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Stargirl Actress Wants A Crossover With Arrowverse Show Supergirl - Screen Rant

Posted: 30 May 2020 11:48 PM PDT

Actress Brec Bassinger already knows who she wants to see DC's Stargirl crossover with first: Supergirl. Created by Geoff Johns and Lee Moder, the character of Courtney Whitmore made her comic book debut in DC Comics' Stars and S.T.R.I.P.E series, which ran for 15 issues between 1999 and 2000. Originally known as the second iteration of the Star-Spangled Kid, she ultimately changed her moniker to Stargirl after coming into possession of the Cosmic Staff. As well as being adapted for animation, the character previously made minor live-action appearances on both Smallville and Legends of Tomorrow. Debuting on the DC Universe streaming service, and, subsequently, on The CW, the new iteration will be the definitive version - with Johns (who based the character on his late sister) himself overseeing the production.

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Played by Bassinger, Stargirl picks up with Courtney moving to a new town after her mother Barbara (Amy Smart) marries Pat Dugan (Luke Wilson). Courtney quickly discovers that Pat used to be a sidekick to Starman (Joel McHale) and is chosen by the Cosmic Staff to take up his mantle. Though only a handful of episodes into its first season, it's already known that Courtney will form a new generation of the Justice Society of America and square off against their villainous counterparts in the form of Injustice Society. Stargirl season 1 has already enjoyed an impressive reception from fans and critics alike.

Related: DC's Stargirl Cast, Character, & Powers Guide

Speaking with the folks over at TV Guide, Wilson revealed that Bassinger is already looking to the future. After Bassinger and Smart praised the pleasant and exciting surprise that was joining the established family and fanbase of the Arrowverse (rather than just the DC Universe, as was first planned), talk quickly turned to potential crossovers. "Someone asked, 'would storylines ever, you know, start connecting from other shows', and Brec was saying that she'd like to do something with Supergirl," Wilson stated. Bassinger then chimed in with her reasoning: "I said Supergirl because I think Supergirl and Stargirl, like, just their names, in general, lend to them needing to work together."

Stargirl Courtney with Cosmic Staff in Pilot

Wilson himself, however, shared that he thought a team up with The Flash "would be cool" once the first season was complete in its own right and they could broaden the horizons. Smart, meanwhile, admitted that she wasn't yet familiar enough with the ever-expanding shared universe to offer a recommendation of her own. Bassinger then just agreed with the idea that they could just crossover with all of them, alluding to the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover event that took place earlier this year. Stargirl (and her fledgling team) actually made a cameo appearance on the aforementioned crossover, establishing them as being residents of Earth-2.

A more direct merger of the respective worlds feels inevitable. And focusing that that on a collaboration between Stargirl and Supergirl, especially, would make a lot of sense. Not only would it allow the heroes of the Arrowverse to finally learn that the multiverse still exists but it would fit within the mantra for more intimate crossovers post-Crisis. Despite their budding friendship, Batwoman is set to cross streams with Superman & Lois rather than Supergirl. As a result, the Girl of Steel's schedule is wide open. Equally, the fact that Supergirl's Kara Danvers is now as experienced at heroism as Stargirl's Courtney Whitmore is a newcomer could make for a really interesting and fun mentor/mentee-style dynamic.

More: How Stargirl Connects To Other DC Universe Shows (& Arrowverse)

Source: TV Guide

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「理想の上司」「帝国軍ええ職場になったなあ」 テレワーク終了を告げるダース・ベイダーが「こんな上司なら暗黒面に堕ちてもいい」と話題に - ITmedia

Posted: 30 May 2020 11:18 PM PDT

「理想の上司」「帝国軍ええ職場になったなあ」 テレワーク終了を告げるダース・ベイダーが「こんな上司なら暗黒面に堕ちてもいい」と話題に - ITmedia

 テレワークの終了を告げるダース・ベイダーとストームトルーパーのオンライン通話を描いたフィギュア4コマが、「理想の上司」「帝国軍ええ職場になったなあ」と話題を呼んでいます。今すぐ帝国軍に履歴書送りたい。

 1コマ目では、ノートPCを広げるストームトルーパーが写し出されており、画面にはダース・ベイダーの姿が。「先ほど、皇帝陛下より連絡があった。本日をもって、在宅勤務については…」となんとも神妙な面持ちです。


フィギュア4コマ ダース・ベイダー スター・ウォーズ テレワーク おもしろ

 2コマ目ではダース・ベイダーからテレワークの終了を告げられてがっくり来ているストームトルーパーが「はぁ〜やっぱりな〜… そうなると思ったわ…」と大きく肩を落としていましたが、3コマ目でダース・ベイダーが告げた「が、聞かなかったことにした」という発言で一気に状況は好転。


フィギュア4コマ ダース・ベイダー スター・ウォーズ テレワーク おもしろ

フィギュア4コマ ダース・ベイダー スター・ウォーズ テレワーク おもしろ

 4コマ目では「だってワシもう新しいゲーム買っちゃったしwww」とおちゃめな姿を見せるダース・ベイダーと、歓喜するストームトルーパーのほっこりする姿が描かれています。


フィギュア4コマ ダース・ベイダー スター・ウォーズ テレワーク おもしろ

 このフィギュア4コマを公開したのは、これまでにもねとらぼで何度か取り上げている、これまでにもねとらぼで何度か取り上げているねぎかつセブン(@Negikatsu7)さん。世相を反映した見事な作品には、「流石はベイダー様!」「帝国軍、ホントに"ホワイト"過ぎます」「会社の上司としてはダメだが人生の上司としては最高」といったコメントが寄せられているほか、4万件以上の"いいね"が寄せられています。

画像提供:ねぎかつセブン(@Negikatsu7)さん

(Kikka)

Copyright © ITmedia, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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2020-05-31 03:30:00Z
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Protests heat up across US, governors call in National Guard - Marin Independent Journal

Posted: 30 May 2020 11:08 PM PDT

By TIM SULLIVAN and STEPHEN GROVES

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Tense protests over the death of George Floyd and other police killings of black people grew Saturday from New York to Tulsa to Los Angeles, with police cars set ablaze and reports of injuries mounting on all sides as the country convulsed through another night of unrest after months of coronavirus lockdowns.

The protests, which began in Minneapolis following Floyd's death Monday after a police officer pressed a knee on his neck until he stopped breathing, have left parts of the city a grid of broken windows, burned-out buildings and ransacked stores. The unrest has since become a national phenomenon as protesters decry years of deaths at police hands.

Tens of thousands of people were in the streets across the country, many of them not wearing masks or observing social distancing, raising concerns among health experts about the potential for spreading the coronavirus pandemic at a time when much of the country is in the process of reopening society and the economy.

After a tumultuous Friday, racially diverse crowds held mostly peaceful demonstrations in dozens of cities, though many later descended into violence as had happened the previous night.

Few corners of America were untouched, from protesters setting fires inside Reno's city hall, to police launching tear gas at rock-throwing demonstrators in Fargo, North Dakota, to shattered windows at police headquarters in Richmond, Virginia.

— In Indianapolis, police were investigating "multiple shootings" downtown, including one that left a person dead, amid the protests. Police gave few details but said no officers were involved.

— In Washington, the National Guard was deployed outside the White House, where chanting crowds taunted law enforcement officers. Dressed in camouflage and holding shields, the troops stood in a tight line a few yards from the crowd, preventing them from pushing forward. President Donald Trump, who spent much of Saturday in Florida for the SpaceX rocket launch, landed on the lawn in the presidential helicopter at dusk and went inside without speaking to journalists.

— In Philadelphia, at least 13 officers were injured when peaceful protests turned violent and at least four police vehicles were set on fire. Other fires were set throughout downtown.

— In Salt Lake City, protesters defied a curfew and National Guard troops were deployed by Utah's governor. Demonstrators flipped a police car and lit it on fire, and another vehicle was later set ablaze. Police said six people were arrested and a police officer was injured after being struck in the head with a baseball bat.

— In Los Angeles, protesters chanted "Black Lives Matter," some within inches of the face shields of officers. Police used batons to move the crowd back and fired rubber bullets. A graffiti-covered police car burned in the street.

— And in New York City, dangerous confrontations flared repeatedly as officers made arrests and cleared streets. A video showed two NYPD cruisers lurching into a crowd of demonstrators who were pushing a barricade against one of them and pelting it with objects. Several people were knocked to the ground, and it was unclear if anyone was hurt.

"Our country has a sickness. We have to be out here," said Brianna Petrisko, among those at lower Manhattan's Foley Square, where most were wearing masks amid the coronavirus pandemic. "This is the only way we're going to be heard."

Back in Minneapolis, the city where the protests began, police, state troopers and National Guard members moved in soon after an 8 p.m. curfew took effect to break up protests, firing tear gas and rubber bullets to clear streets outside a police precinct and elsewhere.

The show of force came after three days when police largely avoided engaging protesters, and after the state poured in more than 4,000 National Guard troops to Minneapolis and said the number would soon rise to nearly 11,000.

"The situation in Minneapolis is no longer in any way about the murder of George Floyd," said Gov. Tim Walz, who also said local forces had been overmatched the previous day. "It is about attacking civil society, instilling fear and disrupting our great cities."

Minneapolis' streets steadily grew calmer as the night went on, and Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell said the tough response would remain as long as it takes to "quell this situation."

Some residents were glad to see the upheaval dissipating.

"l live here. I haven't been able to sleep," said Iman Muhammad, whose neighborhood saw multiple fires set Friday night. Muhammad said she sympathized with peaceful protests over Floyd's death but disagreed with the violence: "Wrong doesn't answer wrong."

Trump appeared to cheer on the tougher tactics Saturday night, commending the Guard deployment in Minneapolis, declaring "No games!" and saying police in New York City "must be allowed to do their job!"

Overnight curfews were imposed in more than a dozen major cities nationwide, including Atlanta, Denver, Los Angeles, Minneapolis and Seattle.

More than 1,300 people have been arrested in 16 cities since Thursday, including over 500 Friday in Los Angeles.

The unrest comes at a time when most Americans have spent months inside over concerns surrounding the coronavirus, which the president has called an "invisible enemy." The events of the last 72 hours, seen live on national television, have shown the opposite: a sudden pivot to crowds, screaming protesters and burning buildings, a stark contrast to the empty streets of recent months.

"Quite frankly I'm ready to just lock people up," Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields said at a news conference. Demonstrations there turned violent Friday, and police were arresting protesters Saturday on blocked-off downtown streets. "Yes, you caught us off balance once. It's not going to happen twice."

This week's unrest recalled the riots in Los Angeles nearly 30 years ago after the acquittal of the white police officers who beat Rodney King, a black motorist who had led them on a high-speed chase. The protests of Floyd's killing have gripped many more cities, but the losses in Minneapolis have yet to approach the staggering totals Los Angeles saw during five days of rioting in 1992, when more than 60 people died, 2,000-plus were injured and thousands arrested, with property damage topping $1 billion.

Many protesters spoke of frustration that Floyd's death was one more in a litany. It came in the wake of the killing in Georgia of Ahmaud Arbery, a black man who was shot dead after being pursued by two white men while running in their neighborhood, and in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic that has thrown millions out of work, killed more than 100,000 people in the U.S. and disproportionately affected black people.

The officer who held his knee to Floyd's neck as he begged for air was arrested Friday and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. But many protesters are demanding the arrests of the three other officers involved.

Trump stoked the anger on Twitter, saying that if protesters had breached the White House fence, they would "have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen."

Leaders in many affected cities have voiced outrage over Floyd's killing and expressed sympathy for protesters' concerns. But as the unrest intensified, they spoke of a desperate need to protect their cities and said they would call in reinforcements, despite concerns that could lead to more heavy-handed tactics.

Governors in Georgia, Kentucky, Ohio and Texas also activated the National Guard after protests there turned violent overnight.

Police in St. Louis were investigating the death of a protester who climbed between two trailers of a Fed Ex truck and was killed when it drove away. And a person was killed in the area of protests in downtown Detroit just before midnight after someone fired shots into an SUV, officers said. Police had initially said someone fired into the crowd from an SUV.

___

Numerous AP journalists contributed from across the U.S.

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太田光、「錯覚」から木村花さんは抜け出せなかった - 日刊スポーツ

Posted: 30 May 2020 10:48 PM PDT

太田光、「錯覚」から木村花さんは抜け出せなかった - 日刊スポーツ

お笑いコンビ、爆笑問題の太田光(55)が31日、MCを務めるTBS系「サンデー・ジャポン」(日曜午前9時54分)に生出演し、SNSでの誹謗(ひぼう)中傷について語った。

23日に亡くなった女子プロレスターの木村花さんは19年から恋愛リアリティー番組「テラスハウス」に出演しており、木村さんのSNSには誹謗中傷のコメントが多く寄せられていたことが大きな問題となった。

太田は「SNSがそんなにつらかったら携帯なんて捨てちゃえばいいじゃんって思うんだけど、我々の世代と若い人たちっておそらく違う」と理解を示した上で、「木村さんの状況って、おそらく学校で言えば集団いじめの真っただ中にいた事です」。

学校ならば、行かなければいいと大人が言うことができるが、木村さんの場合「社会人なわけだから、番組に出ててここからどうやって抜け出せばいいんだろうっていうのがすごく分かりにくかった」と分析。

放送打ち切りとなった「テラスハウス」について「僕も大好き」と明かし「年頃の若い男と女の子が恋愛がらみで共同生活したら、それは精神的なバランスを崩しやすい状況にまずはあると思う。そこが自分たちの全部の世界だって思い込みやすい」と問題点を指摘した。

その世界が全てと思ってしまうのは「錯覚」であるとし、「この錯覚っていうのがないと人間は生きていけないというのも事実」と持論を展開した。恋愛や信仰を例に取り、「人はその錯覚がないと生きていけないのも事実でして、その錯覚は人を殺したりあるいは生かしたりもする」。

さらに「リアリティーと誹謗中傷が全然違うって分けるんじゃなくて、重要なものっておんなじ場所にある。人を生かすものも殺すものも実は同じもの。それが分かっていないと、そこから離脱するっていうことは、特に若い子は難しい」と木村さんが追い込まれていった状況を推察した。「コロナで家にいなさいっていうと、あの番組を観て、SNSをみて、その中だけでこれが全部だって思っちゃう。錯覚っていうのが難しいっていうのが理解して欲しい」と訴えた。

自身も高校時代に思い悩む経験があったといい、それを救ってくれたのは「文学だったり何かだったりする」と明かした。

「自分とは関係ないんだけど似たようなことでやっぱり悩んでいるんですよ。人間って孤独だったり嫌われているんじゃないか、この世界とうまくできないんじゃないかっていうそんなやつらばっかりだから、文学の中にはそこに仲間がいっぱいいて、そこで救われる。それをアニメでも他の何かでもいいけど、今いる自分の状況と全然違うところに実はそれが本当の広い世界がその自分の世界の外側に無限の世界が広がっているっていうのは分かると、何とかそこから抜け出せる」と話した。

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2020-05-31 03:19:08Z
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Viral video: Toddler gets dragged, hangs mid-air after leash gets stuck between elevator - The Indian Express

Posted: 30 May 2020 10:47 PM PDT

By: Trends Desk | New Delhi | Published: May 31, 2020 10:30:46 am
Toddler, China, Elevator, Toddler in elevator, Viral videos, Toddler videos, Trending news, Indian Express news The toddler was yanked from the lift's floor towards the ceiling and got stuck mid-air by the arm.

A toddler in China was rescued unhurt after a safety leash attached to her wrist got stuck between an elevator door. The CCTV footage of the terrifying incident is now viral on the internet.

The footage showed the toddler standing in the elevator alone without realising that her wrist leash is outside. As the elevator started descending, the toddler was yanked from the lift's floor towards the ceiling and got stuck mid-air by the arm. The two-year-old was lowered down to the floor after dangerously hanging mid-air for over a minute.

According to reports, it was the elevator's emergency system which halted and prevented it from descending further. Daily Mail quoted a local news outlet and said the incident took place on May 28 in the city of Daye in China' Hubei Province.

Watch the video here:

Many who came across the video expressed concern over the toddler's safety, while others expressed their views on putting children on a leash. Take a look at some of the reactions here:

According to the report, it was the building's maintenance team who freed the toddler. She did not sustain any injuries.

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Demonstrators rally at Birmingham's Kelly Ingram Park to protest death of George Floyd; tense protests ripple throughout the country - Trussvilletribune

Posted: 30 May 2020 10:08 PM PDT

From The Tribune staff reports and TIM SULLIVAN and STEPHEN GROVES, Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS  — Tense protests over the death of George Floyd and other police killings of black men grew Saturday from New York to Tulsa to Los Angeles, with police cars set ablaze and reports of injuries mounting on all sides as the country lurched toward another night of unrest after months of coronavirus lockdowns.

The protests, which began in Minneapolis following Floyd's death Monday after a police officer pressed a knee on his neck for more than eight minutes, have left parts of the city a grid of broken windows, burned-out buildings and ransacked stores. The unrest has since become a national phenomenon as protesters decry years of deaths at police hands.

The large crowds involved, with many people not wearing masks or social distancing, raised concerns among health experts about the potential for helping spread the coronavirus pandemic at a time when overall deaths are on the decline nationwide and much of the country is in the process of reopening society and the economy.

After a tumultuous Friday night, racially diverse crowds took to the streets again for mostly peaceful demonstrations in dozens of cities from coast to coast. The previous day's protests also started calmly, but many descended into violence later in the day.

— In Birmingham, Demonstrators flocked to Kelly Ingram Park, which sits across the street from the Birmingham Civil Rights Museum and the 16th Street Baptist Church, to protest the death of Floyd. The group, Alabama Rally Against Injustice, said it organized the event in solidarity with protesters in Minneapolis. Several demonstrators moved to Hoover City Hall later in the day on Saturday with reports of multiple people arrested, according to WBHM 90.3,

— In Washington, growing crowds outside the White House chanted, taunted Secret Service agents and at times pushed against security barriers. President Donald Trump, who spent much of Saturday in Florida for the SpaceX rocket launch, landed on the residence's lawn in the presidential helicopter at dusk and went inside without speaking to journalists.

— In Philadelphia, at least 13 officers were injured when peaceful protests turned violent and at least four police vehicles were set on fire. Other fires were set throughout downtown.

— In the Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma, the site of a 1921 massacre of black people that left as many as 300 dead and the city's thriving black district in ruins, protesters blocked intersections and chanted the name of Terence Crutcher, a black man killed by a police officer in 2016.

— In Tallahassee, Florida, a pickup truck drove through a crowd of protesters, sending some running and screaming as the vehicle stopped and started and at one point had a person on its hood, police said, but no serious injuries were reported. Police handcuffed the driver but did not release his name or say whether he would face charges.

— In Los Angeles, protesters chanted "Black Lives Matter," some within inches of the face shields of officers. Police used batons to move the crowd back and fired rubber bullets. One man used a skateboard to try to break a police SUV's windshield. A spray-painted police car burned in the street.

— And in New York City, video posted to social media showed officers using batons and shoving protesters down as they made arrests and cleared streets. Another video showed two NYPD cruisers driving into protesters who were pushing a barricade against a police car and pelting it with objects, knocking several to the ground.

"Our country has a sickness. We have to be out here," said Brianna Petrisko, among those at lower Manhattan's Foley Square, where most were wearing masks amid the coronavirus pandemic. "This is the only way we're going to be heard."

Back in Minneapolis, the city where the protests began, 29-year-old Sam Allkija said the damage seen in recent days reflects longstanding frustration and rage in the black community.

"I don't condone them," he said. "But you have to look deeper into why these riots are happening."

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz fully mobilized the state's National Guard and promised a massive show of force.

"The situation in Minneapolis is no longer in any way about the murder of George Floyd," Walz said. "It is about attacking civil society, instilling fear and disrupting our great cities."

Soon after the city's 8 p.m. curfew went into force, lines of police cars and officers in riot gear moved in to confront protesters, firing tear gas to push away throngs of people milling around the city's 5th police precinct station. The tougher tactics came after city and state leaders were criticized for not forcefully enough confronting days of violent and damaging protests that included protesters burning down a police station shortly after officers abandoned it.

Trump tweeted Saturday night that the Guard "should have been used 2 days ago & there would not have been damage & Police Headquarters would not have been taken over & ruined. Great job by the National Guard. No games!"

Overnight curfews were imposed in more than a dozen major cities nationwide, ranging from 6 p.m. in parts of South Carolina to 10 p.m. around Ohio. People were also told to be off the streets of Atlanta, Denver, Los Angeles, Seattle and Minneapolis — where thousands had ignored the same order Friday night.

More than 1,400 people have been arrested in 16 cities since Thursday, with more than 500 of those happening in Los Angeles on Friday.

The unrest comes at a time when most Americans have spent months inside over concerns surrounding the coronavirus, which the president has called an "invisible enemy." The events of the last 72 hours, seen live on national television, have shown the opposite: a sudden pivot to crowds, screaming protesters and burning buildings, a stark contrast to the empty streets of recent months.

"Quite frankly I'm ready to just lock people up," Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields said at a news conference. Demonstrations there turned violent Friday, and police were arresting protesters Saturday on blocked-off downtown streets. "Yes, you caught us off balance once. It's not going to happen twice."

This week's unrest recalled the riots in Los Angeles nearly 30 years ago after the acquittal of the white police officers who beat Rodney King, a black motorist who had led them on a high-speed chase. The protests of Floyd's killing have gripped many more cities, but the losses in Minneapolis have yet to approach the staggering totals Los Angeles saw during five days of rioting in 1992, when more than 60 people died, 2,000-plus were injured and thousands arrested, with property damage topping $1 billion.

Many protesters spoke of frustration that Floyd's death was one more in a litany. It came in the wake of the killing in Georgia of Ahmaud Arbery, a black man who was shot dead after being pursued by two white men while running in their neighborhood, and in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic that has thrown millions out of work, killed more than 100,000 people in the U.S. and disproportionately affected black people.

The officer who held his knee to Floyd's neck as he begged for air was arrested Friday and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. But many protesters are demanding the arrests of the three other officers involved.

Trump stoked the anger on Twitter, ridiculing people who protested outside the White House and warning that if they had breached its fence, they would "have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen."

Leaders in many affected cities have voiced outrage over Floyd's killing and expressed sympathy for protesters' concerns. But as the unrest intensified, they spoke of a desperate need to protect their cities and said they would call in reinforcements, despite concerns that could lead to more heavy-handed tactics.

Minnesota has steadily increased to 1,700 the number of National Guardsmen it says it needs to contain the unrest, and the governor is considering a potential offer of military police put on alert by the Pentagon.

Governors in Georgia, Kentucky, Ohio and Texas also activated the National Guard after protests there turned violent overnight, while nighttime curfews were put in place in Portland, Oregon, Cincinnati and elsewhere.

Police in St. Louis were investigating the death of a protester who climbed between two trailers of a Fed Ex truck and was killed when it drove away. And a person was killed in the area of protests in downtown Detroit just before midnight after someone fired shots into an SUV, officers said. Police had initially said someone fired into the crowd from an SUV.

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‘They are making it worse’: chaos, violence divide Minneapolis protesters - South China Morning Post

Posted: 30 May 2020 09:08 PM PDT

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  1. 'They are making it worse': chaos, violence divide Minneapolis protesters  South China Morning Post
  2. Curfews and clashes as US race protests spread - The Jakarta Post  Jakarta Post
  3. The death of George Floyd: What video shows about his final minutes  Washington Post
  4. Ex-Minneapolis officer charged in George Floyd's death held in Ramsey County Jail  TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press
  5. Minneapolis's Progressive Image Burns in Its Streets  Bloomberg
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Machine Gun Kelly, Other Celebs Protest George Floyd's Death - TMZ

Posted: 30 May 2020 09:08 PM PDT

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Protests, some violent, spread in wake of George Floyd death - wnky.com

Posted: 30 May 2020 09:08 PM PDT

ATLANTA (AP) — Days after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, people took to the streets in protest in dozens of cities around the country. They marched, chanted, stopped traffic and in some cases turned violent toward police to protest the death of the handcuffed black man after a white officer pressed a knee into his neck even after he stopped moving. Georgia's governor mobilized the National Guard to protect Atlanta, where demonstrators set a police car and American flag on fire, injured at least three officers, spray-painted the iconic logo sign at CNN headquarters, and broke into a restaurant. The crowd pelted officers who came over with bottles.

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「麒麟がくる」風間俊介初登場!若かりし家康に「ギャップが出れば」 - シネマトゥデイ

Posted: 30 May 2020 08:18 PM PDT

「麒麟がくる」風間俊介初登場!若かりし家康に「ギャップが出れば」 - シネマトゥデイ

「麒麟がくる」で松平元康(後の徳川家康)を演じる風間駿介
「麒麟がくる」で松平元康(後の徳川家康)を演じる風間駿介 - (C)NHK

 31日放送の大河ドラマ「麒麟がくる」(NHK総合・毎週日曜20時~ほか)第二十回「家康への文」で、松平元康(後の徳川家康)として初登場する風間俊介。本作が「西郷どん」以来2年ぶり、2度目の大河出演となる風間が「まだ何者でもない」若かりし家康を演じる心境を明かした。

【写真】風間俊介、「西郷どん」で大河ドラマ初出演!会見の様子

 織田信長(染谷将太)の盟友となり後に「本能寺の変」で信長を討つ智将・明智光秀(長谷川博己)の人生を描く本作。第二十回「家康への文」は、駿河の今川義元(片岡愛之助)が再び尾張への侵攻を開始。かつて駿河の今川と尾張の織田の間で人質となり成人した松平元康(風間)が、その先鋒を任されることになる。

[PR]

 風間演じる家康は、桶狭間の戦いで今川方として参戦するも敗退。のちに今川から独立し、三河の戦国大名として信長と同盟を結ぶという設定。風間は家康の若かりし時代を「今演じている元康は、まだ何者でもないですし、立場が弱い武将ですから、晩年の家康からは逆算して考えないようにしています。晩年の家康に至るまでは何十年もかかりますし、小さい頃からそのイメージのまま、ということはありませんので、みなさんの持っている家康のイメージから、ギャップが出ればいいなと思っています」と紹介する。

 第四回では光秀が幼少期の竹千代(岩田琉聖)と出会い、母と引き裂かれ孤独な竹千代に干し柿を与える場面があったが、風間は「今後シーンとしてあるかどうか分かりませんが、光秀と一緒に干し柿を食べるシーンをやりたいですね(笑)」とも。

 一方、制作統括の落合将は家康を"運命の人"と称し、光秀、信長、豊臣秀吉(佐々木蔵之介)が揃うシーンに期待を込める。「家康は三河という小国に生まれ、幼いころから幸薄い武将で、親元を離れ人質になり、捨て石のように今川に使役されます。いわば、自分の意思ではなく、さだめに従って生きていった末、200年続く新たな幕藩体制をつくりあげてしまったまさしく『運命の人』です。風間さん扮する家康は、その登場時から自分の意思が通用しない世界で自分にできることは何か、懸命に探そうとします。そのどうしようもなさや、悲しさをたたえた人物像を、確かな演技力で、巧みに演じてくれています。長谷川さんの光秀、染谷さんの信長、佐々木さんの秀吉、そして風間さんの家康が、どう天下を動かしていくのか、『麒麟』を呼んでいくのか……まだ4人が揃うシーンの撮影はこれからですが、今から楽しみでなりません」

[PR]

 風間のコメント全文は下記の通り。(編集部・石井百合子)

松平元康(徳川家康)役・風間俊介

 「麒麟がくる」の制作が決まったとき、一視聴者としてとても楽しみにしていたのですが、徳川家康役で出演が決まったと聞いて、大変驚きました。大河ドラマ出演は、「西郷どん」以来2作目ですが、大河ドラマへの憧れが強すぎるせいか、未だにドキドキして、緊張し続けています。家康は、ひとつの固定したイメージだけで描かれるわけではなく、作品の視点によって描かれ方が全く異なりますので、とても多面的で面白い人物だと思います。現代から見た家康は、徳川幕府を開いた人物であり、たぬきであり、すごい人というイメージですけど、これはあくまで晩年の家康のイメージです。今演じている元康は、まだ何者でもないですし、立場が弱い武将ですから、晩年の家康からは逆算して考えないようにしています。晩年の家康に至るまでは何十年もかかりますし、小さい頃からそのイメージのまま、ということはありませんので、みなさんの持っている家康のイメージから、ギャップが出ればいいなと思っています。「麒麟がくる」のストーリーの中では、徳川家康は竹千代として既に登場しています。竹千代が僕に変わるということは、他のキャラクターもそれだけ時間を積み重ねてきていますので、「こんなに時間が経ったんだ」と、時の流れを感じていただけるのではないかと思います。また、松平元康が登場するということは、歴史が大きく動く瞬間でもあります。それぞれの武将の勢力図も変わっていきますので、ここからさらに面白くなると思います。家康だけではなく、この時代の大きくうごめく流れが変わる瞬間に、みなさん是非一緒に立ち会っていただきたいと思います。今後シーンとしてあるかどうか分かりませんが、光秀と一緒に干し柿を食べるシーンをやりたいですね(笑)。

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2020-05-31 02:59:29Z
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Protests, some violent, spread in wake of Minneapolis police killing - Press Herald

Posted: 30 May 2020 08:08 PM PDT

ATLANTA — Demonstrators marched, stopped traffic and in some cases lashed out violently at police as protests erupted Friday in dozens of U.S. cities following the killing of George Floyd after a white officer pressed a knee into his neck while taking him into custody in Minnesota. In Phoenix, Denver, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and beyond, thousands of protesters carried signs that said: "He said I can't breathe. Justice for George." They chanted ""No justice, no peace" and "Say his name. George Floyd."

After hours of peaceful protest in downtown Atlanta, some demonstrators suddenly turned violent, smashing police cars, setting one on fire, spray-painting the iconic logo sign at CNN headquarters, and breaking into a restaurant. The crowd pelted officers with bottles, chanting "Quit your jobs."

At least three officers were hurt and there were multiple arrests, Atlanta police spokesman Carlos Campos said. Campos said protesters shot BB guns at officers and threw bricks, bottles and knives at them. People watched the scene from rooftops, some laughing as skirmishes broke out.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms passionately addressed the protesters at a news conference: "This is not a protest. This is not in the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr."

"You are disgracing our city," she told protesters. "You are disgracing the life of George Floyd and every other person who has been killed in this country. We are better than this. We are better than this as a city. We are better than this as a country. Go home, go home."

Bottoms was flanked by rappers T.I. and Killer Mike, as well as King's daughter, Bernice King.

Killer Mike cried as he spoke.

"We have to be better than this moment. We have to be better than burning down our own homes. Because if we lose Atlanta what have we got?" he said.

After Mayor Bottoms appealed for calm, the violence continued. More cars were set on fire, a Starbucks was smashed up, the windows of the College Football Hall of Fame were broken, and the iconic Omni Hotel was vandalized.

Protesters gathered outside the White House, with President Donald Trump inside, and some tried to push through barriers set up by the U.S. Secret Service along Pennsylvania Avenue.

In Minneapolis, a curfew did little to stop protesters and others from gathering in several areas of the city, including the battered Lake Street neighborhood where a police precinct was burned the night before. There were scattered small fires and some stores in a strip mall were being broken into near the city's 5th Precinct.

An initially peaceful demonstration in New York City spiraled into chaos as night fell, as protesters skirmished with officers, destroyed police vehicles and set fires.

In Brooklyn, activists who had marched from Manhattan chanted insults at officers lined up outside the Barclays Center and pelted them with water bottles. Police sprayed an eye-irritating chemical into the largely diverse crowd multiple times, then cleared the plaza.

Video posted to social media showed officers using batons and shoving protesters down as they took people into custody and cleared streets.

Demonstrators rocked a police van, set it ablaze, then scrawled graffiti across its charred hulk and set it on fire a second time as officers retreated from the area. Blocks away, protesters used a club to batter another police vehicle.

Numerous people were arrested and police brought in buses to carry off those they arrested.

"We have a long night ahead of us in Brooklyn," Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted. "Our sole focus is deescalating this situation and getting people home safe. There will be a full review of what happened tonight. We don't ever want to see another night like this."

The police department said numerous officers were injured, including one who had a tooth knocked out.

The names of black people killed by police, including Floyd and Eric Garner, who died on Staten Island in 2014, were on signs carried by those in the crowd, and in their chants.

"It's my duty to be out here," said Brianna Petrisko, among those at Foley Square in lower Manhattan, where most were wearing masks amid the coronavirus pandemic. "Our country has a sickness. We have to be out here. This is the only way we're going to be heard."

In Houston, where George Floyd grew up, several thousand people rallied in front of City Hall. Among them was 19-year-old Jimmy Ohaz, who came from the nearby city of Richmond, Texas.

"My question is how many more, how many more? I just want to live in a future where we all live in harmony and we're not oppressed."

Tensions rose in several West Coast cities as night fell.

About 1,000 protesters gathered in Oakland at a demonstration billed on social media as a rally to "F(asterisk)(asterisk)(asterisk) the police," and some windows were smashed.

Demonstrators shut down a freeway in Los Angeles amid isolated scuffles with police that ended in a few protesters detained and one officer receiving medical treatment, police said. An LAPD vehicle had its windows smashed, and CNN reported that someone wrote "killer" on a patrol car.

Protesters repeatedly clashed with police in the Silicon Valley city of San Jose, said Mayor Sam Liccardo, and police responded with flash-bang grenades and rubber bullets. One officer was being treated at a hospital for an injury that was not life-threatening, he and police officials said.

Liccardo said his own officers shared the community's outrage over Floyd's in-custody death.

"It was a horrible injustice. I'd venture to guess that every police officer out there feels much of the same anger about what happened in Minneapolis," he told The Associated Press.

Thirty miles to the west, Santa Cruz police chief Andrew G. Mills said in a statement that the actions by Minneapolis officers in Floyd's death "are the antithesis of what we view as good policing."

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Tear gas and burning cars in US cities as unrest over George Floyd death continues - Redlands Daily Facts

Posted: 30 May 2020 08:08 PM PDT

By TIM SULLIVAN and AARON MORRISON

MINNEAPOLIS — Tense protests over the death of George Floyd and other police killings of black men grew Saturday from New York to Tulsa to Los Angeles, with police cars set ablaze and reports of injuries mounting on all sides as the country lurched toward another night of unrest after months of coronavirus lockdowns.

The protests, which began in Minneapolis following Monday's death of George Floyd after a police officer pressed his knee on Floyd's neck for more than eight minutes, have left parts of the city a grid of broken windows, burned-out buildings and ransacked stores. They have since become a national phenomenon as protesters decry years of deaths at police hands.

  • Protesters clash with New York police officers during a demonstration, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Protests were held throughout the city over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

  • Chicago Police prepare and organize to address protesters over the death of George Floyd in Chicago, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

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  • A peson holds sign during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Chicago, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

  • A Los Angeles police officer watches a police car burn during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • A worker cleans up broken glasses at a Walgreens store damaged from protests over the Memorial Day death of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man in police custody in Minneapolis, in Oakland, Calif., Saturday, May 30, 2020. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

  • A demonstrator is detained by Atlanta Police during a protest, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

  • A woman holds a burned Chicago flag as she marches during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Chicago, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

  • A person wears a mask reading "I Can't Breath" during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Chicago, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

  • Police shoot rubber bullets at protesters throwing rocks and water bottles during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Protesters flip a car before burning it Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Thousands of people converged on downtown Salt Lake City on Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and some demonstrators set fire to a police car and threw eggs and wrote graffiti on a police station. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • A policeman kicks back a tear gas canister during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • A car barrels through a crowd of demonstrators as they throw objects at him during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Floyd died after being restrained in police custody on Memorial Day in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • A protester sits on a police car as she yells at them during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Protesters kneel on I-95 highway after blocking traffic during a demonstration, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • A protester walks past a flipped vehcle Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Thousands of people converged on downtown Salt Lake City on Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and some demonstrators set fire to a police car and threw eggs and wrote graffiti on a police station. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • A pair of protesters attempt to stop others from throwing rocks and water bottles at police during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • EDS NOTE: OBSCENITY – Demonstrators yell at Los Angeles Police officers during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • Los Angeles police officer strike demonstrators as they try to push them back during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • A police car burns during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Atlanta Police detain demonstrators protesting, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • A fire burns in a dumpster as demonstrators protest the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, near the White House in Washington. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

  • Demonstrators protest, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

  • Police react after a demonstrator threw back a tear gas canister during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • A demonstrator is detained by Atlanta Police during a protest, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

  • Protesters gather at Times Square during a solidarity rally for George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in New York. Protests were held throughout the city over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

  • The fire-scared- entrance to the Minneapolis Police 3rd precinct building is shown in the wake of protests in the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Minneapolis, Minn. Floyd was killed in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25.  (David Joles/Star Tribune via AP)

  • A Los Angeles police officer walks by a burning police car as another is seen destroyed during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Floyd died after being restrained in police custody on Memorial Day in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • Policeman push a photographer as protesters demonstrate Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • A protester looks on as a flipped over police vehicle burns Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. People converged on downtown Salt Lake City, Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd who died in Minneapolis police custody on May 25. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • A protester grabs his back after Denver Police fire a pepper ball at the man during a protest outside the State Capitol over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Denver. Floyd died after being restrained in police custody on May 25 in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Los Angeles police officers watch a police car burn during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • People march around a burned Chicago flag on the street during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Chicago, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

  • A woman runs out of a store with a bag of goods on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia, May 30, 2020, during a protest against the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a Minneapolis police officer pinned him to the ground with a knee on his neck on May 25. (Jessica Griffin/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

  • Police officers stand in formation against protesters throwing rocks and waterbottles during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Protesters pour milk in the eyes of a woman affected by teargas during a rally at the Miami Police Department on Saturday, May 30, 2020, to protest the death of George Floyd, a black man who was killed in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Los Angeles police officer strike demonstrators as they try to push them back during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • A protester looks on as a flipped over police vehicle burns Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Thousands of people converged on downtown Salt Lake City on Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and some demonstrators set fire to a police car and threw eggs and wrote graffiti on a police station. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • A policeman walks in front of a burning vehicle as protesters demonstrate Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Thousands of people converged on downtown Salt Lake City on Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and some demonstrators set fire to a police car and threw eggs and wrote graffiti on a police station. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • Protesters kneel on an off ramp of I-95 highway after blocking traffic during a demonstration, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Atlanta Police monitor demonstrators protesting, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • Police advance on protesters throwing rocks and water bottles during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami.Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Protesters march during a solidarity rally for George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in New York. Demonstrators took to the streets of New York City to protest the death of Floyd, a black man who died after he was taken into police custody in Minneapolis on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

  • A protester on a bicycle rides past a burning police car during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • A demonstrator pours milk in the eyes of a woman affected by teargas during a rally at the Miami Police Department on Saturday, May 30, 2020, to protest the death of George Floyd, a black man who was killed in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • Demonstrators march near Ebenezer Baptist Church, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • Protesters flip a car before burning it Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Thousands of people converged on downtown Salt Lake City on Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and some demonstrators set fire to a police car and threw eggs and wrote graffiti on a police station. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • Police officers push back demonstrators Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles during a protest over the death of George Floyd. Floyd died in Minneapolis police custody on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

  • A demonstrator is detained by Atlanta Police during a protest, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

  • A policeman prepares to shoot teargas at protesters throwing rocks and water bottles during a demonstration next to the city of Miami Police Department, Saturday, May 30, 2020, downtown in Miami. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

  • A Pittsburgh Police vehicle burns a during a march in Pittsburgh, Saturday, May 30, 2020, to protest the death of George Floyd, who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

  • A Denver Police officer is taunted by a man during a protest outside the State Capitol over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Denver. Protests were held in U.S. cities over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • A police officer wears an American flag face mask as protesters march in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Saturday, May 30, 2020, over the death of George Floyd, who died in police custody on Memorial Day in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/ Christian Monterrosa)

  • Annah Dominis wears a face mask with Black Lives Matter written on it, in San Francisco, Saturday, May 30, 2020,.at a protest over the Memorial Day death of George Floyd. Floyd was a black man who was killed in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25.. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

  • Demonstrators protest, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

  • People confront police officers during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Los Angeles, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

  • A police vehicle drives past a burning car Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Thousands of people converged on downtown Salt Lake City on Saturday to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and some demonstrators set fire to a police car and threw eggs and wrote graffiti on a police station. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

  • New York police officers watch protesters during a demonstration, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Protests were held throughout the city over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis. Floyd died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

  • A person lights clothing on fire in front of stores on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia, May 30, 2020, during a protest against the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a Minneapolis police officer pinned him to the ground with a knee on his neck on May 25. (Jessica Griffin/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

  • Police officers arrest a man during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Los Angeles, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25.(AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

  • Demonstrators stand on U.S. Secret Service vehicles, one with a broken windshield, near the White House on Saturday, May 30, 2020, as they protest the death of George Floyd. Floyd died after being restrained by Minnesota Police. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

  • A demonstrator is detained by Atlanta Police during a protest, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

  • A man runs across Coilfax Avenue at Lincoln to evade a cloud of tear gas after Denver Police fired canisters during a protest outside the State Capitol over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Denver. Floyd, a handcuffed black man, died after being restrained in police custody on May 25 in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

  • Atlanta Police detain demonstrators protesting, Saturday, May 30, 2020 in Atlanta. The protest started peacefully earlier in the day before demonstrators clashed with police. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

  • Demonstrators block the street as Los Angeles Fire Department paramedic tries to get through during a protest over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Los Angeles. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

The large crowds involved, with many people not wearing masks or social distancing, raised concerns among health experts about the potential for helping spread the coronavirus pandemic at a time when overall deaths are on the decline nationwide and much of the country is in the process of reopening society and the economy.

After a tumultuous Friday night, racially diverse crowds took to the streets again for mostly peaceful demonstrations in dozens of cities from coast to coast. The previous day's protests also started calmly, but many descended into violence later in the day.

— In the Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma, the site of a 1921 massacre of black people that left as many as 300 dead and the city's thriving black district in ruins, protesters blocked intersections and chanted the name of Terence Crutcher, a black man killed by a police officer in 2016.

— In Tallahassee, Florida, a pickup truck drove through a crowd of protesters, sending some running and screaming as the vehicle stopped and started and at one point had a person on its hood, police said, but no serious injuries were reported. Witnesses said a group followed the vehicle and forced it to stop. Police handcuffed the driver but did not release his name or say whether he would face any charges.

— In Columbia, South Carolina, a television reporter for WIS-TV was injured by rocks thrown outside the main police station. Several hundred people participated in the demonstration, tearing down the American and state flags in front of the building. They also swarmed a police car, breaking its windows, The State reported.

— In Los Angeles protesters chanted "Black Lives Matter," some within inches of the face shields of officers. Police used batons to move the crowd back and fired rubber bullets at demonstrators. One man used a skateboard to try to break the windshield of a police SUV. A spray-painted police car burned in the street.

— In New York City, video posted to social media showed officers using batons and shoving protesters down as they took people into custody and cleared streets. One video showed on officer slam a woman to the ground as he walked past her in the street.

"Our country has a sickness. We have to be out here," said Brianna Petrisko, among those at lower Manhattan's Foley Square, where most were wearing masks amid the coronavirus pandemic. "This is the only way we're going to be heard."

Back in Minneapolis, the city where the protests began, 29-year-old Sam Allkija said the damage seen in recent days reflects longstanding frustration and rage in the black community.

"I don't condone them," he said. "But you have to look deeper into why these riots are happening."

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz fully mobilized the state's National Guard and promised a massive show of force.

"The situation in Minneapolis is no longer in any way about the murder of George Floyd," Walz said. "It is about attacking civil society, instilling fear and disrupting our great cities."

At least a dozen major cities nationwide imposed overnight curfews ranging from 6 p.m. in parts of South Carolina to 10 p.m. around Ohio. People were also told to be off the streets of Atlanta, Denver, Los Angeles and Minneapolis – where thousands ignored the same order the previous night.

The unrest comes at a time when most Americans have spent months inside over concerns surrounding the coronavirus, which the president has called an "invisible enemy." The events of the last 72 hours, seen live on national television, have shown the opposite: a sudden pivot to crowds, screaming protesters and burning buildings, a stark contrast to the empty streets of recent months.

Hundreds of people were arrested Friday, and police used batons, rubber bullets and pepper spray to push back crowds in some cities. Many departments reported injured officers, while social media was awash in images of police using forceful tactics, throwing protesters to the ground, using bicycles as shields and trampling one protester while on horseback.

This week's unrest recalled the riots in Los Angeles nearly 30 years ago after the acquittal of the white police officers who beat Rodney King, a black motorist who had led them on a high-speed chase. The protests of Floyd's killing have gripped many more cities, but the losses in Minneapolis have yet to approach the staggering totals Los Angeles saw during five days of rioting in 1992, when more than 60 people died, 2,000-plus were injured and thousands arrested, with property damage topping $1 billion.

Many protesters spoke of frustration that Floyd's death was one more in a litany. It came in the wake of the killing in Georgia of Ahmaud Arbery, a black man who was shot dead after being pursued by two white men while running in their neighborhood, and in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic that has thrown millions out of work, killed more than 100,000 people in the U.S. and disproportionately affected black people.

The officer who held his knee to Floyd's neck as he begged for air was arrested Friday and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter — but that appeared to provide little balm. Many protesters are demanding the arrests of the three other officers involved.

President Donald Trump stoked the anger, firing off a series of tweets criticizing Minnesota's response, ridiculing people who protested outside the White House and warning that if protesters had breached its fence they would "have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen."

Leaders in many affected cities have voiced outrage over Floyd's killing and expressed sympathy for protesters' concerns. But as unrest intensified, they spoke of a desperate need to protect their cities and said they would call in reinforcements, despite concerns that could lead to more heavy-handed tactics.

Minnesota has steadily increased to 1,700 the number of National Guardsmen it says it needs to contain the unrest, and the governor is considering a potential offer of military police put on alert by the Pentagon.

Governors in Georgia, Kentucky, Ohio and Texas also activated the National Guard after protests there turned violent overnight, while nighttime curfews were put in place in Portland, Oregon, Cincinnati and elsewhere.

Police in St. Louis were investigating the death of a protester who climbed between two trailers of a Fed Ex truck and was killed when it drove away. And a person was killed in the area of protests in downtown Detroit just before midnight after someone fired shots into an SUV, officers said. Police had initially said someone fired into the crowd from an SUV.

In Atlanta, where crews worked Saturday to clean up glass and debris from rioting the night before, a large electronic billboard flashed the message: "If you love Atlanta PLEASE GO HOME," echoing pleas from the mayor.

Numerous AP journalists contributed from across the U.S.

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ダレノガレ明美、薬物検査の結果発表 - モデルプレス

Posted: 30 May 2020 07:48 PM PDT

ダレノガレ明美、薬物検査の結果発表 - モデルプレス

モデルのダレノガレ明美が31日、TBS系「サンデー・ジャポン」(毎週日曜9時54分~)に出演。薬物疑惑報道を受け、行った毛髪検査の結果を生発表した。
ダレノガレ明美(C)モデルプレス
ダレノガレ明美(C)モデルプレス

ダレノガレ明美、薬物検査の結果発表

スタジオに薬物関係証明書が届き、爆笑問題田中裕二が結果を見せると、コカイン、オピオイド、フェンシクリジン、アンフェタミン、マリファナと書かれた項目にはすべて「陰性」の文字が。ダレノガレは「当たり前なんです」と結果を冷静に受け止めていた。

ダレノガレ明美、薬物疑惑を否定

ダレノガレ明美(C)モデルプレス
ダレノガレ明美(C)モデルプレス
ダレノガレ明美(C)モデルプレス
ダレノガレ明美(C)モデルプレス
一部報道にて、薬物使用の事実があると報じられ、本人が否定。所属事務所は「このような虚偽の記事が掲載された経緯の説明と訂正謝罪記事の掲載を求める所存です」とコメントを提示し、ダレノガレは毛髪検査に行ったことを報告していた。毛髪検査に必要な髪の毛の量は長さなどで変わるそうだが、ロングヘアのダレノガレは1000本以上使用したという。

また、番組では、その後報道元から直接謝罪を受けたことも報告。「和解金を受け取ったのでは」というネット上の噂をぶつけられると、「和解金はまったくない、お菓子もない、なんかもらえるのかなと思ったら(笑)」と否定した。(modelpress編集部)

ダレノガレ明美、自ら薬物検査実施へ「しっかりやります」

情報:TBS

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2020-05-31 02:33:34Z
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George Floyd’s mother was not there, but he used her as a sacred invocation - National Geographic

Posted: 30 May 2020 07:08 PM PDT

This story was produced in partnership with The Undefeated, an ESPN website that explores the intersection of race, culture, and sports. This report also appears on TheUndefeated.com. ESPN and National Geographic are both owned by The Walt Disney Company.

The video frame of George Floyd on Facebook, handcuffed on his stomach as a Minneapolis police officer presses his knee into Floyd's neck, feels narrowed.

Floyd lies immobilized, groaning on the pavement as cars rush by, police radios beep and bystanders gather, yelling that Floyd's nose is bleeding, that he is subdued, cursing and entreating the officers. "Let him breathe, man!" one bystander yelled.

"Please, man!" Floyd begs as he is ground into the pavement. His pleas mix with the ambient noises around him. They are the disjointed sounds from the clash of belief systems and competing visions of sovereignty, of ownership, of authority over black bodies compressed into the narrow frame of Floyd's last moments.

"Momma!" Floyd, 46, calls out. "Momma! I'm through," the dying man says, and I recognize his words. A call to your mother is a prayer to be seen. Floyd's mother died two years ago, but he used her as a sacred invocation.

"He is a human being!" comes an anguished plea from someone in a desperate attempt to engage the officers' reason or compassion or oaths of office. But in that moment, those officers are beyond the reach of humanity. Not Floyd's, but their own.

I didn't want to click on the video. I didn't want to see another police snuff film. I didn't want to watch whatever it is that compels someone to put his knee into a man's neck, until he can no longer draw breath. But I heard this black man had called out to his momma as he lay dying, and I too am a black mother. One of the ones since time immemorial who have to answer the sacred call. Who have to answer the call for the divine sisterhood of black mothers. Even when they are not our own, we are asked to bear witness.

I was in the delivery room with my son, in pain with no medication, save the one that magnified my contractions. As my vision narrowed, I focused on a point above me and I heard the nurses talking about me as if I wasn't there. I stared at the ceiling and over and over I called out for my mother. There are moments when it feels like life hangs in the balance, and in those moments, we want to go back to the beginning, when we were known.

Dying soldiers called out for their mothers, according to Civil War battlefield reports. Last year, an article from The Atlantic cited a hospice nurse. "Almost everyone is calling for 'Mommy' or 'Mama' with the last breath."

We are the ballast. The anchors. A way for those who are close to the edge to find their way back, or their way home. This is true for black mothers, who are especially tested and learned in all the dread fates of black bodies. We are the hedge against the people who don't see us. We are an assertion of black life.

For black people who feel they are about to be taken from themselves, we are the assurance of memory, of justice, of 10-hour waits to cast our ballots at polling places. We will not be moved.

I have often imagined 14-year-old Emmett Till calling for his momma, Mamie Till-Mobley, as he was kidnapped, tortured and killed over the false witness of Carolyn Bryant Donham, whom America had invested with the savage idea of white womanhood. The black mother's answer was to throw open her son's casket and change the nation.

It is the duty of black mothers made sacred by all the ugly Karens (Beckys, Katies, et al.), who threaten to call the police on black people because they understand the country we live in. It has been made sacred by all the admonitions, and prayers — all the side deals we try to cut with our God when black boys cross streets, or play in parks, or get into cars, or grow into men who do anything at all while being black.

It is made sacred by our need to protect against all the people who think they hold dominion over black lives. Who overpolice or underfund, or over-report, or wag their fingers in our faces. The vacant-looking father and son with rifles in Georgia, the masked female portfolio manager waving her cellphone in New York, the reptilian officer who has learned how to kneel a man to death in Minnesota, may not see themselves. But we, the black mothers, see you.

As bystanders scream at Minneapolis officers, "He's dying. You're f—ing killing him," Floyd is no longer moving, he is perhaps already dead. In the ways black people have trained themselves to look at these things, in his final breaths, he has already won.

To call out to his mother is to be known to his maker. The one who gave him to her. I watched the Floyd video, for us, the living. It's my sacred charge. I am a black mother.

Lonnae O'Neal is a senior writer at The Undefeated. She's an author, a former columnist, has a rack of kids and she writes bird by bird.

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Protesters crowd Los Angeles streets, continuing unrest over George Floyd killing | Part 2 - KTLA 5

Posted: 30 May 2020 07:08 PM PDT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Protesters crowd Los Angeles streets, continuing unrest over George Floyd killing | Part 2  KTLA 5
  2. Retreat or Deploy? Police Try to Balance Protest Response  The New York Times
  3. Protests over George Floyd death escalate in Los Angeles  CNN
  4. 553 arrested by LAPD during Friday night protests in Los Angeles  OCRegister
  5. 'Insecure' Actor Kendrick Sampson Hit by Rubber Bullets in Los Angeles Protest  Variety
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Batwoman: 6 Actresses Who Could Replace Ruby Rose In The CW Series - Cinema Blend

Posted: 30 May 2020 06:48 PM PDT

Ashley Platz

The actress has spent most of her career in guest starring roles, appearing in The Bold Type as Kat's love interest, in Grey's Anatomy, Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and Netflix's GLOW, among several other TV shows. Ashley Platz is probably best known for her role as Nurse Katie in the 2018 horror film Big Legend. Platz identifies as bisexual/pansexual and she's an actress with a lot to offer if given the chance.

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Duggs Nation has taken Rocky Top by storm with viral video game sensation - WRCB-TV

Posted: 30 May 2020 06:47 PM PDT

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Dozens take part in ‘mobile protest’ through downtown Salisbury - WBTV

Posted: 30 May 2020 06:44 PM PDT

Many of the cars were decorated with signs saying "Black Lives Matter," No Justice, No Peace, or "Say Their Names," referring to the names of three people, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and Ahmaud Arbery. Taylor and Floyd were killed in incidents involving police, Arbery was killed in an incident in Georgia involving two civilians.

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Alphonso Davies shows off skill on goal in Bayern's shutout win over Fortuna - CBC.ca

Posted: 30 May 2020 06:42 PM PDT

Edmonton's Alphonso Davies and his Bayern Munich teammates continue to dominate the Bundesliga in empty stadiums.

Robert Lewandowski scored twice as Bayern Munich took a confident step closer to an eighth straight German title with a 5-0 demolition of Fortuna Dusseldorf on Saturday.

With five games remaining, Bayern moved into a 10-point lead over Borussia Dortmund, which plays at Paderborn on Sunday.

Davies made it 5-0 in the 52nd minute, winning the ball off Duesseldorf's Kevin Stöger at the edge of the penalty box and then driving through two more defenders before slipping a low shot through goalkeeper Florian Kastenmeier's legs.

WATCH | Davies scores again in Bayern's dominant win over Dusseldorf:

Alphonso Davies from Edmonton registers a goal as Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich dominate Fortuna Dusseldorf 5-0. 1:14

Davies also scored last weekend in Bayern's 5-2 win over Eintracht Frankfurt.

Davies was instrumental in the move that led to Bayern's first goal in the 15th minute Saturday. After Duesseldorf regained possession after a Bayern corner and started up the field, Davies won the ball back. Five passes later it was in the back of the Duesseldorf net courtesy of an own goal.

Blocked shot

It was Bayern's 16th goal in the opening 15 minutes of a match this season.

At the other end, the 19-year-old Davies used his left foot to block a shot by Turkish international Kenan Karaman in the 33rd minute.

The young Canadian took time to change boots in the 76th minute. "Probably from wearing the other ones down with his Road Runner speed," said the Bundesliga official website, referencing Bayern veteran Thomas Mueller's comment this week that Davies's speed was akin to the cartoon character.

Only Bayern's players and staff were there to cheer the kind of dominant win which would normally put Bayern fans in a party mood. Bayern has won 14 of its last 15 league games as it cruises toward the title, including a potential title-deciding 1-0 win over Dortmund on Tuesday.

Right-back Benjamin Pavard got Bayern going Saturday with a 15th-minute shot deflected in off Fortuna's Matthias "Zanka" Jorgensen, who was credited with the own-goal. Pavard got his name on the scoresheet 14 minutes later at a corner.

Lewandowski finished off well-worked team moves either side of halftime to add Bayern's third and fourth goals. That took the Poland striker to four goals since the Bundesliga restarted amid the coronavirus pandemic earlier this month.

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「麒麟がくる」風間俊介初登場!若かりし家康に「ギャップが出れば」 - シネマトゥデイ

Posted: 30 May 2020 06:17 PM PDT

「麒麟がくる」風間俊介初登場!若かりし家康に「ギャップが出れば」 - シネマトゥデイ

「麒麟がくる」で松平元康(後の徳川家康)を演じる風間駿介
「麒麟がくる」で松平元康(後の徳川家康)を演じる風間駿介 - (C)NHK

 31日放送の大河ドラマ「麒麟がくる」(NHK総合・毎週日曜20時~ほか)第二十回「家康への文」で、松平元康(後の徳川家康)として初登場する風間俊介。本作が「西郷どん」以来2年ぶり、2度目の大河出演となる風間が「まだ何者でもない」若かりし家康を演じる心境を明かした。

【写真】風間俊介、「西郷どん」で大河ドラマ初出演!会見の様子

 織田信長(染谷将太)の盟友となり後に「本能寺の変」で信長を討つ智将・明智光秀(長谷川博己)の人生を描く本作。第二十回「家康への文」は、駿河の今川義元(片岡愛之助)が再び尾張への侵攻を開始。かつて駿河の今川と尾張の織田の間で人質となり成人した松平元康(風間)が、その先鋒を任されることになる。

[PR]

 風間演じる家康は、桶狭間の戦いで今川方として参戦するも敗退。のちに今川から独立し、三河の戦国大名として信長と同盟を結ぶという設定。風間は家康の若かりし時代を「今演じている元康は、まだ何者でもないですし、立場が弱い武将ですから、晩年の家康からは逆算して考えないようにしています。晩年の家康に至るまでは何十年もかかりますし、小さい頃からそのイメージのまま、ということはありませんので、みなさんの持っている家康のイメージから、ギャップが出ればいいなと思っています」と紹介する。

 第四回では光秀が幼少期の竹千代(岩田琉聖)と出会い、母と引き裂かれ孤独な竹千代に干し柿を与える場面があったが、風間は「今後シーンとしてあるかどうか分かりませんが、光秀と一緒に干し柿を食べるシーンをやりたいですね(笑)」とも。

 一方、制作統括の落合将は家康を"運命の人"と称し、光秀、信長、豊臣秀吉(佐々木蔵之介)が揃うシーンに期待を込める。「家康は三河という小国に生まれ、幼いころから幸薄い武将で、親元を離れ人質になり、捨て石のように今川に使役されます。いわば、自分の意思ではなく、さだめに従って生きていった末、200年続く新たな幕藩体制をつくりあげてしまったまさしく『運命の人』です。風間さん扮する家康は、その登場時から自分の意思が通用しない世界で自分にできることは何か、懸命に探そうとします。そのどうしようもなさや、悲しさをたたえた人物像を、確かな演技力で、巧みに演じてくれています。長谷川さんの光秀、染谷さんの信長、佐々木さんの秀吉、そして風間さんの家康が、どう天下を動かしていくのか、『麒麟』を呼んでいくのか……まだ4人が揃うシーンの撮影はこれからですが、今から楽しみでなりません」

[PR]

 風間のコメント全文は下記の通り。(編集部・石井百合子)

松平元康(徳川家康)役・風間俊介

 「麒麟がくる」の制作が決まったとき、一視聴者としてとても楽しみにしていたのですが、徳川家康役で出演が決まったと聞いて、大変驚きました。大河ドラマ出演は、「西郷どん」以来2作目ですが、大河ドラマへの憧れが強すぎるせいか、未だにドキドキして、緊張し続けています。家康は、ひとつの固定したイメージだけで描かれるわけではなく、作品の視点によって描かれ方が全く異なりますので、とても多面的で面白い人物だと思います。現代から見た家康は、徳川幕府を開いた人物であり、たぬきであり、すごい人というイメージですけど、これはあくまで晩年の家康のイメージです。今演じている元康は、まだ何者でもないですし、立場が弱い武将ですから、晩年の家康からは逆算して考えないようにしています。晩年の家康に至るまでは何十年もかかりますし、小さい頃からそのイメージのまま、ということはありませんので、みなさんの持っている家康のイメージから、ギャップが出ればいいなと思っています。「麒麟がくる」のストーリーの中では、徳川家康は竹千代として既に登場しています。竹千代が僕に変わるということは、他のキャラクターもそれだけ時間を積み重ねてきていますので、「こんなに時間が経ったんだ」と、時の流れを感じていただけるのではないかと思います。また、松平元康が登場するということは、歴史が大きく動く瞬間でもあります。それぞれの武将の勢力図も変わっていきますので、ここからさらに面白くなると思います。家康だけではなく、この時代の大きくうごめく流れが変わる瞬間に、みなさん是非一緒に立ち会っていただきたいと思います。今後シーンとしてあるかどうか分かりませんが、光秀と一緒に干し柿を食べるシーンをやりたいですね(笑)。

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2020-05-31 01:09:30Z
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Trump cuts WHO funding as US economy clouds speedy recovery - WHEC

Posted: 30 May 2020 06:08 PM PDT

But many seemed undeterred.

"It's not OK that in the middle of a pandemic we have to be out here risking our lives," Spence Ingram said Friday after marching with other protesters to the state Capitol in Atlanta. "But I have to protest for my life and fight for my life all the time."

Ingram, 25, who was wearing a mask, said she has asthma and was worried about contracting the virus. But she said as a black woman, she always felt that her life was under threat from police and she needed to protest that.

The demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white Minneapolis officer pressed a knee into his neck, are coming at a time when many cities were beginning to relax stay-at-home orders.

That's especially worrisome for health experts who fear that silent carriers of the virus who have no symptoms could unwittingly infect others at gatherings with people packed cheek to jowl and cheering and jeering without masks.

"Whether they're fired up or not that doesn't prevent them from getting the virus," said Bradley Pollock, chairman of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of California, Davis.

Even for the many protesters who have been wearing masks, those don't guarantee protection from the coronavirus. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends cloth masks because they can make it more difficult for infected people to spread the virus - but they are not designed to protect the person wearing the mask from getting it.

The U.S. has been worst hit by the coronavirus outbreak, with more than 1.7 million cases and over 103,000 deaths, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.

In New York, where more than 21,000 people have died during the pandemic, a large crowd in Brooklyn tossed water bottles at officers and torched a police van Friday outside the Barclays Center. Officers cleared the crowd by spraying an eye-irritating chemical.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said after another night of unrest in Minneapolis that many protesters wearing masks were simply trying to hide their identities and "cause confusion and take advantage of this situation."

"I will continue to stress, because it seems like a lifetime ago: We are still in the middle of a pandemic and passed 1,000 deaths yesterday. We still have hospitals on the verge of being overrun with COVID-19," he said.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey echoed those concerns: "We have two crises that are sandwiched on top of one other."

The state's health commissioner had warned just days earlier that the massive protests were almost certain to fuel new cases of the virus. Minnesota reported 35 deaths on Thursday, a single-day high since the start of the outbreak, and 29 more on Friday.

But it wasn't just protesters at risk - unmasked officers stood within arm's reach of shouting demonstrators. In Atlanta, police Chief Erika Shields waded into a crowd without a mask Friday while she listened to people air frustrations.

When Los Angeles officials announced earlier in the week that the city was relaxing stay-at-home orders and reopening stores, they said political protests could resume but with a cap of 100 people.

Several hundred people showed up for a protest organized by Black Lives Matter-LA and later shut down a freeway. Most wore masks, but many did not observe a buffer zone.

Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Friday that was an ongoing concern.

"Show respect for each other by putting on that face covering so that your respiratory droplets aren't unintentionally getting into somebody else's mouth, nose or eyes," she said.

Those same concerns surfaced Saturday in Paris when unions flouted a ban on large gatherings at a march to protest conditions for workers in the country illegally. Police used tear gas to disperse the crowds and said they had banned the march due to the "health risks that such an event is likely to generate."

Meanwhile, the European Union on Saturday urged President Donald Trump to rethink his decision to terminate the U.S. relationship with the World Health Organization as spiking infection rates in India and elsewhere reinforced that the pandemic is far from contained.

Trump on Friday charged that the WHO didn't respond adequately to the pandemic and accused the U.N. agency of being under China's "total control." The U.S. is the largest source of financial support for the WHO, and its exit is expected to significantly weaken the organization.

The head of the EU's executive arm urged Trump to reconsider. "The WHO needs to continue being able to lead the international response to pandemics, current and future," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas told Germany's Funke media group that Trump's decision was the "wrong signal at the wrong time."

In China, where the virus outbreak began, only four new confirmed cases were reported Saturday, all brought from outside the country.

More than 6 million coronavirus infections have been reported worldwide, with over 368,000 deaths and more than 2.5 million recoveries, according to the Johns Hopkins tally. The true death toll is widely believed to be significantly higher, with experts saying many victims died of the virus without ever being tested for it.

Elite sporting events will be allowed to resume in England starting Monday, but without spectators, paving the way for the planned June 17 return of the Premier League, the world's richest soccer competition.

England's deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam warned that the situation overall remained precarious. "I believe this is also a very dangerous moment," he said. "We have to get this right."

India registered another record single-day jump of 7,964 cases and 265 deaths. The government had been expected to end a 2-month-old nationwide lockdown but instead extended measures in some areas due to coronavirus outbreaks.

Italy, though, added 111 new victims to its death toll and nearly 420 new infections, in line with its recent daily tallies, suggesting the virus is under control nearly four weeks after the country began gingerly loosening a strict lockdown in the onetime European epicenter of the pandemic.

___

Seewer reported from Toledo, Ohio. AP reporters from around the world contributed to this report.

___

Follow AP pandemic coverage at https://ift.tt/2xPjH8c and https://ift.tt/2wrCaXK

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事務所の注意も無視…竹内涼真、“二股&恋人ポイ捨て”体質の新証言 白ベンツでデート - Business Journal

Posted: 30 May 2020 05:47 PM PDT

事務所の注意も無視…竹内涼真、"二股&恋人ポイ捨て"体質の新証言 白ベンツでデート - Business Journal

事務所の注意も無視…竹内涼真、二股&恋人ポイ捨て体質の新証言 白ベンツでデートの画像1
竹内涼真のInstagramより

 あの人気俳優に熱愛の噂に加え、緊急事態宣言下での"3密"ドライブ外出の疑いが浮上している。

 29日発売の週刊誌「フライデー」(講談社)は、竹内涼真とモデルで女優の三吉彩花の熱愛を報じている。2人は東京が緊急事態宣言下の5月、複数回にわたり買い物デートを楽しむほか、マスクをせずに計5人でドライブに興じたり、郊外の知人宅に長時間滞在したりしていたという。

 竹内といえば2018年に女優の吉谷彩子との熱愛が報じられていたが、週刊誌記者は語る。

「『フライデー』によれば竹内は今年4月に吉谷との同棲生活を解消し、その前後から三吉との交際を始めたとされていますが、これが事実なら"二股"ということになります。業界では有名な"竹内の白ベンツ"でサングラスをかけた竹内が三吉とデートする写真もばっちり撮られており、二股と緊急事態宣言下での堂々の外出も重なり、爽やかなキャラが売りの竹内にとっては大きなイメージダウンにつながりかねません」

 記事によれば、竹内は同棲していた吉谷を追い出すかたちで一方的に別れを告げたとなっているが、竹内を知る人物は語る。

「『追い出した』という表現はさすがに"盛って"いるのでないかと思われるかもしれませんが、おそらく本当だと思います。竹内は独りではいられないというか、寂しがり屋っぽい部分があって、常に交際する女性がいないとダメなタイプなのですが、その一方で半同棲のような状態になるとすぐに相手に飽きてしまうみたいです。そうなると交際中の女性がいるにもかかわらず、他の女性に興味がいって頻繁に会うようになるのですが、なぜか彼女に浮気がバレるのを警戒している様子もなく、ちょっとそういう抜けたところというか、『え?』って思っちゃうところがあるんですよね。本人にはまったく悪気はないんですが……。

 三吉を"ポイ捨て"したような書かれ方をしていますが、過去に付き合っていた女性にも同じような別れ方をしていますよ。竹内にしてみれば、"別れる・別れない"という話し合いを長々とするのが単に面倒なだけなんでしょう。現場でも年上の大御所女優たちに可愛がられていますし、黙っていても女性が寄ってくるので、困ることはないんですよ」

 そんな竹内を所属事務所のホリプロも苦々しく思っているという。

「過去に竹内が熱愛を報じられた相手は、吉谷と三吉以外にもいますが、爽やかで真面目というイメージに人気が支えられ、CMの仕事も多い竹内だけに、事務所も竹内に何度か注意していますよ。しかし、どうも竹内は意に介さず、危機意識が感じられないようなんです。本人に"人気俳優だから許される"という感覚があるようにみえるといい、事務所も細かい私生活までは制御できず、いつか大きなスキャンダルを起こしてしまうのではないかと心配しているみたいです」(芸能事務所関係者)

 竹内が自分を見失わないように願うばかりである。

(文=編集部)

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2020-05-31 00:12:02Z
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事務所の注意も無視…竹内涼真、“二股&恋人ポイ捨て”体質の新証言 白ベンツでデート - Business Journal

Posted: 30 May 2020 05:17 PM PDT

事務所の注意も無視…竹内涼真、"二股&恋人ポイ捨て"体質の新証言 白ベンツでデート - Business Journal

事務所の注意も無視…竹内涼真、二股&恋人ポイ捨て体質の新証言 白ベンツでデートの画像1
竹内涼真のInstagramより

 あの人気俳優に熱愛の噂に加え、緊急事態宣言下での"3密"ドライブ外出の疑いが浮上している。

 29日発売の週刊誌「フライデー」(講談社)は、竹内涼真とモデルで女優の三吉彩花の熱愛を報じている。2人は東京が緊急事態宣言下の5月、複数回にわたり買い物デートを楽しむほか、マスクをせずに計5人でドライブに興じたり、郊外の知人宅に長時間滞在したりしていたという。

 竹内といえば2018年に女優の吉谷彩子との熱愛が報じられていたが、週刊誌記者は語る。

「『フライデー』によれば竹内は今年4月に吉谷との同棲生活を解消し、その前後から三吉との交際を始めたとされていますが、これが事実なら"二股"ということになります。業界では有名な"竹内の白ベンツ"でサングラスをかけた竹内が三吉とデートする写真もばっちり撮られており、二股と緊急事態宣言下での堂々の外出も重なり、爽やかなキャラが売りの竹内にとっては大きなイメージダウンにつながりかねません」

 記事によれば、竹内は同棲していた吉谷を追い出すかたちで一方的に別れを告げたとなっているが、竹内を知る人物は語る。

「『追い出した』という表現はさすがに"盛って"いるのでないかと思われるかもしれませんが、おそらく本当だと思います。竹内は独りではいられないというか、寂しがり屋っぽい部分があって、常に交際する女性がいないとダメなタイプなのですが、その一方で半同棲のような状態になるとすぐに相手に飽きてしまうみたいです。そうなると交際中の女性がいるにもかかわらず、他の女性に興味がいって頻繁に会うようになるのですが、なぜか彼女に浮気がバレるのを警戒している様子もなく、ちょっとそういう抜けたところというか、『え?』って思っちゃうところがあるんですよね。本人にはまったく悪気はないんですが……。

 三吉を"ポイ捨て"したような書かれ方をしていますが、過去に付き合っていた女性にも同じような別れ方をしていますよ。竹内にしてみれば、"別れる・別れない"という話し合いを長々とするのが単に面倒なだけなんでしょう。現場でも年上の大御所女優たちに可愛がられていますし、黙っていても女性が寄ってくるので、困ることはないんですよ」

 そんな竹内を所属事務所のホリプロも苦々しく思っているという。

「過去に竹内が熱愛を報じられた相手は、吉谷と三吉以外にもいますが、爽やかで真面目というイメージに人気が支えられ、CMの仕事も多い竹内だけに、事務所も竹内に何度か注意していますよ。しかし、どうも竹内は意に介さず、危機意識が感じられないようなんです。本人に"人気俳優だから許される"という感覚があるようにみえるといい、事務所も細かい私生活までは制御できず、いつか大きなスキャンダルを起こしてしまうのではないかと心配しているみたいです」(芸能事務所関係者)

 竹内が自分を見失わないように願うばかりである。

(文=編集部)

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2020-05-30 21:47:09Z
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「麒麟がくる」風間俊介初登場!若かりし家康に「ギャップが出れば」 - シネマトゥデイ

Posted: 30 May 2020 05:17 PM PDT

「麒麟がくる」風間俊介初登場!若かりし家康に「ギャップが出れば」 - シネマトゥデイ

「麒麟がくる」で松平元康(後の徳川家康)を演じる風間駿介
「麒麟がくる」で松平元康(後の徳川家康)を演じる風間駿介 - (C)NHK

 31日放送の大河ドラマ「麒麟がくる」(NHK総合・毎週日曜20時~ほか)第二十回「家康への文」で、松平元康(後の徳川家康)として初登場する風間俊介。本作が「西郷どん」以来2年ぶり、2度目の大河出演となる風間が「まだ何者でもない」若かりし家康を演じる心境を明かした。

【写真】風間俊介、「西郷どん」で大河ドラマ初出演!会見の様子

 織田信長(染谷将太)の盟友となり後に「本能寺の変」で信長を討つ智将・明智光秀(長谷川博己)の人生を描く本作。第二十回「家康への文」は、駿河の今川義元(片岡愛之助)が再び尾張への侵攻を開始。かつて駿河の今川と尾張の織田の間で人質となり成人した松平元康(風間)が、その先鋒を任されることになる。

[PR]

 風間演じる家康は、桶狭間の戦いで今川方として参戦するも敗退。のちに今川から独立し、三河の戦国大名として信長と同盟を結ぶという設定。風間は家康の若かりし時代を「今演じている元康は、まだ何者でもないですし、立場が弱い武将ですから、晩年の家康からは逆算して考えないようにしています。晩年の家康に至るまでは何十年もかかりますし、小さい頃からそのイメージのまま、ということはありませんので、みなさんの持っている家康のイメージから、ギャップが出ればいいなと思っています」と紹介する。

 第四回では光秀が幼少期の竹千代(岩田琉聖)と出会い、母と引き裂かれ孤独な竹千代に干し柿を与える場面があったが、風間は「今後シーンとしてあるかどうか分かりませんが、光秀と一緒に干し柿を食べるシーンをやりたいですね(笑)」とも。

 一方、制作統括の落合将は家康を"運命の人"と称し、光秀、信長、豊臣秀吉(佐々木蔵之介)が揃うシーンに期待を込める。「家康は三河という小国に生まれ、幼いころから幸薄い武将で、親元を離れ人質になり、捨て石のように今川に使役されます。いわば、自分の意思ではなく、さだめに従って生きていった末、200年続く新たな幕藩体制をつくりあげてしまったまさしく『運命の人』です。風間さん扮する家康は、その登場時から自分の意思が通用しない世界で自分にできることは何か、懸命に探そうとします。そのどうしようもなさや、悲しさをたたえた人物像を、確かな演技力で、巧みに演じてくれています。長谷川さんの光秀、染谷さんの信長、佐々木さんの秀吉、そして風間さんの家康が、どう天下を動かしていくのか、『麒麟』を呼んでいくのか……まだ4人が揃うシーンの撮影はこれからですが、今から楽しみでなりません」

[PR]

 風間のコメント全文は下記の通り。(編集部・石井百合子)

松平元康(徳川家康)役・風間俊介

 「麒麟がくる」の制作が決まったとき、一視聴者としてとても楽しみにしていたのですが、徳川家康役で出演が決まったと聞いて、大変驚きました。大河ドラマ出演は、「西郷どん」以来2作目ですが、大河ドラマへの憧れが強すぎるせいか、未だにドキドキして、緊張し続けています。家康は、ひとつの固定したイメージだけで描かれるわけではなく、作品の視点によって描かれ方が全く異なりますので、とても多面的で面白い人物だと思います。現代から見た家康は、徳川幕府を開いた人物であり、たぬきであり、すごい人というイメージですけど、これはあくまで晩年の家康のイメージです。今演じている元康は、まだ何者でもないですし、立場が弱い武将ですから、晩年の家康からは逆算して考えないようにしています。晩年の家康に至るまでは何十年もかかりますし、小さい頃からそのイメージのまま、ということはありませんので、みなさんの持っている家康のイメージから、ギャップが出ればいいなと思っています。「麒麟がくる」のストーリーの中では、徳川家康は竹千代として既に登場しています。竹千代が僕に変わるということは、他のキャラクターもそれだけ時間を積み重ねてきていますので、「こんなに時間が経ったんだ」と、時の流れを感じていただけるのではないかと思います。また、松平元康が登場するということは、歴史が大きく動く瞬間でもあります。それぞれの武将の勢力図も変わっていきますので、ここからさらに面白くなると思います。家康だけではなく、この時代の大きくうごめく流れが変わる瞬間に、みなさん是非一緒に立ち会っていただきたいと思います。今後シーンとしてあるかどうか分かりませんが、光秀と一緒に干し柿を食べるシーンをやりたいですね(笑)。

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2020-05-30 23:00:00Z
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BTS' SUGA face criticisms as he thanks COVID-19 and includes a Mass Murderer sample - allkpop

Posted: 30 May 2020 04:47 PM PDT

BTS' SUGA face criticisms as he thanks COVID-19 and includes a Mass Murderer sample - allkpop

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  1. BTS' SUGA face criticisms as he thanks COVID-19 and includes a Mass Murderer sample  allkpop
  2. BTS' Suga (Agust D) Becomes 1st Korean Solo Artist To Rank In Top 10 Of UK's Official Albums Chart  soompi
  3. BTS: Suga, Jimin twin in black & post Yoonmin selfie; Yoongi asks Jimin why he didn't come to Daechwita MV set  PINKVILLA
  4. [Album & MV Review] Agust D (SUGA) – 'D-2'  allkpop
  5. BTS Suga makes historic records with AGUST D-2 on UK, Ireland and Australia music charts  Bollywood Hungama
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


2020-05-30 04:33:00Z
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMieWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFsbGtwb3AuY29tL2FydGljbGUvMjAyMC8wNS9idHMtc3VnYS1mYWNlLWNyaXRpY2lzbS1hcy1oZS10aGFua3MtY292aWQtMTktYW5kLWluY2x1ZGVzLWEtbWFzcy1tdXJkZXJlci1zYW1wbGXSAQA?oc=5


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