel prices and quickly spread. Tokayev’s office said that authorities had brought the situation under control, and were conducting “cleanup” operations. A nationwide state of emergency and curfew remained in effect on Sunday. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for Tokayev to rescind his “shoot-to-kill” order against protesters.  BBC NEWS 

The Nigerian online newspaper, the Peoples Gazette, claims it has been raided by the Nigerian National Intelligence Agency. (Peoples Gazette) 

Tennis player Novak Djokovic is allowed entry to Australia following a federal court hearing which determined his visa to be permissible despite current pandemic health measures, which require proof of COVID-19 vaccination. (BBC News) 

The counsel for the Commonwealth Christopher Tran tells the court that Alex Hawke might use his personal prerogative as the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship to cancel Djokovic’s visa despite the court ruling against the Commonwealth. (ABC News Australia) 

Djokovic wins appeal after Australia revoked his visa Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic won his appeal of Australia’s decision to revoke his visa, clearing him to leave immigration detention at Melbourne’s Park Hotel on Monday. Judge Anthony Kelly ruled that the federal government’s rescinding of the world’s top-ranked men’s tennis player’s visa was “unreasonable.” The government said Djokovic failed to comply with rules regarding his exemption from Australia’s coronavirus vaccination mandate. The judge’s decision potentially cleared Djokovic to play in next week’s Australian Open, where he will try for a record 21st Grand Slam Title. But lawyers for the federal government told the court that Australia’s immigration minister, Alex Hawke, might exercise his personal power to again revoke Djokovic’s visa to protect public health in the country, which is experiencing a coronavirus surge. REUTERS 

Myanmar court sentences ousted Suu Kyi to another 4 years in prison A Myanmar court convicted ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday for possessing walkie-talkies in her home and violating COVID-19 protocols. The court sentenced Suu Kyi, 76, to four years in prison on the charges, adding to the two years she received for her Dec. 5 conviction on charges of inciting public unrest and another count of violating COVID-19 protocols. The earlier sentence was cut in half by army commander-in-chief Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, who led the Feb. 1 coup that forced Suu Kyi and her government from office. Suu Kyi’s supporters said the walkie-talkies involved in the latest case belonged to her security detail. They said the charges were politically motivated. CNN 

Bronx apartment building fire kills 19 A fire in an apartment building in the Bronx killed 19 people on Sunday, including nine children, New York City officials said. New York City Mayor Eric Adams confirmed the death toll, tweeting: “We’ve lost 19 of our neighbors today. It’s a tragedy beyond measure.” The blaze started around 11 a.m. in a 19-floor building. About 60 people were injured, 32 of them were hospitalized with life-threatening injuries. Smoke spread to every floor of the building, the city’s fire department commissioner, Daniel Nigro, said. Investigators determined that a malfunctioning electric space heater in a bedroom likely started the fire. REUTERS 

Taliban arrests Kabul professor who clashed with official on TV The Taliban have arrested Kabul University law and political science professor Faizullah Jalal in the latest sign of an escalating crackdown by Afghanistan’s new government, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. Jalal gained national fame for confronting a Taliban official in a debate on live TV, calling Mohammad Naeem, the spokesperson for the Taliban’s political office in Doha, a “terrorist” and a “calf,” a common Afghan insult suggesting someone lacks intelligence. Taliban chief spokesperson Zabiullah Mujahid confirmed the arrest via Twitter and called Jalal a “fanatic,” posting screenshots of anti-Taliban messages on social media that Jalal’s relatives said were fake. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Comedian and ‘Full House’ star Bob Saget dies at 65 Comedian Bob Saget, best known for his breakout role as wholesome widowed dad Danny Tanner on the sitcom Full House, was found dead in his Ritz-Carlton Orlando, Grande Lakes, hotel room on Sunday. He was 65. The local sheriff’s department said the cause of death was under investigation, but there were no signs of foul play or drug use. Saget was a famous stand-up comedian when he got the role on ABC’s Full House, which ran from fall 1987 through May 1995. Saget, who also hosted America’s Funniest Home Videos, was in Florida on a comedy tour. “The loss of Bob Saget hits deep,” actor Jason Alexander tweeted. “If you didn’t know him, he was kind and dear and cared about people deeply.” “Just the funniest and nicest,” said Jon Stewart. CNN 

2022 Golden Globe winners announced after private ceremony The Hollywood Foreign Press Association on Sunday night announced the 2022 Golden Globe winners following a private ceremony in Beverly Hills. On the comedy and musical side, Hacks won Best TV Series. Its star, Jean Smart, won Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series and Ted Lasso‘s Jason Sudeikis won for best actor. West Side Story won Best Picture, and the musical’s star, Rachel Zegler, took the acting award. Succession won for best TV drama series, and The Power of the Dog won Best Motion Picture. Will Smith (King Richard) and Nicole Kidman (Being the Ricardos) took the acting awards in the film drama category. Other winners include The Underground Railroad for Best Limited Series.   VARIETY 

The End

1.09.2022

Sunday, January 9th, 2022 

The death toll from the protests in Kazakhstan increases to 164, including 103 who were killed in Almaty. 5,135 people have also been detained. (Al Jazeera) 

South Korean actor O Yeong-su wins the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor in the Squid Game television series, becoming the first person from South Korea to win the honor. (Korea Times) 

Mj Rodriguez wins the Best Actress in the Pose television series, becoming the first trans actress to win a Golden Globe. (CNN) 

At least 19 people are killed and more than 60 others are injured after a fire spreads through a 19-story apartment building in the Bronx, New York City, United States. (CNN) (ABC News) 

Tianjin begins city-wide COVID-19 testing for 14 million people after 20 children and adults tested positive for COVID-19, two of whom were infected with the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (The Guardian) 

The Greek government announces that fully vaccinated people who have not received a COVID-19 vaccine booster dose seven months after receiving their second dose will be banned from entering most indoor venues and participating in many types of activities beginning on February 1. (Times of Malta) 

The West African nations of the 15-member bloc ECOWAS suspend diplomatic relations with Mali and announce that they are closing their borders with and imposing economic sanctions on Mali in response to an “unacceptable delay” to the country’s next general election(Reuters) 

Sen. John Thune will seek a 4th term Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), the Senate minority whip widely seen as a possible successor to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), announced Saturday that he plans to run for re-election in 2022. Former President Donald Trump called for Thune to be unseated after Thune refused to join in Trump’s effort to overturn the results of the 2020 election. Thune had expressed concerns about Trump’s continuing hold on the Republican Party and was considering retirement, but aggressive lobbying from his colleagues ultimately convinced him to run again. Three other Republicans — all aligning themselves with Trump — have announced that they will challenge Thune in the primary. Five other Republican senators are retiring in 2022. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Non-citizens can now vote in NYC elections A New York City bill allowing non-citizens to vote in local elections became law Sunday after Mayor Eric Adams declined to veto it. The new “Our City, Our Vote” measure will reportedly enfranchise around 800,000 legal, non-citizen New York City residents, including green card holders and “Dreamers” brought to the U.S. illegally as children and benefiting from deferred action. The city’s Board of Elections must submit an implementation plan by July. They will also have to print separate ballots for municipal races, since non-citizens will still be barred from voting in statewide and presidential elections. THE NEW YORK POST 

Obama, Biden, others recall Reid’s tenacity, telephone etiquette President Biden, former President Barack Obama, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) all spoke at the memorial service for former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in Las Vegas Saturday. Common themes in the speeches were Reid’s rise from inauspicious circumstances, his humility, his persistence, and his penchant for ending phone conversations without saying goodbye. Reid’s body will lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda Wednesday before being interred in his hometown of Searchlight, Nevada. CBS NEWS 

Ethiopian airstrike reportedly hits displaced persons camp Aid workers reported Saturday that an Ethiopian airstrike killed 56 people and injured 30 in a Tigrayan displaced persons camp late Friday night or early Saturday morning. Despite continued reports of atrocities, the Ethiopian government has made attempts at rapprochement. A statement the government released Friday announced that several opposition leaders had been released from prison in an attempt to open dialogue and achieve reconciliation following more than a year of war. The newly freed prisoners include several leaders of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) as well as members of other ethnic and regional anti-government militias. REUTERS 

At least 22 dead after snowstorm in Pakistan traps thousands in their cars Snowstorms in Pakistan stranded thousands of tourists in their cars overnight as they attempted to reach Muree, a mountain vacation destination northeast of Islamabad. As of Saturday, 22 people have been confirmed dead from hypothermia or carbon monoxide poisoning, including at least 10 children. Of the 22 dead, 8 were from a single family — Islamabad police officer Naveed Iqbal, his wife, and their six children. Military personnel and first responders provided food and blankets, helped clear roads, and evacuated over 300 people. BBC 

Government says situation in Kazakhstan has ‘stabilized’ Officials from Kazakhstan’s Interior Ministry announced Sunday that the situation in the Central Asian country has ‘stabilized’ and that all government buildings have been re-taken. Authorities also announced that several “strategic facilities have been transferred under the protection of the united peacekeeping contingent of the CSTO member states,” a contingent made up mostly of Russian troops. During a week of unrest kicked off by an increase in the price of liquified petroleum gas, protestors burned the country’s presidential residence and stormed its largest airport, which remains closed. More than 5,000 people have reportedly been detained. REUTERS 

Transgender Ivy League swimmers face off Lia Thomas, a transgender swimmer who has shattered records on the University of Pennsylvania women’s team after three years of competing as a man, lost two events Saturday to Yale’s Iszac Henig, who is in the process of transitioning from female to male. Henig explained in a June New York Times article that he was allowed to continue competing on the women’s team after he agreed to delay testosterone treatment. After one event, Henig pulled down his bathing suit top, revealing the scars from his double mastectomy. “Everything is messed up,” one UPenn parent said. “The NCAA needs to do something about this.” THE NEW YORK POST 

‘Deltacron’ hybrid COVID variant discovered in Cyprus A biology professor in Cyprus claims to have discovered a new COVID-19 strain that is a genetic hybrid of the Omicron and Delta variants, Bloomberg reported Saturday. “We will see in the future if this strain is more pathological or more contagious or if it will prevail,” University of Cyprus Professor Leondios Kostrikis said in a Friday interview on Cyprus’ Sigma TV network. In contrast to the deadly Delta variant, the Omicron variant is highly contagious but has not produced a corresponding uptick in deaths. Around 25 cases of Deltacron have been identified. CNBC 

Australian court to hear Djokovic deportation appeal Monday Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic, who is facing deportation from Australia, will get his (virtual) day in court Monday morning. Djokovic was denied entry into Australia on Wednesday after his visa was canceled due to his refusal to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. He was originally scheduled to be flown out of the country Thursday but was allowed to remain in an Australian quarantine hotel pending the results of his appeal. His lawyers plan to argue that, because Djokovic had COVID-19 last month and recovered, he qualifies for a medical exemption to Australia’s vaccine mandate. A request from the Australian Department of Home Affairs that the hearing be postponed until Wednesday was denied. REUTERS 

Baby handed to U.S. soldier during Afghanistan withdrawal reunited with family Baby Sohail Ahmadi, whose parents handed him to a U.S. soldier during the chaos of last summer’s evacuation from Afghanistan, was reunited with relatives in Kabul Saturday. Mirza Ali Ahmadi and his wife Suraya had passed their then-two-month-old son over the wall at Hamid Karzai International Airport, fearing that the baby would be crushed by the surging crowd. Although the couple later gained access to the airport and were evacuated to the U.S., they were unable to locate their son. The baby was found with 29-year-old taxi driver Hamid Safi, who had taken him home from the airport. Sohail was placed with his grandfather, who plans to send the child to his parents soon. REUTERS 

Saturday, January 8th, 2022 

At least 56 people are killed by an airstrike on an IDP camp in DedebitTigray RegionEthiopia(Sky News) 

At least 200 people were killed by a bandit group from January 4 to 6 in Zamfara State in northwestern Nigeria(Al Jazeera) 

At least 21 people are killed by a snowstorm on a highway in MurreeRawalpindi DistrictPunjabPakistan(BBC News) 

At least seven people are killed and 32 others injured when a rock face collapses onto boats at Furnas Lake in CapitólioMinas GeraisBrazil(The Washington Post) 

Cypriot scientist detects a variant of the SARS-CoV-2 called “Deltacron”, which combines genomes found in the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant and genetic signatures found in the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant(CNBC) 

Romania reintroduces mandatory face mask wearing in outdoor and indoor public spaces; reduces the operating hours and capacity of bars, restaurants, cinemas, gyms, and sporting events; and also reduces the quarantine period, amidst concern that the next wave of COVID-19 could overwhelm the health system. (Associated Press) 

Mexico reports a record 30,671 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 4.1 million. The country also surpasses 300,000 deaths from COVID-19. (Bloomberg) 

Volcán Wolf, the tallest mountain and volcano in the Galápagos Islands, erupts. (The Guardian) 

Saturday, January 8th, 2022 

Chicago 

At least 56 people are killed by an airstrike on an IDP camp in DedebitTigray RegionEthiopia(Sky News) 

Romania reintroduces mandatory face masks in outdoor and indoor public spaces, reducing the operating hours and capacity of bars, restaurants, cinemas, gyms, and sporting events, and cuts the quarantine period, amid concern that the next wave of COVID-19 could overwhelm health system. (AP) 

The tallest mountain and volcano in the Galápagos IslandsVolcán Wolf, erupts. (The Guardian) 

At least 6 people are killed when a rock face collapses onto boats at Furnas Lake in CapitólioBrazil(Washington Post) 

Kazakhstan protests die down as Russian troops enter country Protests in Kazakhstan that left at least 26 demonstrators and 18 law enforcement officers dead gave way to an uneasy calm Saturday as some 2,500 Russian troops arrived in the country. Kazakh authorities also announced Saturday that Karim Massimov, who until recently headed the country’s National Security Committee, had been detained on suspicion of high treason. Some observers suggest that, by arresting Massimov and calling in Russian troops, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev is attempting to escape the shadow of his predecessor, Nursultan Nazarbayev, who led the former Soviet republic from its independence in 1991 until 2019 and has remained influential. Massimov served as prime minister under Nazarbayev from 2006 to 2007 and again from 2014 to 2016. Tokayev removed Nazarbayev from his position as chair of Kazakhstan’s Security Council Wednesday. THE WASHINGTON POST 

U.S. COVID hospitalizations approach record high According to a new tally by Reuters, COVID-19 hospitalizations in the United States could reach a new record high by the end of the week. Hospitalizations have spiked in recent weeks as the more infectious but probably less deadly Omicron variant became the dominant strain of the virus. Even as hospitalizations from the virus increase — to almost 123,000 — deaths remain steady. Additionally, many analysts have expressed concerns that hospitalization numbers are overinflated. Data released Friday by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) revealed that more than half of the COVID patients in New York City hospitals were admitted for reasons other than COVID and only later tested positive for the virus. REUTERS 

Wednesday wasn’t the first time Cruz called Jan. 6 a ‘terrorist attack’ CNN’s Daniel Dale released a fact check Friday showing that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who attempted to play off calling the Jan. 6 riot a “terrorist attack” during a Wednesday Senate committee meeting as a one-time instance of “sloppy” phrasing, was not being entirely accurate. According to Dale, Cruz used the phrase “terrorist attack” to describe what happened on Jan. 6 at least 17 times prior to Wednesday. Cruz made his excuse during a Thursday appearance on Fox’s Tucker Carlson Tonight, during which he apologized for echoing what many Republicans consider a left-wing narrative designed to justify a crackdown on Trump supporters. Carlson was not eager to let Cruz off the hook. CNN 

Men convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery get life in prison The three men convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery have been sentenced to life in prison. Greg McMichael, Travis McMichael, and William Bryan were convicted of murder in November after chasing down Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man. Travis McMichael fatally shot him, and all three men — all of whom are white — were found guilty of felony murder. On Friday, they were each sentenced to life in prison, the McMichaels without the possibility of parole. Bryan was given the possibility of parole after 30 years. The case is expected to be appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Supreme Court appears hesitant to embrace Biden’s vaccine plan The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday appeared skeptical of President Biden’s broad COVID vaccination-or-testing requirement for the nation’s large employers. The justices did, however, seem more likely to back to a separate vaccine requirement for health care workers at facilities that receive federal funds. The administration’s rule, which was supposed to go into effect on Jan. 4, mandates employers with over 100 employees require vaccination or weekly COVID-19 testing as a condition of employment. OSHA pushed back the date in response to legal challenges. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

U.K.: 4th jab not necessary for elderly Government public health advisers in the United Kingdom recommended Friday that nursing home residents and people over the age of 80 not be given a fourth dose of COVID-19 vaccine. According to U.K. public health data, a fourth jab is unnecessary because even three months after the third dose, protection against hospitalization remains at around 90 percent for those over 65. Prof. Wei Shen Lim, chair of the U.K. Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunization, said that, given the need to focus on getting third shots into the arms of the general population, there is “no immediate need” to boost seniors again, but that public health officials could revisit the possibility at a later date. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Legendary actor Sidney Poitier dies at 94 Sidney Poitier, the legendary actor who made history by becoming the first Black man to win the Oscar for Best Actor, has died. He was 94. Poitier won the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1964 for Lilies of the Field. “It is a long journey to this moment,” he said in his acceptance speech. Poitier directed numerous films, as well, including Buck and the Preacher and Stir Crazy, and he served as Bahamian ambassador to Japan from 1997 through 2007. Then-President Barack Obama honored him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009. TMZ 

Transgender contestant Amy Schneider becomes the 1st woman to win $1 million on ‘Jeopardy!’ Amy Schneider continued her impressive streak on Friday’s Jeopardy!, and her winnings now total $1,019,600 after 28 games. This makes her the first woman to ever win more than $1 million on the quiz show. Schneider has been making history throughout her Jeopardy! run. She previously became the first transgender contestant to qualify for the show’s Tournament of Champions, and she holds the records for most money and most consecutive games won by a woman. Schneider is the fifth person to win over $1 million on Jeopardy!, and the fourth to do so during regular-season play. 

Friday,  January 7th, 2022 

Chicago 

Kazakh president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev issues his security forces a shoot-to-kill without warning order in an attempt to end the ongoing protests. (Reuters) 

The Russian Ministry of Defense reports that Russian troops deployed to Kazakhstan have maintained control of Almaty International Airport and secured critical government buildings in Nur-Sultan, including the Ak Orda Presidential Palace(Bloomberg) (The New York Times) 

Sixteen people are dead and 10 others are injured during a gas explosion in ChongqingChina(CNN) 

The Food and Drug Administration begins accepting requests for certification of COVID-19 antigen test kits for home use. Previously, antigen test kits were only available for professional use. (CNN Philippines) 

Japan declares a quasi-state of emergency for OkinawaYamaguchi, and Hiroshima prefectures, which host U.S. military bases and are reporting an increase in the number of COVID-19 cases. The quasi-emergency measures will take effect on January 9. (Kyodo News) 

Bulgaria imposes a rule that requires almost all travellers aged above 12 years from the European Union and the United Kingdom to have a negative PCR test in the previous 72 hours along with a valid COVID-19 certificate prior to arrival, in order to limit the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant(Euronews) 

German chancellor Olaf Scholz and the leaders of 16 states agree to reduce the isolation period for people who have received a booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and also toughen the requirement to enter bars and restaurants to include a booster shot or a negative test result in addition to proof of vaccination or recovery as the Omicron variant continues to spread across the country. (ABC News) 

Mexican health regulator COFEPRIS grants emergency use authorization for Merck & Co.‘s anti-COVID-19 drug Molnupiravir for the treatment of severe disease. (Reuters) 

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari announces that Nigeria is working on developing its own COVID-19 vaccine(CNN) 

The three defendants convicted in the murder of Ahmaud Arbery are sentenced to life in prison. Travis and Greg McMichael are sentenced to life without the possibility of parole, while William Bryan is sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. (NBC News) 

Researchers from the University of Bern announce the discovery of TOI-2257 b, an eccentric exoplanet that orbits near a red dwarf(Phys.org) 

Biden says Trump lies fueled Jan. 6 Capitol attack President Biden, marking the anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot, called the insurrection an attack on democracy. He accused his predecessor, former President Donald Trump, of fueling the violence by spreading a “web of lies” in an attempt to overturn the 2020 election results. “For the first time in our history, a president … tried to prevent a peaceful transfer of power as a violent mob breached the Capitol,” Biden said outside the House chamber. Thursday marked a year since a mob of Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol and tried to prevent lawmakers from certifying Biden’s victory over Trump. The former president, who canceled a planned Jan. 6 press conference, said Biden was using “political theater” to distract from his own policy failures.  REUTERS 

Kazakhstan tells troops to use lethal force against protesters Kazakhstan’s president, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, said in a televised address Friday that he had authorized police and soldiers to shoot to kill when confronting “terrorists” participating in violent anti-government protests in the former Soviet nation. “Those who don’t surrender will be eliminated,” Tokayev said. He dismissed calls for talks with protesters as “nonsense,” saying it was impossible to negotiate “with criminals, murderers.” Kazakhstan’s Interior Ministry said 26 protesters had been killed as of Friday. Another 18 have been wounded and more than 3,000 people detained. Eighteen law enforcement officers reportedly have died in the unrest, and 700 have been injured. The demonstrations started over spiking fuel prices but reflect broad dissatisfaction with the government. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Ex-advisers urge Biden to shift approach to pandemic  Six of President Biden’s former health advisers on Thursday publicly called for revising the government’s COVID-19 strategy to focus on living with the coronavirus instead of eliminating it. In three opinion articles published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the experts, who served on Biden’s transition team, said the United States should avoid getting caught in “a perpetual state of emergency,” and start approaching the coronavirus as one of several respiratory viruses to address together, with data tracking, testing, and goals on limiting hospitalizations. University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Ezekiel Emanuel, who coordinated the effort, told The Washington Post the experts were trying to outline “a national strategy … to find a new normal.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

WHO confirms record 9.5 million COVID cases in last week The World Health Organization on Thursday reported that a record 9.5 million COVID-19 cases were confirmed worldwide in the last week. The total marked a 71 percent jump compared to the previous week in what the United Nations health agency called a “tsunami” fueled by the highly infectious Omicron coronavirus variant. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the total of 9,520,488 new cases was probably an undercount, due to holiday delays. There were 41,178 coronavirus deaths in the same seven-day period, down from 44,680 the week before. “The tsunami of cases is so huge and quick that it is overwhelming health systems around the world,” the WHO chief said in a news conference. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Supreme Court to hear arguments on Biden vaccine mandates The Supreme Court is scheduled to review two challenges to President Biden’s coronavirus vaccination requirements for private employers and health-care facilities on Friday. Biden has said the rules, which would affect nearly 100 million workers, will help make it safer for people to go to work by expanding protection against COVID-19. “Too many people remain unvaccinated for us to get out of this pandemic for good,” he said in November when he announced the mandates. The measures were supposed to take effect on Jan. 4, but they have been put on hold while courts consider challenges by business and religious groups that argue they exceed the Biden administration’s authority. The high court will decide whether to block the rules while the cases continue. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Stephanie Grisham: Trump ‘gleefully’ watched Capitol attack on TV Former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said Thursday that former President Donald Trump didn’t just fail to quickly condemn last year’s attack on the Capitol as it happened, he happily watched the situation unfold from the safety of the White House. “All I know about that day is that [Trump] was in the dining room, gleefully watching on his TV, as he often did, ‘Look at all of the people fighting for me,’ hitting rewind, watching it again,” Grisham told CNN’s John Berman. Grisham also revealed how a group of about 15 ex-Trump officials, including her, are planning to meet in the coming weeks to strategize ways to stop the former president and show those in the country that still believe in him “who he really is.” ROLLING STONE 

Politico: Harris was at DNC on Jan. 6, 2021, when pipe bomb was discovered  Vice President Kamala Harris was at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, 2021, when a pipe bomb was discovered outside the building, Politico reported Thursday, citing four people familiar with her activities that day. Capitol Police started investigating the pipe bomb at 1:07 p.m., and evacuated an unnamed “protectee” seven minutes later, according to an official Capitol Police timeline obtained by Politico. The four sources, including a White House official and a former law enforcement official, confirmed that Harris was the Secret Service protectee mentioned in the timeline. The DNC bomb threat was neutralized at 4:36 p.m., an hour after another pipe bomb was discovered at the Republican National Committee. No suspects have been arrested. POLITICO 

Mortgage rates rise to highest level since May 2020 U.S. mortgage rates jumped this week to their highest level since May 2020. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.22 percent in the seven-day period that ended Thursday, up from 3.11 percent the previous week. A year ago, the average 30-year rate was 2.65 percent, the lowest on record. Ultra-low interest rates have helped drive a housing boom since the pandemic started two years ago, as people who held onto their jobs and had savings took advantage of low borrowing costs to buy bigger houses as Americans shifted to working, studying, and socializing virtually, from home. Economists have expected rates to rise as the economy improves, inflation looms, and the Federal Reserve tapers its efforts to boost the recovery with asset purchases and low rates. CNN 

Moderna CEO says people might need a 4th vaccine shot next fall Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel said Thursday that people might need to get a fourth shot of the company’s coronavirus vaccine in the fall to restore strong protection against COVID-19. Bancel said people who got booster shots last fall likely would get through the winter with adequate resistance to infection and severe illness, but that the vaccine’s efficacy would wane in subsequent months. U.K. data found that Moderna and Pfizer’s two-dose vaccines were just 10 percent effective at preventing symptomatic COVID-19 from the fast-spreading Omicron variant 20 weeks after the second dose. Protection was restored to 75 percent two weeks after a third booster shot, but efficacy declined to 40 percent to 50 percent 10 weeks later. CNBC 

Peter Bogdanovich, who directed ‘The Last Picture Show,’ dies at 82 Oscar-nominated writer-director Peter Bogdanovich died early Thursday of natural causes at his home in Los Angeles, his daughter Antonia Bogdanovich told The Hollywood Reporter. He was 82. Bogdanovich catapulted to A-list status in 1971 with his second film, The Last Picture Show. The black-and-white drama set in a Texas town earned eight Academy Awards nominations — including directing and adapted screenplay (shared with Larry McMurtry) for Bogdanovich — and supporting acting awards for Cloris Leachman and Ben Johnson. Bogdanovich followed up with two more well-known films including What’s Up, Doc? and Paper Moon. His later hits included 1985’s MaskCritic Matt Zoller Seitz reflected that with Bogdanovich’s death, “one of the last remaining links to classic Hollywood is also gone.” THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Jobs report expected to show hiring rebound before Omicron hit  Economists expect the federal jobs report to show Friday that hiring remained strong in December. A survey by data provider FactSet found that economists expected a gain of 400,000 jobs last month, up from 210,000 in November. The unemployment rate was projected to drop from 4.2 percent to 4.1 percent. The numbers will reflect the hiring situation before the Omicron coronavirus variant sparked a spike in COVID-19 cases that has started impacting some businesses. Companies had record numbers of open positions last year. Many sharply increased pay, nevertheless prompting a wave of resignations as people sought better pay. Economists expect job growth to slow in January and early February, although “the hit from Omicron will probably be modest and relatively brief,” TD Securities economist Jim O’Sullivan said.  THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

GameStop working on launching NFT marketplace Struggling brick-and-mortar videogame retailer GameStop is working toward creating a marketplace for nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, as part of a turnaround plan, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday, citing people familiar with the plans. GameStop has hired more than 20 people to operate a new unit focused on developing the marketplace, and is recruiting game developers and publishers to list NFTs on the marketplace, which it aims to launch later this year, the Journal reported. Prices of NFTs, a technology allowing proof of ownership of digital goods stored on a blockchain, have risen sharply in recent months, driven by enthusiasm among holders of Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies. GameStop shares shot up by 14 percent in after-hours trading after the Journal report. CNBC 

Julia Fox describes her ‘instant connection’ with Kanye West The Kanye West and Julia Fox saga just got stranger. The Uncut Gems actress has gone ahead and published a two-paragraph dispatch in Interview magazine walking us through her odd second date with Ye. First, she describes meeting West on New Year’s Eve and developing an “instant connection,” writing, “His energy is so fun to be around.” Fox then recounts how they went to see Slave Play in New York and how at dinner, West “directed an entire photo shoot for me while people dined.” Afterward, West surprised her with “an entire hotel suite full of clothes,” which “felt like a real Cinderella moment,” leading Fox to ask the natural question of “who does things like this on a second date?”— though she seems to mean this in a good way. Despite what she just finished describing, Fox claims “everything with us has been so organic.” TMZ pointed out that West appeared to be “trying to create a new version of” his estranged wife Kim Kardashian by dressing Fox “top to bottom in Balenciaga.” So yes, we’re apparently kicking off 2022 with a Kanye West remake of Vertigo.  INTERVIEW 

Jim Carrey shows up on the Weeknd’s new album Ladies and gentlemen … Jim Carrey. Just in time for the weekend, the Weeknd dropped his new album Dawn FM on Friday, in which Jim Carrey naturally shows up to voice a purgatory radio DJ. Why not? The album’s opening track features Carrey as a host on “Dawn FM,” telling listeners, “You’ve been in the dark for way too long. It’s time to walk into the light and accept your fate with open arms.” The Weeknd has described the album as being “like the listener is dead,” and they’re tuning into a radio host “helping you transition to the other side.” By the final track, Carrey performs a spoken word poem he co-wrote, telling listeners, “If pain’s living on when your body’s long gone, and your phantom regret hasn’t let it go yet, you may not have died in the way that you must.” Alrighty then!  USA TODAY 

Rooney Mara set to play Audrey Hepburn in a biopic What is it with this week and major actors being cast as Hollywood icons? After Chris Evans was cast as Gene Kelly, Rooney Mara is now set to play Audrey Hepburn in an upcoming film directed by Call Me By Your Name‘s Luca Guadagnino. Mara, who has earned Oscar nominations for her roles in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and Carol, will reportedly also be producing the movie. The casting certainty seemed to make sense, and back in 2012, The Cut even wrote an article suggesting Mara could be the “new Audrey Hepburn.” But Emily in Paris star Lily Collins immediately began to trend on Twitter as some argued she should have gotten the role instead — leading writer Akilah Hughes to offer the brutal rebuttal, “Saying Lily Collins should play Audrey Hepburn is a real mean way to say you don’t think Audrey Hepburn could act.”  DEADLINE 

The Golden Globes will now be a ‘private event’ If the Golden Globes is held but no one is around to see it, does it make a sound? The awards are set for this Sunday, but after the ceremony got canceled by NBC, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association has now confirmed there won’t be any way to watch it at all. “This year’s event is going to be a private event and will not be livestreamed,” an HFPA spokesperson said, promising to post “real time updates on winners on the Golden Globes website and our social media.” It’s been a stunning downfall for an awards ceremony that faced massive backlash in 2021 over its shocking lack of diversity and alleged corruption. There won’t actually be any celebrities in attendance on Sunday, and according to Deadline, the only people who will be there are “selected members of the HFPA and grant recipients of the organization’s philanthropy.” Needless to say, there’s no need for any FOMO here. DEADLINE 

Ben Affleck says ‘The Flash’ has his favorite scenes as Batman Will Ben Affleck get to play Batman in a movie that’s not terrible? Affleck teased his return as Batman in DC’s upcoming The Flash, revealing to The Herald Sun, “Maybe my favorite scenes in terms of Batman and the interpretation of Batman that I have done, were in the Flash movie.” Affleck had a pretty rough experience playing Batman in the critically panned movies Batman v Superman and Justice League, though Zack Snyder’s recut of the latter film got more of a favorable reaction last year. But after seemingly retiring as the character, Affleck returns in The Flash, which involves timeline shenanigans bringing multiple Batmen into the mix including Michael Keaton’s version. Affleck recalled remembering thinking while shooting The Flash, “Wow — I think I have finally figured it out.’” We’re rooting for you, Batfleck.  SCREEN RANT 

Thursday, January 6th, 2022 

Chicago 

Twenty-six anti-government protestors are killed during a military operation in Almaty. The death toll of security forces increases to 18 with two of the officers being beheaded(BBC News) 

Explosions and heavy gunfire are reported near the main Republic Square in Almaty. (The Independent) 

The Collective Security Treaty Organization military alliance approves what it describes a peacekeeping mission in Kazakhstan in response to an official request for military assistance from Kazakh president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev(Yahoo! News) 

Russian-led CSTO forces enter Kazakhstan in order to help the government restore control of the country, according to a statement from Kremlin spokesperson Maria Zakharova(Al Arabiya) (The Guardian) 

Two journalists are killed and their bodies burned during a gang attack in Port-au-PrinceHaiti(BBC News) 

The United States Armed Forces order all personnel stationed in Japan to wear masks when traveling off-base amid criticism of their handling of the increase in COVID-19 cases in areas where they are based in large numbers, such as Okinawa and Iwakuni(ABC News) 

The Chicago Public Schools announces that schools in ChicagoIllinois, has been canceled for a third consecutive day as teachers in the city go on a strike over COVID-19 protocols. (National Review) (Chicago Tribune) 

A 79-year-old man in BuckfastleighDevon, becomes the first person in the United Kingdom to test positive for bird flu(The Guardian) 

The French National Assembly votes 214−93 with 27 abstentions to approve a bill to transform the COVID-19 health pass into a vaccine pass, which would require people over the age of 12 years to show proof of vaccination in order to enter most public places and use inter-regional public transport. The bill will be debated in the Senate early next week and is expected to come into effect later this month. (Euronews) 

Phillipine president Rodrigo Duterte signs into law a bill outlawing child marriage, with violators facing up to 12 months in prison. Some portions of the law will not go into effect for one year in order to allow for Muslim and indigenous communities to prepare. (NDTV) 

2021 Men’s Singles champion Novak Djokovic is detained by the Australian Border Force for failing to provide a valid medical exemption to explain his not being vaccinated against COVID-19 under federal guidelines. The Victoria State Government and Tennis Australia had previously approved Djokovic’s exemption under their own guidelines, which was not endorsed by the federal Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation(The Guardian) 

 
Garland vows to ‘hold all Jan. 6 perpetrators’ accountable Attorney General Merrick Garland promised Wednesday to “hold all Jan. 6 perpetrators, at any level, accountable” for last year’s attack on the Capitol by a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters. “We will follow the facts wherever they lead,” Garland said in a speech to Justice Department employees. The comments came the day before the first anniversary of the deadly attack by rioters aiming to prevent Congress from certifying Trump’s loss to President Biden in the 2020 election. More than 700 people have been arrested for participating in the insurrection. The FBI is still looking for another 350 suspects, including 250 people accused of assaulting police officers. On Thursday, President Biden will go to the Capitol to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the attack. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

CDC backs Pfizer boosters for adolescents The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday endorsed giving the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus booster to children ages 12 to 15, five months after their initial two-dose series of shots. “It is critical that we protect our children and teens from COVID-19 infection and the complications of severe disease,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said in a statement. “This booster dose will provide optimized protection against COVID-19 and the Omicron variant.” Walensky’s approval came hours after CDC advisers voted 13-1 to recommend the change, and strengthened the recommendation for 16- and 17-year-olds to get the booster. Health officials had previously recommended that people get the Pfizer booster six months after their second dose, but cut the wait to five months to expand protection against the fast-spreading Omicron variant. NPR 

Fire in Philadelphia rowhouse kills at least 12, including 8 children A fire ripped through a crowded rowhouse in Philadelphia’s Fairmont district on Wednesday, killing at least 12 people, including eight children. “This is without a doubt one of the most tragic days in our city’s history,” Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney said. Eight people managed to escape the flames. Firefighters said that when they arrived they saw flames were shooting up from the second floor of the three-story, 2,300-square-foot house, which was operated by the Philadelphia Housing Authority. Witnesses said screams from the building woke them up. Firefighters managed to control the blaze within 50 minutes. Investigators said smoke detectors in the building failed. THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER 

Fed minutes show support for faster rate hikes to fight inflation Federal Reserve officials last month discussed speeding up their timetable for raising interest rates, with the first hike coming as soon as March, according to minutes of Fed policymakers’ Dec. 14-15 meeting that were released Wednesday. The minutes indicated that Fed leaders believed that the quicker pace could be justified to fight high inflation occurring at the same time as a tight labor market. Some officials at the central bank also supported cutting the Fed’s $8.76 trillion portfolio of bonds and other assets after the interest rate increases start. Fed officials said in projections released after the meeting that they expected three quarter-percent rate increases in 2022. During much of 2021, Fed officials said rising inflation was mostly due to supply-chain disruptions, but the persistence of high inflation has increased pressure on the Fed to move faster. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Capitol Police chief vows to fix problems exposed by Jan. 6 attack J. Thomas Manger, the chief of the U.S. Capitol Police, told lawmakers on the eve of the anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on Congress that his department was taking steps to fix security shortcomings exposed by the insurrection. Manger vowed to implement more than 100 recommendations to address the issues. “We fully understand the need to restore confidence in our ability to fulfill our mission each day, no matter the circumstances,” Manger said in written testimony to the Senate Rules Committee. The panel last month received a critique on the Capitol Police from the agency’s inspector general, Michael A. Bolton, who made 103 recommendations, including upgrading riot gear and other equipment, and streamlining intelligence operations. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

White House says fresh COVID stimulus under discussion The White House said Wednesday that it is continuing to talk with members of Congress and others about the possibility of another round of stimulus funding to address fallout from the latest coronavirus surge. Recent economic data indicates that the economy is doing well, with private payrolls increasing, holiday sales strong, and supply chain bottlenecks easing. But economists warn that spiking COVID-19 cases, driven by the fast-spreading Omicron variant, have started to dent economic activity. Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) told CNN a bipartisan group is looking into whether Congress can provide aid to restaurants and other industries expected to be hit hard by the latest COVID-19 wave, although no formal deal has been proposed. REUTERS 

Kazakhstan protests turn deadly as Russia-led troops arrive to back government Protesters stormed Kazakhstan’s largest airport on Wednesday as anti-government demonstrations that began last weekend over higher fuel prices intensified. Protesters also set fire to the president’s residence and several other government buildings. Kazakhstan’s interior ministry said eight law enforcement officers and national guard members have been killed in the unrest, and more than 300 injured. A police spokesperson said dozens of protesters were killed. “Peacekeepers” from a Russia-led military alliance arrived to back the government at the request of President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, who fired his government and declared a two-week state of emergency in response to the protests. BBC Russian correspondent Olga Ivshina wrote that analysts say “the Kazakh government clearly underestimated how angry the population was.” BBC NEWS 

Australia denies Djokovic entry over vaccine exemption Australian authorities on Thursday told Novak Djokovic, the world’s No. 1-ranked men’s tennis player, that he would have to leave the country because he failed to provide adequate evidence supporting a medical exemption from the country’s coronavirus vaccine requirement. “Mr. Djokovic’s visa has been canceled,” Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison tweeted. “Rules are rules, especially when it comes to our borders. No one is above these rules.” Djokovic had traveled all day Wednesday from Dubai to Australia to defend his Australian Open singles championship. The exemption was supposed to allow him to play even though he has not been vaccinated. A judge said he would be allowed to stay in the country pending a Monday hearing on a legal challenge to the order to leave. ESPN 

Grammys postponed due to risks from Omicron surge The Recording Academy and CBS announced Wednesday that they are postponing the 64th Grammy Awards, saying “holding the show on Jan. 31 simply contains too many risks” given the wave of COVID-19 cases blamed on the fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant. The Recording Academy said it would announce a new date “soon.” “The health and safety of those in our music community, the live audience, and the hundreds of people who work tirelessly to produce our show remains our top priority,” the Recording Academy said in a joint statement with its longtime television partner. This will be the second straight year the Grammys have been delayed due to the pandemic. Last year’s ceremony was pushed back from Jan. 31 to March 14. LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Fed minutes show support for faster rate hikes to fight inflation Federal Reserve officials last month discussed speeding up their timetable for raising interest rates, with the first hike coming as soon as March, according to minutes of Fed policymakers’ Dec. 14-15 meeting that were released Wednesday. The minutes indicated that Fed leaders believed that the quicker pace could be justified to fight high inflation now that the job market is strong enough that lower rates are no longer needed. Some officials at the central bank also supported cutting the Fed’s $8.76 trillion portfolio of bonds and other assets after the interest rate increases start. Fed officials said in projections released after the meeting that they expected three quarter-percent rate increases in 2022. THE WALL STREET JOURNALTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

GM unveils fully electric Chevrolet Silverado pickup General Motors on Wednesday unveiled its fully electric Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck. The announcement presented a new challenge to EV powerhouse Tesla, and sent GM’s stock rising. Ford revealed a day earlier that demand for its F-150 Lightning electric pickups had jumped. GM’s full-size electric Silverado is intended to go 400 miles on a full charge. A Work Truck version designed for fleet buyers will be priced at $39,900. It is expected to go on sale in spring 2023. The fully loaded RST First Edition model will cost $105,000, and be available in fall 2023. Both versions will get 100 miles of range in 10 minutes with a DC fast charger. INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILYENGADGET 

White House says fresh COVID stimulus under discussion The White House said Wednesday that it is continuing to talk with members of Congress and others about the possibility of another round of stimulus funding to address fallout from the latest coronavirus surge. Recent economic data indicates that the economy is doing well, with private payrolls increasing, holiday sales strong, and supply chain bottlenecks easing. But economists warn that spiking COVID-19 cases, driven by the fast-spreading Omicron variant, have started to dent economic activity. Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) told CNN a bipartisan group is looking into whether Congress can provide aid to restaurants and other industries expected to be hit hard by the latest COVID-19 wave, although no formal deal has been proposed. REUTERS 

WarnerMedia, ViacomCBS weigh possible CW Network sale AT&T’s WarnerMedia and ViacomCBS are considering selling the CW Network, which they jointly own, and could reach a deal soon, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday night. The potential buyers include Nexstar Media Group, the nation’s biggest broadcaster and a large owner of affiliates of the teen-focused network, the people close to the talks told the Journal. WarnerMedia and ViacomCBS reportedly might sell a significant stake, or all of the CW. They have been exploring strategic options for several months. The CW Network is not profitable on its own, but it produces valuable content for the parent companies’ other platforms. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Jessica Chastain went to the hospital after fight scene on ‘The 355’ Jessica Chastain apparently brought some Tom Cruise energy to her new film. The actress spoke with James Corden about doing stunts on the action movie The 355, one of which went a bit awry. During a fight scene on a marble floor, Chastain explained she “had to fall and hit my head” but “misjudged the distance,” and everyone on set stopped and “looked scared” when she “heard a crack.” Her stunt double then came up and uttered the ominous phrase “I’m sorry, but I have to put it back in” while reaching toward her head. “I guess it was just a bruise she was pushing back in my head,” Chastain said. “I did a couple of more takes because, you know, I don’t give up easy, and then I went to the hospital.” Chastain previously revealed a separate moment when she hurt herself while jumping from a ledge, which is actually in the film. And now to take a giant sip of coffee and check the film’s Rotten Tomatoes score for confirmation that all this brutal work was worth it… CNN 

Tom Holland unsuccessfully pitched a young James Bond film Tom Holland’s pitch for a young James Bond movie didn’t leave producers stirred. The Spider-Man actor revealed in a new interview with Total Film he came up with an idea for a movie about a young James Bond and even pitched it — unsuccessfully. Holland explained, “It didn’t really make sense. It didn’t work. It was the dream of a young kid, and I don’t think the Bond estate were particularly interested.” The meeting wasn’t a complete waste of time, though, as Holland said his idea for a Bond origin film ended up evolving into the Uncharted movie, in which Holland stars as a younger version of Nathan Drake than in the video games. Holland has previously expressed interest in being the next James Bond, telling Variety he’d “love” to do it, though we’re not convinced the gig won’t somehow end up going to Mike Richards.  TOTAL FILM 

Denzel Washington doesn’t recall clash with Ellen Pompeo on ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ I don’t know her. In an interview with Variety, Denzel Washington was asked about Ellen Pompeo revealing they had a heated clash on the set of Grey’s Anatomy when he directed an episode, something that apparently didn’t make much of an impression with him. Pompeo claimed Washington “went ham on my a–” on the set in 2015 and that the two “went at it,” with Pompeo recalling telling him, “Listen, motherf—er, this is my show!” But Variety says that when he was asked about this incident, Washington sidestepped the question and said he doesn’t recall this day. “No, no,” Washington said, before grinning and adding, “But it’s all good.” Back when Pompeo shared the story, she wasn’t exactly showered with support for it, with journalist Felice León on MSNBC deeming it a “typical case of a white woman white womaning.”  VARIETY 

‘The Sopranos’ star Michael Imperioli cast in ‘The White Lotus’ Christopher Moltisanti himself is checking back in at HBO. Michael Imperioli, best known for playing Christopher on HBO’s The Sopranos, has been cast as one of the leads in the second season of The White Lotus. The series from Mike White stars a group of characters staying at a resort in Hawaii — though this follow-up will reportedly be taking place at another location following a new set of protagonists, Jennifer Coolidge may be returning from the first season. Imperioli will be starring as a “man traveling with his elderly father and recent college-graduate son,” Deadline says. With Imperioli’s help, The White Lotus will be following in the grand tradition of shows returning for more seasons despite allegedly being a limited series, so it may soon be time to officially start calling that genre “limited-unless-a-lot-of-people-watch-it series.”  DEADLINE 

Olivia Jade says she ‘worked really hard at school’ Olivia Jade doesn’t want people to think she didn’t work “really hard at school” just because her parents illegally paid $500,000 in bribes to get her into college. In a new episode of her podcast, the 22-year-old YouTuber and daughter of Mossimo Giannulli and Lori Loughlin said there’s a “big misconception about me” that she doesn’t work hard, to which she responded, “I didn’t have to start my YouTube when I was 14. I did put in a lot of work.” Jade, while acknowledging she lives a “very blessed and fortunate and privileged life” thanks to her famous parents, also said she “had straight A’s” in high school and “worked really hard.” Jade’s parents both went to prison after pleading guilty to paying to get her and her sister into the University of Southern California as rowing recruits, even though they don’t row. While reviewing her critical comments, Jade also read aloud a review of her show that declared it “objectively terrible.”   PAGE SIX 

The End