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RFK Jr. on vaccines; Ukraine’s post-war safety : NPR

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Today’s top stories

In a Senate hearing yesterday, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced calls to resign from Democrats and criticism from Republicans. For decades, Kennedy has established a reputation as an anti-vaccine activist. However, when President Trump was considering him for the HHS secretary role, Kennedy made promises not to prevent people from obtaining vaccines. In the hearing, he was asked to explain his recent actions regarding vaccines. This included how he went back on his vow not to touch the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s advisory committee on immunization practices. He fired all 17 members of the committee and replaced them with people with a history of anti-vaccine activism.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. arrives to testify before the Senate Finance Committee at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on September 4, 2025 in Washington, DC.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images


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  • 🎧 Kennedy insisted that anybody who wants to receive the shot can and got angry when he was pressed on the topic, NPR’s Selena Simmons-Duffin tells Up First. This year, the Food and Drug Administration approved the COVID booster, but only for people with certain conditions and those over 65. This decision has caused confusion among doctors, patients and insurance companies. Simmons-Duffins says it’s still unknown what the CDC’s advisory committee on immunization practices plans to do about vaccinations. The panel is set to review routine childhood vaccines, including the one for measles, mumps and rubella, and Hepatitis B.

D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb has filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, stating that the deployment of the National Guard in the nation’s capital is illegal. For the past three weeks, National Guard troops have been patrolling the streets of Washington, D.C., following Trump’s declaration of a “crime emergency” in the city. The president’s claim came as D.C. reported a 30-year low for violent crimes. Schwalb says the military shouldn’t be involved in domestic law enforcement, and they are untrained in policing.

  • 🎧 Since troops were deployed to Washington, estimates indicate that crime overall has decreased, says Alex Koma of NPR network station WAMU. Troops are not authorized to make arrests, but can inform police of a crime. This makes it hard to evaluate if they have any direct correlation with the decline in crime, according to Koma. D.C. has asked a judge to remove the National Guard troops from the area immediately. The lawsuit comes two days after a federal judge ruled that Trump broke the law when he sent National Guard troops into Los Angeles during the protests against immigration raids. This case is being closely monitored by cities like Chicago and Baltimore, where Trump threatened to deploy federal forces.
  • ➡️ On Tuesday, the White House said that 1,669 people have been arrested since Trump’s takeover of the D.C. police. NPR combed through court records and other data. Here’s a breakdown of who has been arrested and what charges they’re facing.

Europe announced yesterday that it had finalized a plan to guarantee Ukraine’s peace and security after the war with Russia ends. The proposal would include troops on the ground in Ukraine from several countries from a group known as the coalition of the willing. The coalition currently includes 35 countries that gathered in Paris, physically and by video. Representatives from Australia, New Zealand, Japan and Canada also attended.

  • 🎧 Russian President Vladimir Putin warned this morning that any foreign troops in Ukraine would be a target. NPR’s Eleanor Beardsley says his response to the news isn’t surprising. It is also why French President Emmanuel Macron, says the backbone of Ukraine’s post-war security is a strong Ukrainian army. Macron stated that this is the reason they won’t be accepting restrictions on the Ukrainian army’s size and shape.

Living better

Close-up of woman pouring a meal replacement shakes into her friend's glass. Horizontal shot.

Close-up of woman pouring a meal replacement shakes into her friend’s glass. Horizontal shot.

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Thomas_EyeDesign/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Living Better is a special series about what it takes to stay healthy in America.

Creatine supplements have gained popularity among social media influencers who say they can help with muscle growth, improve athletic performance and even enhance brain function. The compound is made from three amino acids that serve as a source of energy for your muscles. While your body naturally produces some creatine, can maximizing on it really deliver the benefits influencers are claiming? Here’s what the evidence shows:

  • 🥛 Creatine does work for adding lean muscle mass, but you have to work out to benefit from its effects.
  • 🥛 Men who combined the supplements with resistance training added around two to three pounds of lean body mass, according to a review of 35 studies. This could be significant for older men, who tend to lose muscle mass as they age.
  • 🥛 Initial evidence indicates that benefits like regulating blood sugar in Type 2 diabetes and improving memory are not strongly supported, according to Jose Antonio, an exercise and sports science professor at Nova Southeastern University in Florida.
  • 🥛 Vegans and vegetarians are more likely to see the benefits from taking creatine, as they probably don’t get much or any of it in their diet. Creatine comes from red meat, chicken or fish.

Weekend picks

Daniel Dae Kim plays a spy who faked his own death in Butterfly.

Daniel Dae Kim plays a spy who faked his own death in Butterfly.

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Juhan Noh/Prime

Check out what NPR is watching, reading and listening to this weekend:

🍿 Movies: In The Thursday Murder Club a group of retirees gather to research cold cases to pass the time — until a real murder and a plucky new member show up on their doorstep.

📺 TV: Daniel Dae Kim stars in Butterfly as a former U.S. government spy who comes out of hiding to save his long-lost daughter from her life as an assassin.

📚 Books: To the Moon and Back follows Steph Harper, who aspires to become NASA’s first Cherokee astronaut. Before she can achieve her dreams, she must escape an abusive parent and navigate her youth spent on a reservation while experiencing a queer coming of age.

🎵 Music: Artist Nourished by Time’s new album, The Passionate Ones, is a not-so-quiet, yearning and romantic expression that nothing can stand in the way of pursuing love.

❓ Quiz: I have been bested this week. I got seven out of the 11 questions right. I know you can do better! Test your memory.

3 things to know before you go

Amanda Anisimova of the United States celebrates after defeating Naomi Osaka of Japan in three sets during their women's singles semifinal match on Sept. 5, 2025, in the Queens borough of New York City.

Amanda Anisimova of the United States celebrates after defeating Naomi Osaka of Japan in three sets during their women’s singles semifinal match on Sept. 5, 2025, in the Queens borough of New York City.

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  1. American Amanda Anisimova defeated Naomi Osaka of Japan early today in the U.S. Open semifinals. She is expected to compete in her first U.S. Open finals tomorrow.
  2. Giorgio Armani, the founder of the Italian luxury fashion house Armani, died yesterday in Milan at age 91. His designs had a goal of highlighting the body as a work of art.
  3. Susan Stamberg, one of NPR’s “founding mothers,” is retiring after over 50 years behind the mic. Morning Edition shares a tribute to her legacy.

This newsletter was edited by Suzanne Nuyen.



This story originally appeared on NPR

AI and clean energy drive job growth, reshape US labor market – Computerworld

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At the same time, the push toward electrification — driven by AI, electric vehicles, and data centers — is powering a surge in renewable energy jobs. Solar, wind, geothermal, and tidal energy industries top the list of fastest-growing sectors, projected to add over 41,000 jobs, while battery and electrical component manufacturing will add nearly 48,400 positions, according to BLS data.

However, automation and AI are also expected to lead to significant job declines in office, sales, and production roles. Overall AI and mathematical occupations, led by data scientists and cybersecurity analysts, are forecast to grow over 10%, more than triple the national average, the BLS’s report showed.

Yet, only 10% of CIOs and senior tech leaders say AI is fully integrated across their organization, leaving a lot of room for adoption growth, according to a study by staffing firm ManpowerGroup.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

Valerion launches new premium projector with anti-rainbow effect technology

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After a successful Kickstarter campaign, Valerion is formally announcing its new premium projector, the VisionMaster Max, at IFA 2025. The boxy little projector offers improved contrast and brightness, but the feature that should be most interesting to home theater aficionados is how it tries to address the “rainbow effect” common in some cheaper projectors.

Cheaper DLP projectors sometimes display stuttery strobes of color when the projector’s color wheel is forced to quickly shift between colors during fast-paced scenes. While these doesn’t necessarily impede watching a movie or TV show, the rainbow effect can bother sensitive projector owners. The VisionMaster Max attempts to address the problem with what Valerion calls “Anti-RBE Technology” that “reduces rainbow effects by 99.9 percent.” The company pulls this off by using software to blend the individual color sequences of whatever you’re watching faster than the human eye can perceive, creating what looks like a seamless image.

Valerion says the VisionMaster Max also has an upgraded native contrast ratio of 5,000:1 and an AI-assisted “Enhanced Black Level (EBL)” contrast of 50,000:1 for improved depth and details in shadows. Valerion’s dramatically named “NoirScene Dark Field Engine System” mixes stable luminance from a fixed iris aperture and an EBL algorithm to offer deeper blacks with less need for calibration. Combined with the VisionMaster Max’s up to 3,500 lumens of brightness, it makes the projector even more usable during day or night.

The VisionMaster Max also carries over the adjustable lens system from some of Valerion’s other projectors, offers support for Gigabit ethernet and Wi-Fi 6E and runs Google TV. Despite favoring Google’s home theater OS, Valerion guarantees you can fully integrate the VisionMaster Max with Google Home, Apple HomeKit, Amazon Alexa, Control4 and Crestron smart home systems.

If that all sounds good, just make sure you’re comfortable paying for a premium experience. Valerion says the VisionMaster Max will be available in October 2025, starting at $4,999.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

Meet Her Daughter Willow & Son Jameson Hart – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Bruce Glikas/Getty Images

Pink can do it all! The Grammy Award-winning singer, 44, is not only a legend in the music industry, but she’s also the proud mother of two children, whom she shares with her husband Carey Hart, 48. The couple, who got married in 2006, welcomed their first child, daughter Willow Sage, in June 2011. Five years later, their son Jameson Moon joined the family.

Pink, whose real name is Alecia Beth Moore, loves being a mom so much. But previously, she confessed to People that she was initially “terrified” to have children because she was worried she’d “be a terrible mother.” And she couldn’t have been more wrong! “But, oh my God, being a mom is the most incredible thing I’ve ever done,” Pink also said in that interview. “It’s shocking how responsible I’ve become.”

Below, learn all about Pink’s kids, Willow Sage and Jameson.

Willow Sage Hart

Pink’s daughter was born on June 2, 2011. “We are ecstatic to welcome our new beautiful healthy happy baby girl, Willow Sage Hart,” Pink wrote on Twitter when she announced her daughter’s arrival. “She’s gorgeous, just like her daddy #beyondblessed.”

Willow, now 14, has followed in her mother’s footsteps as a performer. In December 2020, Pink and Willow teamed up for The Disney Holiday Singalong where they performed a duet of the classic “The Christmas Song.” Willow was then featured on her mom’s 2021 single “Cover Me In Sunshine,” dueting with the popstar on a heartfelt ballad. A few months later, Willow joined her mom on stage at the 2021 Billboard Music Awards for an impressive aerial routine. Willow also has other passions that Pink revealed in a 2021 interview with People. “Willow does gymnastics and reads Harry Potter and is convinced she’s going to Hogwarts when she’s 11, and I don’t have the heart to tell her that she’s not,” the “So What” singer said.

Jameson Moon Hart

Pink’s son was born on December 26, 2016, and she announced his arrival on Instagram. The singer shared a photo of her husband holding baby Jameson, with the caption, “I love my baby daddy.”

Jameson, now 8, is the most adorable little boy and he’s so loved by both his parents. Pink frequently posts footage of Jameson doing all kinds of different activities on her social media. Jameson has also been to many red carpet events with his famous mom and the rest of their family. In an interview with People, Pink revealed that her son “wants to be an astronaut.” She also said that both Jameson and Willow are “normal kids.”




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

‘I’m Brit in Benidorm and three situations made me want to go home’ | Travel News | Travel

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A man who has “lived in Benidorm for at least seven or eight years” has shared three of the moments that had him wondering whether he’d actually made the right choice, or whether he should swiftly catch a plane back to the UK.

Harry, who posts on TikTok as @harrytokky, regularly shares lifestyle content from Benidorm, and he’s recently shared the “most dangerous slash scariest situations” that he’d found himself in while in the Spanish party capital.

Nearly getting run over by a bus

“Yes, you heard, ran over,” Harry explained. He continued: “It was one of these back roads here in Benidorm where people drive at mental speeds, and to be honest, they were so close to hitting me.

“I literally had to run out of the way of the road, it was awful”.

Random police search

Harry explained he’d been stopped by police, and they “literally said random search” to him. He claimed they were looking for “the naughty stuff,” which Harry said he “didn’t have”.

“They did a full-on search on the side of the road here in Benidorm. I honestly thought they were going to handcuff me, chuck me in the back of a car and throw away the key,” Harry claimed.

Nearly getting mugged 

“This is definitely number one by far,” Harry shared, explaining: “I was walking down one of the back alleys […] from the beach to the main road and a guy came up to me, shook my hand, twisted my arm around my back and all of this”.

He said that this was an attempt to “rob” him of his belongings, saying that it was the “worst experience,” and it would leave anybody shaken up.

He did say, however, that he wasn’t sharing his experiences to “scare anyone off Benidorm,” but instead, he wanted to equip people with the knowledge that these things can happen so they can try and protect themselves.

“Stuff like this does happen everywhere in the world,” Harry reiterated. “But because I live here, it’s happened to me, and I wanted to speak about it.”

In the comments, someone said he’d lived a “crazy life” while he’d been in Benidorm, and Harry replied: “I know right, super crazy”.

However, there are some perks to Benidorm – you can get a really cheap McDonald’s.

Sitting outside, he said: “And just like that, the food has arrived. Now you will not believe how cheap this was. We’ve got two meals here. Guess how much this costs? €11 (£9.53)”.

Harry continued, explaining that there are two fries, two burgers, two drinks, and some chicken nuggets on the side as well.

He gushed: “I mean, €11? What do you think guys? I think that’s an absolute bargain, let’s be honest. €11? In the UK, that’d probably be at least £20.”

In the UK, a large Big Mac meal costs around £7.69, depending on location. Meanwhile, six chicken nuggets cost around £3.49, depending on location.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Today’s fall in the Ashmore Group share price pushes its yield to 10.3%!

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Image source: Getty Images

The Ashmore Group (LSE:ASHM) share price fell over 8% in early trading today (5 September) after the emerging markets asset manager published its results for the year ended 30 June (FY25). However, by midday, it had recovered a little and was down ‘only’ 5.5%.

What’s going on?

Since 2020, the group has observed a trend for investors to move their money away from emerging markets into, predominantly, US equities. As a result, it’s seen its assets under management (AuM) fall. At 30 June 2021, these were $94.4bn. Four years’ later, it was managing $47.6bn of funds on behalf of its clients, which it describes as “predominantly a diversified set of institutions”.

Source: company reports

Not surprisingly, its management fees have more than halved during this period. And, since September 2020, the group’s share price has fallen by over 50%.

To help offset falling revenue, it’s embarked on a cost-cutting exercise. However, in a business which relies heavily on people, I suspect there’s not much scope for making further reductions.  

But despite the fall in the group’s AuM, it remains positive about the sector. It says: “Emerging markets provide superior economic growth, more effective monetary and fiscal policies, and higher risk-adjusted returns”.

Indeed, for as long as I can remember, emerging markets have been touted as the next big thing. Their huge populations, superior growth rates and attractive asset valuations are often given as reasons to invest. Dollar weakness also makes the exports of these countries cheaper.

And while these markets generally do okay, others do better. For example, over the past 10 years, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has risen by an average annual rate of 6.92%. This beats the 6.6% return from MSCI’s UK index but global stocks have delivered growth of 12.22% a year.

Good for income

Prior to today’s share price fall, the stock was offering a healthy yield. But it’s now even higher. With the year’s dividend confirmed at 16.9p, the stock’s now yielding 10.3%. Of course, there can never be any guarantees when it comes to shareholder returns. But at the risk of appearing churlish, I should point out that the group’s dividend has remained unchanged for five years now.

Even so, a double-digit yield puts it in the top five on the FTSE 250. And it’s three times higher than the average for the index. Some will be concerned that its payout this year is more than its earnings per share. Indeed, this has been the case for the past four years. However, the group’s able to maintain its dividend by selling some of its own independently-held investment portfolio of funds managed for its clients. Ultimately, this could prove unsustainable.

Even though I acknowledge there’s a strong investment case for emerging markets, I don’t want to take a stake in Ashmore Group.

For as long as its AuM continues to fall, it’s inevitable that it’s income will drop, no matter how good its professionals are at identifying profitable opportunities for the group’s clients. And this is likely to put further pressure on its share price. On this basis, the stock’s not for me.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

One of the Best and Most Groundbreaking Action Series of All Time Is Finally “Closer Than Ever” to a Revival After 11 Years

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In 2001, Kiefer Sutherland blasted onto screens as Jack Bauer, and changed TV forever. After eight seasons and a belated, shorter ninth season entitled Live Another Day, it seemed that Bauer had come to the end of his journey. Now, more than a decade on, perhaps the door is opening on another revival of 24, one of the most groundbreaking series in television history.

What made 24 unique was its use of real-time, with every episode covering an hour of Jack Bauer’s latest day from hell. Each episode began and ended with the ticking of that iconic clock, and every episode ended on a cliffhanger moment to end all cliffhangers – every single time. Overall, the series scored 87% from both critics and audiences on Rotten Tomatoes, but several seasons were rated a perfect 100%, and it was only the last few that dipped into mid-70s.

So, could the return of Jack Bauer be overdue? According to Sutherland, during an appearance on CJAD 800 AM, the revival of 24 has “never been closer.” He said:

“Howard Gordon has come up with an idea that I like. Before, the material had not been written, so I would have to say, “I’m not the one that’s in the way.” [But] something has been written. I think it’s really good. I think it’s really strong. 24 was originally with Fox. Now it’s owned by Disney because of what Fox has sold off, and so it has to go through different channels before it’s either approved or disapproved. Like everybody else, it’s something I would really like to do. I would like to close that story. It was left kind of wide open. So, fingers crossed. There’s a chance. We’ve taken some considerable steps forward.”

Will ’24’ Season 10 Actually Happen?

Fans of 24 have been hearing rumors of a possible big screen outing for Jack Bauer for years. That was seemingly abandoned for the ninth season in 2014. Since then, there have been several whispers that development on a new 24 series had begun, but somewhere in the middle, Disney went and bought Fox.

While some would consider this a problem, Disney allowing one of their many adopted IPs to sit collecting dust when there is potentially a strong script, a returning star, and a fandom waiting to see one more Jack Bauer adventure out there is a ridiculous idea to even consider. Having already worked their way through several big IPs, with huge success for the Alien and Predator franchises among others, Disney would surely be happy to have Sutherland bringing Bauer back to close the book on the story in a more definite way than Season 9 achieved. Who knows, perhaps there could even be more than one season left in the old dog.



24


Release Date

2001 – 2009

Showrunner

Robert Cochran

Directors

Robert Cochran






This story originally appeared on Movieweb

Who The New York Ripper Is In Dexter: Resurrection – Identity Confirmed

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Warning! This article contains SPOILERS for Dexter: Resurrection season 1, episode 10.Dexter: Resurrection finally revealed the identity of the elusive New York Ripper, and it also set them up to be a main villain in the next season. The ending of Dexter: Resurrection season 1 had quite a few bombshell developments for the show, but it also set up future seasons. While Resurrection season 2 hasn’t been confirmed yet, it looks exceedingly likely, especially after the cancellation of Original Sin.

One of the things Resurrection season 1’s ending set up was a new villain for Dexter to take on. The New York Ripper has been an unseen but prominent part of Resurrection from the beginning, and it always seemed like he was going to be a villain for Dexter to take down. That theory proved true, but the Ripper’s real identity also disproved some other popular theories.

Dexter: Resurrection’s Season 1 Finale Confirms The New York Ripper’s Identity

A long hooked tool with a placard that reads “New York Ripper” in Leon Prater’s museum in Dexter: Resurrection season 1, episode 4

The final episode of Dexter: Resurrection season 1 finally confirmed the identity of the New York Ripper, and it wasn’t who we thought it was. There were some popular fan theories that Blessing could be the New York Ripper or even that Leon Prater was the Ripper, but neither of them were right. Instead, the New York Ripper was a man named Don Framt.

Resurrection revealed the Ripper’s identity through the files in Leon Prater’s vault that he kept on all the serial killers he was in contact with. Prater already had the Ripper’s manhole hook, which he used as a murder weapon, so he knew the Ripper personally in some way. Prater also kept blackmail and detailed files on everyone who came to his dinner parties, which obviously includes the Ripper.

Interestingly enough, Resurrection never introduced Don Framt before Dexter found his file in Prater’s vault. We did get to hear his voice taunting the family of one of his victims during Claudette Wallace’s presentation at the college, but we’ve never actually seen the man. Luckily, this probably isn’t the last we’ve seen of the New York Ripper.

Wallace & Oliva Finding The New York Ripper’s File Sets Him Up As Season 2’s Big Bad

Detectives Wallace and Olivia with police siren lights flashing on them in Dexter Resurrection

The fact that Wallace and Oliva ended up finding Framt’s file indicates that he’s going to have some role to play in Dexter: Resurrection season 2. Given how much the show has already played up his importance to Wallace and Prater, it seems like the New York Ripper is going to be the main villain of Dexter: Resurrection season 2.

Dexter took a series of files from Leon Prater for his own use. They contained details about serial killers named “Jawsplitter,” “Midnight Mangler,” “Yonkers Slayer,” and Al Walker, also known as Rapunzel.

Claudette is obsessed with the New York Ripper, so she’ll obviously be going after Don Framt now that she finally has a concrete lead. She’ll also need to get real, verifiable evidence that’s admissible in court; Prater’s files are just a start. Dexter also took several different files with him, and if the Ripper becomes active again, the former may decide to start hunting the latter.

Framt turning out to be Resurrection‘s main villain would also fit with the show’s unique title card. Resurrection uses a manhole cover for its intro sequence, while the New York Ripper uses a manhole hook as his weapon. Evidently, Dexter: Resurrection is finally ready for its first multi-season villain, and Dexter, Wallace, and Oliva are finally going to be on the same side.


03231844_poster_w780.jpg


Dexter: Resurrection

9/10

Release Date

July 13, 2025

Network

Paramount+ with Showtime

Directors

Marcos Siega






This story originally appeared on Screenrant

‘Trans people are just trying to live our lives’: ‘Transa’ event at the Getty celebrates trans art

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When the sprawling compilation album “Transa” came out last fall, Massima Bell — a musician, model and activist who helped assemble the project under the aegis of the Red Hot organization — thought of it as a crucial act of “archive-making” for one of society’s most marginalized communities.

“As a whole, trans people have not had the opportunity to really have our own historical understanding of who we are,” Bell says. “It’s something that’s been literally stamped out over the course of the Western gender binary that emerged from the Victorian era.”

With 46 tracks by approximately 100 artists — including many trans and nonbinary musicians along with big names such as André 3000, Jeff Tweedy, Clairo and Perfume Genius — “Transa” sets down intimate stories of experience and allyship so that they might be “honored and remembered and live far beyond the present moment,” as Bell puts it.

Among the album’s varied highlights: Teddy Geiger and Yaeji’s dreamy folk-pop “Pink Ponies”; a rendition of Prince’s “I Would Die 4 U” by Lauren Auder and Prince’s old bandmates Wendy & Lisa; Allison Russell and Ahya Simone’s take on “Any Other Way” by the trans pioneer Jackie Shane; and a spectral cover of Sylvester’s late-’70s disco hit “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)” by Moses Sumney and Sam Smith.

Then there’s Sade’s “Young Lion,” a tolling piano ballad in which the famous soul singer asks her son to forgive her for not recognizing his gender identity earlier than she did.

“Young man, it’s been so heavy for you / You must have felt so alone / The anguish and pain / I should have known,” Sade sings in the song, which has been streamed more than 5 million times since “Transa” was released in November.

Now, some of the artists involved with the project are set to bring its archive to life at the Getty Center on Saturday with a daylong “Transa” event featuring films, art installations and a concert with performances by Geiger, Devendra Banhart and Dirty Projectors’ David Longstreth, among others.

The takeover is the latest bit of cultural activism by the not-for-profit Red Hot, which made its name during the AIDS epidemic with 1990’s “Red Hot + Blue,” a hit compilation LP that had stars like U2, Sinéad O’Connor and k.d. lang interpreting the songs of Cole Porter; after that came similarly buzzy benefit albums built around country music, alternative rock and the work of Fela Kuti and the Grateful Dead.

In an interview last year with the New York Times, Red Hot’s co-founder, John Carlin, compared recent attacks on trans people to the treatment of people with AIDS in the ’90s. “We’re doing this to make sure the culture wars are being fought from both sides,” he said of “Transa.”

Yet the Getty event is billed explicitly as a celebration. Geiger, who is trans and whose career encompasses her own records as well as songwriting and production work for the likes of Pink and the Chicks, says “Transa” embodies “the idea that trans lives, which inevitably become politicized, are about more than struggle.”

Sumney, a singer and actor seen in “MaXXXine” and HBO’s “The Idol,” says he’s been thinking lately about Nina Simone’s enduring quote about how an artist’s duty is to reflect the times.

“I’m not sure I agree,” Sumney says. “I think the artist’s duty is to reflect me. Can’t we just tell stories?” Too often, he adds, “minoritized identities are asked to speak for their entire identity. But that responsibility impedes the ability to speak for themselves.”

For Bell, the promise of “Transa” — in its acts of testimony as well as in a piece like André 3000’s 26-minute psychedelic jazz excursion — is that it offers “a glimpse of our collective liberation and the light inside all of us.” Says the activist: “Trans people are just trying to live our lives.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Justin Bieber’s ‘Swag II’: Every Song Ranked

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Billboard sizes up the 23 new songs on Bieber’s semi-surprise sequel set.

Swag, swag, swag… on II. The suddenly very prolific pop superstar Justin Bieber announced over social media on Thursday (Sept. 4) that midnight would bring with it the surprise sequel to his equally unexpected Swag album from July. Midnight came and went without the suddenly highly anticipated release, but just around 3:30 a.m. ET, the set appeared on YouTube, trickling to other DSPs shortly after. Swag II was now officially with us.

The 23-track set follows in the organic-sounding, warm-feeling alt-R&B mode of the first Swag, with many of the same sonic architects (Dijon, Carter Lang, Mk.gee), and even a couple overlapping feature guests in Lil B and Eddie Benjamin. New to the Swag is Afrobeats star Tems, British singer-songwriter Bakar and ’00s Louisiana rapper Hurricane Chris. But no skits this time — Druski makes nary an appearance across the set, although “I’m not the one” and “It’s not clocking to you” references are both made in the album’s lyrics. And the blockbuster sequel closes with the longest Bieber album cut to date: “Story of God,” a nearly eight-minute spoken-word retelling of the Adam and Eve story, with Justin narrating as Adam.

Ultimately, the set will unquestionably be worth the wait for Beliebers, who now have a whopping 44 tracks’ worth of Swag to keep them cuddly in the cold-weather months that lie ahead. And with Bieber’s sneaky productivity of late, who knows if there might even be a third Swagstallment still waiting in the wings. Until then, though, here’s our early ranking of the 23 tracks new to Swag II.



This story originally appeared on Billboard