Foo Fighters free livestream: Here’s how to watch the May 21 concert

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Foo Fighters free livestream: Here’s how to watch the May 21 concert Southern California rock band Foo Fighters are hosting a special livestream event dubbed “Foo Fighters: Preparing Music For Concerts” that launches Sunday, May 21 at noon.The virtual performance from the band’s Los Angeles-based Studio 606 will include the group blasting through its hits and debuting new music from its forthcoming “But Here We Are” album, which is due out on June 2. It will also feature behind-the-scenes footage and a few surprises, plus the reveal who will be occupying the drumkit in place of Taylor Hawkins, who died suddenly while on tour last year.Fans can tune into the free livestream at foofighters.veeps.com.So far, Foo Fighters have released two new songs from its upcoming album, a collection of songs written and recorded after Hawkins’ death and the pair of massive, rock-filled celebrations of life at Wembley Stadium in London and Kia Forum in Inglewood that followed. The band put out the emotional track, “Rescued,” in April and just dropped the punk rock-tin...

Warriors star Steph Curry wins NBA citizenship award

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Warriors star Steph Curry wins NBA citizenship award Stephen Curry’s off-court work promoting youth literacy and fighting for gender equity in sports has been well-known for years. But now he’s receiving an honor recognizing his work in the community.The Professional Basketball Writers Association on Thursday named Curry as the recipient of this year’s J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award. He is the first Warriors player to win the award, which was established in 1974.The annual award is said to be presented to “a player, coach or athletic trainer who shows outstanding service and dedication to the community.” The PBWA viewed Curry as deserving for this year’s honor, which is the first in two years because of the pandemic.“Few athletes have as great a reach or as powerful a platform as Steph Curry, and he has used it to the fullest to benefit others,” PBWA President Howard Beck said in a statement. “The members of the Professional Basketball Writers Association salute him and the other nominees for t...

Brush fire near Highway 4 in Martinez burns 5 acres

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Brush fire near Highway 4 in Martinez burns 5 acres (KRON) -- Firefighters are responding to a brush fire near Highway 4 in the Martinez area, according to the Crockett Carquinez Fire Department. The fire is burning adjacent to westbound Highway 4, east of McEwen.Firefighters are reportedly calling for a second alarm. The fire has burned five acres, but forward progress has apparently been stopped. "Crews will be mopping up for an extended period," Crockett Carquinez FD tweeted.Photo: Alert CaliforniaPhoto: Con FireThis is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Debt ceiling negotiators rushing for weekend deal, but much work remains

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Debt ceiling negotiators rushing for weekend deal, but much work remains WASHINGTON (AP) — Negotiators from the White House labored Thursday over the U.S. debt limit with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s emissaries at the Capitol, grinding through a second day of head-to-head talks trying to strike a budget deal to avert a looming economic crisis.Brown bags of lunch snacks were delivered to the stately room signaling a long day ahead.With a deadline as soon as June 1 drawing nearer, President Joe Biden and McCarthy tapped their top representatives to work out a deal after a week of talks with a larger contingent stalled out. Upbeat, McCarthy said it was important to have an “agreement in principle” by this weekend if they hope to get to a House vote next week. “Everyone’s working hard.” McCarthy told CNN and others at the Capitol.The White House team also appeared upbeat as they entered the building, but declined comments. They departed two hours later, and it was unclear if talks would continue late in the day.“This does not have to be a crisi...

Mastodon bones unearthed by Michigan work crew go on display in museum

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Mastodon bones unearthed by Michigan work crew go on display in museum GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — A selection of bones belonging to a juvenile mastodon who roamed the woods of Michigan 13,000 years ago is now on display at the Grand Rapids Public Museum, after workers unearthed it by chance last year.Excited museum officials showed off some of the long-extinct pachyderm’s remains on Thursday, although much of the skeleton still is going through the drying process. Mastodons might seem similar to woolly mammoths, but they were shorter and stockier — imagine a mix between a woolly mammoth and modern elephant — and their tusks were shorter and less curved.The Michigan skeleton was discovered by Kent County workers digging a drainage ditch about 30 miles north of Grand Rapids. Museum CEO Dale Robertson called the discovery “amazing.”“It’s probably an understatement,” he said during a news conference Thursday before officials toured the new exhibit.It’s not unusual to find mastodon bones, especially in the Midwest. But what’s special about...

Incredible shrinking lakes: Humans, climate change, diversion costs trillions of gallons annually

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Incredible shrinking lakes: Humans, climate change, diversion costs trillions of gallons annually WASHINGTON (AP) — Climate change ‘s hotter temperatures and society’s diversion of water have been shrinking the world’s lakes by trillions of gallons of water a year since the early 1990s, a new study finds.A close examination of nearly 2,000 of the world’s largest lakes found they are losing about 5.7 trillion gallons (21.5 trillion liters) a year. That means from 1992 to 2020, the world lost the equivalent of 17 Lake Meads, America’s largest reservoir, in Nevada. It’s also roughly equal to how much water the United States used in an entire year in 2015.Even lakes in areas getting more rainfall are shriveling. That’s because of both a thirstier atmosphere from warmer air sucking up more water in evaporation, and a thirsty society that is diverting water from lakes to agriculture, power plants and drinking supplies, according to a study in Thursday’s journal Science. Authors also cited a third reason they called more natural, with wat...

‘Indiana Jones’ swings into Cannes Film Festival; Harrison Ford honored before joyous festivalgoers

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

‘Indiana Jones’ swings into Cannes Film Festival; Harrison Ford honored before joyous festivalgoers CANNES, France (AP) — Indiana Jones and Harrison Ford swung into Cannes on Thursday for the world premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” in one of the most anticipated events of the French Riviera festival.Fedoras abounded in the throngs of onlookers who watched Ford and company hit the red carpet.Ford walked hand in hand with his wife, Calista Flockhart, and later joined his cast mates as John Williams’ score played across the red carpet. Among those in attendance were Disney chief Bob Iger, Lucasfilm’s Kathleen Kennedy and filmmaker Steve McQueen.Ford, 80, who has said “Dial of Destiny” will be his last performance as the character, also received an honorary Palme d’Or from the Cannes Film Festival. Last year, Cannes feted “Top Gun Maverick” and Tom Cruise in a similar manner. Inside the theater, Ford was greeted with thunderous applause. He beamed and looked around the theater before receiving the honorary Palme.“I’m very touched. I’m very moved by this,” a cle...

Kansas governor vetoes part of school funding bill, setting up likely legal battle with GOP

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

Kansas governor vetoes part of school funding bill, setting up likely legal battle with GOP TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ Democratic governor on Thursday vetoed parts of the Republican-backed $6 billion funding plan for the state’s K-12 schools, setting up a likely legal battle that will test her office’s powers.Gov. Laura Kelly, who won reelection in the conservative state in November, issued a statement explaining her decision to take the unprecedented step of vetoing parts of the proposed education budget, saying she objected to one provision, in particular, that she says would cut funding for rural public schools, which have been dealing with declining enrollment.“This provision pulls the rug out from rural school districts at the 11th hour,” Kelly said. “If the provision is enacted, it will bring dangerous and devastating consequences for our rural districts.”The spending plan, which would provide the bulk of the money that the state’s 286 school districts rely on, would also expand a program aimed at providing private school scholarships for low...

El Ninos are far costlier than once thought, in the trillions, study says — and one’s brewing now

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

El Ninos are far costlier than once thought, in the trillions, study says — and one’s brewing now WASHINGTON (AP) — The natural burst of El Nino warming that changes weather worldwide is far costlier with longer-lasting expenses than experts had thought, averaging trillions of dollars in damage, a new study found.An El Nino is brewing now and it might be a big — and therefore costly — one, scientists said. El Nino is a temporary and natural warming of parts of the equatorial Pacific, that causes droughts, floods and heat waves in different parts of the world. It also adds an extra boost to human-caused warming.The study in Thursday’s journal Science totals global damage with an emphasis on lasting economic scars. It runs counter to previous research that found, at least in the United States, that El Ninos overall aren’t too costly and can even be beneficial. And some — but not all — outside economists have issues with the new research out of Dartmouth College, saying its damage estimates are too big.Study authors said the average El Nino costs the global economy abou...

George Goldhoff’s new job: Keep Atlantic City’s Hard Rock casino running fast

Published Sat, 23 Nov 2024 15:21:30 GMT

George Goldhoff’s new job: Keep Atlantic City’s Hard Rock casino running fast ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — It could be said that George Goldhoff, the new president of Atlantic City’s Hard Rock casino, has been handed the keys to a smooth-running, high-performance Ferrari that’s purring at nearly every turn.Goldhoff is in charge of one of the market’s top-performing properties. It won nearly a half-billion dollars from in-person gamblers last year, second only to the Borgata.And Goldhoff says it can be even better. Despite the casino’s success in its first five years, Goldhoff says there is not a single aspect of Hard Rock’s operations that can’t be improved.“Sometimes the last 10% is more difficult to achieve than the first 90%,” said Goldhoff, who has been on the job for about 60 days. “We have to earn it every day.”Hard Rock is the renovated successor to the Trump Taj Mahal casino. It opened in June 2018, on the same day as another revamped casino, the Ocean Casino Resort, which is the former Revel casino.Hard Rock and Ocean, along wit...