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    ‘Below Deck Sailing Yacht’: Georgia Grobler Reveals What She Really Thinks of Jenna MacGillivray – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Georgia Grobler from Below Deck Sailing Yacht seems to finally be hitting her stride. She struggled during the first few charters, being brought to tears at one point after feeling diminished by chef Adam Glick.

    Grobler also had a strained relationship with chief stew Jenna MacGillivray. She confided in MacGillivray about Glick but became exasperated with MacGillivray when she broke her confidence. MacGillivray told Glick that Grobler was struggling to help, but it seemed to do more damage to their relationship.

    Although they got off to a rocky start, Grobler seems to be more confident and happier in her job. But what does she think about MacGillivray? Plus, what did MacGillivray tell Showbiz Cheat Sheet about why she laughed when Grobler was crying?

    Despite the tension, Grobler said she has respect for MacGillivray. I still have a respect for Jenna, I mean, I even have respect for Adam, Grobler told Decider. Youre my bosses, you can do whatever you want and say whatever you want, that is the nature of the business. Im a third stew, Im literally at the bottom of the hierarchy, so its cool.

    Grobler also likes MacGillivray socially. Jenna in a different context, when you take out the boss element or you take out the Adam/Jenna gossip circle thing, when you take all of that out, I like Jenna, she shared. She and I chat a hell of a lot. Social medias laid into Jenna recently and Im one of the people that if I wanted to I could be all whiney about mine and Jennas dynamic but I feel sorry for the way people are attacking her because shes a strong cup of tea.

    But what about when MacGillivray wanted to give Grobler a hug when she was crying? UmIve got physical boundaries and Ive got very serious physical trust. I really have to trust you. We have to be close for us to hug or do this and that, she shared about why she rejected a hug from MacGillivray.

    MacGillivray also has compassion for Grobler and likes her. I have empathy for Georgia, she told Showbiz Cheat Sheet. And, you know, being new and not having worked for somebody, and that was really difficult. Honestly, Georgia, one on one was really cool we had some really good conversations. And shed be somebody who I would totally go out with and have fun with and enjoy.

    She added that she typically has time to train green stews, but that wasnt in the cards this season. When I hire students, I typically have a couple of months to prepare them for charter, she said. I feel [badly] for green stews to come into something like that and dont know whats going on or what to expect. Thats super hard, I totally get that.

    MacGillivray also clarified what happened when she was caught laughing while Grobler was in tears. I never laughed at Georgia crying. In that moment I did laugh. I did. But I was laughing at the absurdity of it. Like if you asked your kid to clean up his room and he was like, No! and started crying. Its like, Oh my God, I made him cry! It was like that. It wasnt like I was like, F**k her. I was never my intent.

    Below Deck Sailing Yachtairs Mondays at 9/8c on Bravo.

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    'Below Deck Sailing Yacht': Georgia Grobler Reveals What She Really Thinks of Jenna MacGillivray - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

    Twilight Time: Serling baseball comedy on deck – News from southeastern Connecticut – theday.com

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Years before he journeyed to "The Twilight Zone," Rod Serling made a brief detour to the strike zone.

    To many, he's the foreboding figure in black and white who gave the world the heebie-jeebies with those bizarre, mind-bending tales of cannibal aliens, talking dolls and phone calls from the grave.

    Smoldering cigarette in hand, he unleashed macabre mayhem in a classic TV show that resonates decades later in endless reruns.

    "That's how a lot of people pictured Dad," daughter Anne Serling said.

    But, there was another dimension to Rod Serling: His love of baseball.

    And Serling aficionados and sports fans will soon get a chance to experience it. Think there's no baseball on the radio? Think again.

    "O'Toole From Moscow," a long-lost comedy Serling wrote about the national pastime, is on deck.

    It's a screwball romp, with a side of whimsy: At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, a Soviet Embassy worker fritters away time rooting for the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field, then skips town with a comrade who suddenly becomes the greatest slugger ever for the Cincinnati Reds.

    Serling's 1955 script, which was performed only once, is being brought to life in Cincinnati. A public radio station there will air it March 25, which originally was the eve of the opening day matchup between the host Reds and the St. Louis Cardinals, before the coronavirus prompted MLB postponements.

    "Kind of a gift from my dad back in time," Anne said. "There is a magical quality to it, isn't there?"

    "It's his voice," she said from her home in Ithaca, New York. "I could so much imagine my dad writing this."

    Easily, in fact.

    "There's a line in there: 'Give me a stick and I'll beat it to death.' That's an expression he used all the time," she said. "There's so much of my dad in this. I can envision his words throughout this."

    Hers, too. Anne is the narrator and introduces the program, as the stage directions called for, in clipped Rod Serling style.

    The hour-long show is peppered with references to brawny Reds slugger Ted Kluszewski, Stan Musial, Willie Mays, Duke Snider and other stars of the day and begins at 8 p.m. Wednesday on WVXU-FM 91.7, with live streaming at wvxu.org.

    A twi-nighter, of sorts. OK, but why Cincinnati?

    From 1950-54, Serling worked there for WLW, typing out promos, ads and other fixtures. At night, though, he wrote freelance scripts for local and national TV shows.

    "O'Toole From Moscow" was televised live by "NBC Matinee Theater" on the afternoon of Dec. 12, 1955, during the days of the Red Scare.

    Famed big league manager Leo Durocher and John Banner, best known as Sergeant Schultz in "Hogan's Heroes," appeared in the show that featured Chuck Connors, the former major leaguer who later starred in the TV Western, The Rifleman.

    There are no known tapes or recordings of that show, which aired four years before Serling created "The Twilight Zone."

    That's where John Kiesewetter got involved. The Serling fan, longtime Cincinnati Enquirer newspaperman and current Media Beat blogger for WXVU first heard about the show in 1989 and was intrigued. He eventually tracked down the script and oversaw a project to adapt it for radio.

    "Not many people can say they spent a summer rewriting Rod Serling," he kidded.

    Kiesewetter lined up the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music to provide actors, guided by CCM professor of acting and directing Richard Hess, and recorded the show in November.

    Reds organist John Schutte was brought over from Great American Ball Park to play "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," other stadium background and even a little Russian folk music. But none of those eerie echoes from "The Twilight Zone" theme.

    Kiesewetter also went to a local gym where a couple guys hit with wood bats, recording the loud cracks with his phone to set the scene.

    "The ball sounds like it's exploding," he said. Great sound effect.

    For Anne Serling, such sounds bring back fond memories of driving around the Los Angeles freeways with her dad, listening to a ballgame.

    He loved the Dodgers, hearing Vin Scully on the radio. I can recall him being quite enraged, slapping his palm against the wheel when things didn't go right for them.

    Carl Erskine pitched for the Dodgers back then, starting in 1948 with Brooklyn. Now 93, the All-Star is prominently mentioned in this version of Serling's comedy.

    "Now that's a real script. That's amazing," Erskine said from his home in Anderson, Indiana. I liked 'The Twilight Zone' and I remember the music that played behind it. Nice to hear I'm in this one.

    A postscript, submitted for your approval:

    Why Serling picked the name "O'Toole" remains a mystery. It certainly wasn't common in sports. Until Serling's script, there had been exactly one O'Toole in the majors -- Marty, a pitcher who debuted in 1908 with (naturally) the Reds and stuck around the bigs for a bit.

    Some older fans might note that a few years after "O'Toole from Moscow" ran, a young lefty came out of college and showed up in Cincinnati. Jim O'Toole was pretty good, pitching Cincinnati into the 1961 World Series.

    But try to explain this: Serling wrote only one baseball-themed episode of "The Twilight Zone," about a robot pitcher titled "The Mighty Casey." It ran in 1960 and starred Robert Sorrells as the unusual moundsman.

    Sorrells, sadly, drew attention later in life. At 74, he shot and killed a man in a Southern California bar and died in prison years later.

    News reports of the case listed Sorrells' acting credits, but mostly skipped his work in a long-forgotten TV comedy from the early 1960s with a Navy backdrop.

    It was called ... Ensign O'Toole.

    Coincidence? Could be. Or maybe just cue the "Twilight Zone" music and let that Serling touch slip into the shadows, too.

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    Twilight Time: Serling baseball comedy on deck - News from southeastern Connecticut - theday.com

    All hands on deck to save Kenyan football stranded at the high seas – Daily Nation

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By ROY GACHUHIMore by this Author

    All hands on deck is an expression of naval origin made by the captain of a stricken ship. It required all sailors on board to stop what they were doing and immediately report to the deck to help navigate the vessel through a storm or whatever other emergency it was in.

    Kenyan football is in a similar situation. It is in a life-threatening state, showing weak spasms of movement here and there, and if Football Kenya Federation is allowed to continue at the helm alone, our football will die.

    Some people actually think it is already dead but to me there is still a feeble pulse. However, without further loss of time, it must be all hands on deck now before it succumbs to mismanagement and incompetence.

    Never in the history of this country has our national sport been in such a bad state. Even in the amateur days when players sometimes staged coups against their elected officials, livelihoods were not an issue.

    Today, players are going without food. And these are players, so-called professionals, who depend entirely on their football career to feed themselves and their families. If this is not an emergency, what is?

    Imagine watching an award-winning photograph of yourself scoring a goal or saving one on the morning that red-eyed street toughs wielding huge padlocks and chains come to lock your house because you have defaulted on rent payment despite several reminders.

    You are two diametrically different people at the same time: one is a national asset who bears our flag on international duty and the other is a man who cannot provide for his family through no fault of his own but because of the incompetence, arrogance and possible corruption of others. What kind of life is this?

    In all my career, I cant remember reporting on a match where the home team gave its visitors a walkover because it could not afford to host them.

    In fact, the problems I covered revolved around clubs splitting into two with each claiming to be the bona fide team.

    There were walkovers all right but that was because of disagreements over who should play; sometimes exasperated referees blew the final whistle after 10 minutes just to break the deadlock. In other words, there was too much football, not too little of it.

    And despite passing the hat around to raise money, teams still managed to travel to other towns, the wrangle-ridden ones causing mayhem over who the match officials should admit into the pitch. The history of our game shows that some of the best known teams, although now long dead, were actually splinter sides. Think about that kind of vibrancy.

    Today, some home teams cant raise a side. What is more, even our most popular clubs are now practically destitute. They beg their players to play after scrounging around for somebodys lose change so as to make partial payments.

    This has been made to look normal and it isnt. It is utterly abnormal. If the federation cannot attract sponsors for the most popular game in Kenya and the world, its raison d'tre ceases. It should go home at once. It is a deadweight on the country.

    Football Kenya Federation is currently grappling with a debt of Sh109 owed to former Harambee Stars coach Adel Amrouche. Its president, Nick Mwendwa, who all facts show wilfully got Kenya into that hole, wants the public to foot that bill.

    It is one of the most obnoxious habits by far too many public officials in Kenya. Without even the slightest pretence to any modicum of responsibility, they transfer personal misconduct to overtaxed Kenyans to deal with.

    One world leader whose views I could never stomach was the late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. But she once made a speech on taxes whose contents I filed somewhere.

    She said: Let us never forget this fundamental truth the State has no source of money other than the money people earn themselves. If the State wishes to spend more it can do so only by borrowing your savings or by taxing you more. And it is no good thinking someone else will pay. That someone else is you. There is no such thing as public money; there is only taxpayers money. And no nation ever grew more prosperous by taxing its citizens beyond their capacity to pay.

    When Nick Mwendwa asked the government to foot Adel Amrouches bill, the government should have responded by surcharging him with the same.

    Harambee Stars coach Adel Amrouche gives instructions to players from the touch-line during their GOtv Cecafa Senior Challenge Group A match East against South Sudan on November 30, 2013 at Nyayo Stadium. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

    The government has no money for such a purpose and Sports Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohammed was right on the ball when she told him as much.

    That money is Nick Mwendwas debt to pay and if he cannot do that, he should be dealt with as the law demands. Nothing less, nothing more.

    Football Kenya Federation president (FKF) Nick Mwendwa address delegates during the Special General Meeting at Safari Park hotel, Nairobi on January 28, 2020. PHOTO | LUCY WANJIRU |

    I asked Sam Nyamweya how Kenya came by this bill which his successor at FKF wants us to pay. He told me: Adel Amrouche had a valid contract with us. But when he was suspended by CAF, it became imperative to hire somebody else to handle the national team. That is why we turned to Bobby Williamson. But I made it clear to him that he was with us on a temporary basis pending the return of Adel.

    This is what I said to Nick. I told him that to terminate Adel, he had to pay him. To continue with him, he had to pay him. So it was a question of whether he wanted to pay him to work or not to work because either way, he was going to pay him.

    But once in office, Nick arbitrarily threw everything out of the window and brought in his own man, Stanley Okumbi. The millions FKF was going to pay Adel were a forgone conclusion from day one. It was not a question of if but when and how much.

    Kenyas football scene is completely desolate. In a manner of speaking, the clubs and their players are dead men walking. The stadiums they play in are virtually empty.

    The sponsors are gone. One of the two main stadiums in the country has not been available for more than two years and the other one is usually only free after a struggle. Its surface, when it rains, turns into a mud bath while its roofs gush in floods. And the federation has nothing to say about all this to the government even as its city-based teams travel distances out of town, digging into bare pockets to stage their matches.

    The federation, reeling under a mountain of self-inflicted debt, exists to exist. Its primary goal is self-preservation, not service provision. That is why it concocted a raft of rules to disbar everyone but its own to run for its presidency.

    But thank goodness there was a Sports Disputes Tribunal to call it out. As things stand in the country today, if FKF is allowed to continue at the helm of Kenyan football, we must give up on our future which will continue to belong to other Africans Algerians, Cameroonians, Nigerians, Senegalese and practically everyone else.

    Sports Disputes Tribunal chairman John Ohaga delivers the ruling on December 2, 2019 in Nairobi. PHOTO | CHRIS OMOLLO |

    This is untenable. It cannot and should not be allowed.

    We cannot wait for the captain to shout All hands on deck! He wont. He would rather the ship sinks than part with the controls.

    We must seize the deck and assume control of the vessel. The time for a normalisation committee is now because the term of the present office has already expired.

    I have been a voracious consumer of books by African writers. One of the novels I enjoyed the most was Elechi Amadis The Great Ponds. In an early scene, Ejimole, a prisoner held captive for poaching fish in the Pond of Wagaba, decries the conditions of his captivity:

    This treatment is worse than death, he sobs.

    His captor is unmoved. Dont be too sure, he tells Ejimole. At any rate, death is not always the worst thing that can happen to a man.

    What begins as a fight between two villages over control of fish ponds gradually turns into their own devastation by a mysterious disease. People die one by one and it is gut-wrenching. Nobody is able to stop the deaths. Grave after grave fills up.

    From the anonymous villager to the chief, the society is grappling in the dark, trying this and that for a cure, praying to this or that god. They are helpless. The very last paragraph of the novel reads:

    But it was only the beginning. Wonjo, as the villagers called the Great Influenza of 1918, was to claim a grand total of some twenty million lives all over the world. This week, I googled this occurrence and various sources put the deaths at between 50 and 100 million.

    The Great Ponds, a compelling work of literature by one of Africas most elegant writers in my estimation, is now haunting me and I will admit that I cant remember the last time I have spent days on end holed up in my house in such low spirits. A mysterious disease called coronavirus is upon us and it is consuming people one by one all over the world at a frightening rate.

    It has shut down the world and I am very sad, no matter how I try to raise up my spirits. The figures of people expected to die that experts are putting across are more or less those claimed by Wonjo.

    Who among us will live and who will die? And we are being told that a vaccine is 12-18 months away. The sense of helplessness is crushing. Death is not always the worst thing that can happen to a man? Of course. Doesnt knowing if you will be one of the statistics mean just that?

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    All hands on deck to save Kenyan football stranded at the high seas - Daily Nation

    Carolina Panthers poised to stack the deck this offseason – Cat Crave

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

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    CHARLOTTE, NC NOVEMBER 13: Cam Newton #1 and teammate Christian McCaffrey #22 of the Carolina Panthers look on against the Miami Dolphins in the second quarter during their game at Bank of America Stadium on November 13, 2017 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

    A tumultuous period for the Carolina Panthers football offseason is approaching fast. The patches and plugs for every teams supposed needs will be receiving calls and making plans for the upcoming season and Carolina will undoubtedly be in the mix to make some big moves.

    For the past two seasons Carolina has used free agency to remedy the obvious needs of veteran mentors and talent on their roster by signing players like Torrey Smith and Bruce Irvin. The Panthers have already started down the same path this off-season with an addition of left tackle Russell Okung. Now they have to set their sights on other targets.

    The free agent market just became flooded with starting talent all across the board, particularly at the defensive lineman position. The chance that Carolina will find a reasonably-priced plug for their issues on run defense before April just increased drastically (although I believe theyll still walk away with at least one defensive tackle from this draft).

    This works to the benefit of the Panthers as they can shift the draft priority around and find some long-term options to fill the voids left by linebacker Luke Kuechly and (possibly) James Bradberry with the acquisitions of some backfield barracudas in the first and second round. Additionally, the Panthers will avoid breaking the bank for a quarterback and a running back which will leave room to acquire more replacements for their losses this off-season.

    It looks like Dontari Poe wont be returning to the Panthers, so now theres more cap space to make all of the other necessary moves. The re-signature of Tre Boston could be the beginning of a serendipitous cascade of events if the Panthers play their cards right.

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    Carolina Panthers poised to stack the deck this offseason - Cat Crave

    Minnesotans stand on balconies and porches to sing – KARE11.com

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Inspired by a community in Italy, the idea has taken hold in Twin Cities neighborhoods

    MINNEAPOLIS Neighbors craving signs of hope are finding it in song, on their front steps, balconies and the porches of their homes.

    For four nights straight, Michele Hoch has stood in front of her South Minneapolis home singing John Lennons Imagine.

    For the first time, she was joined by her upstairs neighbor, Karen Smith, singing from her balcony.

    Stuck at home, Karen laughs. Introverts unite.

    Inspired by a community in Italy during its battle with coronavirus, the 7 p.m. nightly sing-along has gained traction on social media and spread to neighborhood across the Twin Cities.

    They may be the only person on their block, but it just makes you feel connected to your community, Hoch says.

    KARE 11s coverage of the coronavirus is rooted in Facts, not Fear. Visit kare11.com/coronavirus for comprehensive coverage, find outwhat you need to know about the Midwest specifically, learn more about thesymptoms, and keep tabs on thecases around the world here. Have a question? Text it to us at 763-797-7215. And get the latest coronavirus updates sent right to your inbox every morning. Subscribe to the KARE 11 Sunrise newsletter here. Help local families in need: http://www.kare11.com/give11.

    The state of Minnesota has set up a hotline for general questions about coronavirus at 651-201-3920 or 1-800-657-3903, available 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

    More information on the coronavirus:

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    Minnesotans stand on balconies and porches to sing - KARE11.com

    Coronavirus canceled a wedding and band practice. But these friends didn’t give up – VC Star

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    An epidemiologist answers the biggest questions she's getting about coronavirus. Wochit

    Editor's note:The Star is making this story free to readers due to public health concerns related to coronavirus. Please consider a digital subscription to The Star so we can continue doing this important work.

    John Gahan stepped out of his Ventura home Tuesday night, his mandolin in his hand, and sat down on the porch.

    It was 8 p.m. and he started to play.

    He had gotten the idea earlier while talking over the phone withhis brother-in-law in Barcelona. In home isolation because of the new coronavirus, people in the city 6,000 miles away started takinginstruments out on their balconies and played each night at 8.

    They did it in honor of all those working at hospitals and clinics to save lives, his brother-in-law told him and his wife.

    "I thought I could do that from here," Gahan said.

    The new virus hit Ventura later than Barcelona. As the number of cases rose locally, public health officials first urged social distancingand later ordered Californians to shelter at home.

    Families, classmates, friends, bands, even neighbors were physically divided as lines grew and the shelves emptied at grocery stores. Schools were closed. Gyms, bars anddine-in restaurants followed suit.

    Gatherings bigger than 250 people were canceled,then those with more than 50and finally more than 10.

    Before Gahan started to play that first night,he crafted an email to his fellow members of a band called Pint of Irish.

    "8:00 Tonight And Every Night I Can (For At Least A While)," he wrote in the subject line.

    He toldhis bandmates what his brother-in-law had told him.

    "Anyway, in honor of health care workers everywhere dealing with this, I'm going to do it tonight and every night that I can for a while," he wrote. "I'llgo out on my porch and bang out a couple tunes.If anybody is interested, join me from your porch. I'll be listening."

    More: Coronavirus: How you can help in Ventura County during the COVID-19 outbreak

    The spot set up for a wedding at Lisa and Jeff Daniel's Santa Paula home.(Photo: Contributed photo/The Daniels)

    On the same night in Santa Paula, Susie Yee stood with her husband, Dan, and watched their youngest get married.

    A small group of family members sat inchairs or stood in the grass, a majestic oak tree nearby.

    It wasn't how it was supposed to happen.

    Laurie Yee and Landin Osbornegot engaged lastJune andhadaMarch 21 wedding scheduledata private residence and barn in Oxnard.

    They had planned for nine months and felt lucky to find the spot just a mile from Laurie's childhood home. About 125 peoplewere coming, including family flying in from homes scattered around the country.

    Deposits were made and then the new coronavirus swept through the U.S.

    Family members who had planned to stick around after the wedding for a reunion of sortshad to cancel. The wedding also had to be called off.

    "There were a lot of tears and disappointment," Susie Yee said.

    But while the wedding day they planned was off,neither bride or groom wanted to wait to get married. However this crisis was going to play out, they said they wanted to go through it together.

    Lisa Daniel read her friend Yee's Facebook message about the canceled wedding and reached out.

    I thought, Well, they still want to get married and I have this big beautiful oak tree with green grass under it,' " she said.

    More: Food Share, local pantries worry about volunteers, donations as coronavirus takes a toll

    Susie and Dan Yee at the Santa Paula home where their youngest child got married last week. The bride and groom had to cancel the large wedding they had been planning for months because of the coronavirus.(Photo: Contributed photo/The Yees)

    There wasnt room at the Daniels' Santa Paula home to host a big wedding. But a big wedding couldn't happen anymore.

    "We trimmed everything way back," Susie Yee said. "But once we knew this was the place, it was like the clouds lifted."

    The Daniels invited them to their home.A friend of her daughterdonated flowers from her farm. Another friend of the family gave them a reduced price for photos.

    Even though everyone is going through tough times, Yee said, so many people put everything aside to make the night happen. And, it would happenrain or shine.

    By 2 p.m. Tuesday,the raintapered off and the sun came out. Lisa and her husband, Jeff, dried off their patio chairs and set them up by the big oak, keeping them spaced apart.

    I had a wooden table here in my house that I had actually hauled to San Francisco when my daughter got married for an outdoor wedding, she said. I just pulled that thing back out there, and we used it for another wedding.

    In the end, most of thedetails didnt really matter.

    There was a pastor.The bride had a dress, and the groom had a suit. He played a song he had written on his guitar while she walked down the aisle. Someone took video for everyone who wasn't able to be there.

    "I swear it was like the best way to have a wedding," Yee said.

    An old photo shows Pint of Irish practicing before coronavirus required social distancing.(Photo: Contributed photo/Mike McChesney)

    At 8 on Wednesday night, Gerry McGuirecoaxed notes of a couple Irish songs from hisconcertina.

    He couldn't hear the other members of Pint of Irish but knew they were out there.

    The night after Gahan's email, ahalf-dozen or so played at their homes separated by miles or cities in some cases. By Thursday, the number had doubled, and on Friday night, a neighbor of the Gahans even joined in, playing a bongo drum.

    Any weirdness about playing alone in the dark on his Venturapatio faded quickly, McGuire said."It's a good feeling to be doing something."

    In his 80s, hehad taken the call to stay at home seriously.

    "My wife had a doctor's appointment today. It was the first time we left the house since this happened," he said one day last week.

    They have some family in the area and two neighbors already hadoffered to bring foodif or when they need it. One neighbor had posted some mailfor them.

    "We're doing fine," McGuire said.

    As he played "Merry Blacksmith" that night, his wife cheering him on from inside, he didn't know if his neighbors listened in.

    "Nobody threw anything. I know that," McGuiresaid laughing."I didn't see anyone, but I imagine they were in awe."

    More: Cafe Society: Ventura County restaurants address dining in the time of coronavirus

    John Gahan, in the blue shirt, plays with Pint of Irish band members pre-coronavirus social distancing.(Photo: Contributed photo/John Gahan)

    The band members choose the songs every day before 8. Mostly, they aim for up-tempo, happy tunes with some lilting melodies mixed in.

    Group leader Mike McChesney, who plays the tin whistle from his Thousand Oaks porch, tried to find a video-conferencing program that they could use.

    It hasn't been entirely successful, but it hasn't really mattered.

    "Even though you're there kind of isolated in your front yard," he said, "you feel like you're part of a group."

    That was kind of the point.

    It is important to take what ishappening seriously, Gahan said. "But I also feel like life doesn't have to be dismal in such circumstances."

    People can find ways to connect, check in on each other, save a weddingand maybe cheer on some health workers with a tune or two.

    "It sounds like it really helps to unite people even if there is a physical distance," Gahan had typed in his message to the band.

    Then, he had clicked send, grabbed a cushion and stepped outside to play.

    Cheri Carlson covers the environment for the Ventura County Star. Reach her at cheri.carlson@vcstar.com or 805-437-0260.

    Read or Share this story: https://www.vcstar.com/story/news/local/2020/03/21/coronavirus-band-members-still-play-miles-apart/2877760001/

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    Coronavirus canceled a wedding and band practice. But these friends didn't give up - VC Star

    Knoxville, Beaverdale host bear hunts, but it’s not what you think – KCCI Des Moines

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Knoxville, Beaverdale host bear hunts, but it's not what you think

    Updated: 8:00 PM CDT Mar 21, 2020

    Knoxville and Beaverdale neighborhoods are taking a page out of the book "We're Going on a Bear Hunt."Homes are putting stuffed animals in windows and on porches so families can go on bear hunts, whether in their cars or on walks. While some people didn't have bears to show, the Cookie Monster made an appearance, and so did some unicorns. To find where bears are in your community, click here.

    Knoxville and Beaverdale neighborhoods are taking a page out of the book "We're Going on a Bear Hunt."

    Homes are putting stuffed animals in windows and on porches so families can go on bear hunts, whether in their cars or on walks.

    While some people didn't have bears to show, the Cookie Monster made an appearance, and so did some unicorns.

    To find where bears are in your community, click here.

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    Knoxville, Beaverdale host bear hunts, but it's not what you think - KCCI Des Moines

    State of the art: How COVID-19 is affecting Charlottesvilles arts community – C-VILLE Weekly

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    As we adjust to life amid the COVID-19 pandemic, well likely turn to the artsa favorite poem, a beloved album, a treasured paintingover and over in search of comfort and relief. Art, in all its forms, is a vital part not just of our personal lives but of our community. Social distancing measures and the resulting venue closures have turned the local creative world upside down, both for individual artists and the organizations that support them. Heres what some of those folks are saying about the state of the arts in Charlottesville, and what might come next.

    St. Patricks Day was supposed to be Matthew ODonnells busiest day of the entire year. A multi-instrumentalist who specializes in Irish music, he was booked for 15 hours of serenading audiences, from senior center residents to late-night beer-swigging revelers.

    But this year, his St. Paddys calendar was wide open. As the COVID-19 pandemic spreads throughout the United States, Virginia governor Ralph Northam has banned all nonessential gatherings of more than 10 people. In response, local venues that support the artsconcert halls, theaters, galleries, bookshops, libraries, restaurant-bars, you name ithave shuttered their doors for an undetermined amount of time.

    This leaves ODonnell and many other artists in Charlottesville without physical places to share their worknot just for arts sake, but for a living. Its also worth noting that many local artists participate in the service industry and gig economythey tend bar, wait tables, work retail, drive ride-shares, and more. And most of those jobs are gone, or paused until, well, who knows when.

    ODonnell makes his entire living from performances, and he looks forward to the month of Marchin large part because of St. Patricks Daywhen he can bring in twice what he makes in an average month, to make up for the lean ones (namely January and February).

    I began to get concerned in late February, as the senior communities closed their doors to visitors, says ODonnell, and that concern grew as gigs canceled one by one during the first couple weeks of March. I thought the worst-case scenario would be that everything would shut down, but I honestly didnt think the worst-case scenario would come.

    At first, it was a professional worry of realizing that all of my business is gone, says ODonnell, who hopes he can make some money by playing donation-based virtual concerts. But the worry, the sadness, has turned personal: These people are my friends, he says of his audiences, particularly those folks at the senior centers. When he sings with them, he says he feels something profound. And [now] I cant go see my friends. I do want to be looking forward to the next thingbut all I know is that the next thing I do is going to be very different from what Ive been doing.

    Graphic novelist Laura Lee Gulledge knows that, too. Im friends with change and constant reinvention, she says. As a full-time artist Gulledge relies not just on book sales and illustration commissions but art teaching residencies. She says she often feels like shell get by on the skin of my teeth, but [I] make it work. Artists are always having to come up with new business models, she says. Its implode or evolve.

    Her new book, The Dark Matter of Mona Starr, is scheduled to be released on April 7, and she planned to launch it at last weeks Virginia Festival of the Book. But the festival was canceled due to the threat of COVID-19, as was the rest of her North American book tour.

    In a way, the book is more relevant than Gulledge could have predicted, or ever wanted to imagine. The protagonist, Mona, is a sensitive and creative teen learning to live with anxiety and depression. In the back of the book, Gulledge includes a guide for creating a self-care plan for particularly dark and stressful times, and she shares her own.

    Its like my masterpiece, she says of The Dark Matter of Mona Starr. I was finally mentally prepared to own it and step into it, and start conversations about mental health and not feel like a fraud.

    Rather than consider the whole thing a wash, Gulledge will do a virtual book tour via Facebook Live, where shell be talking about topics such as drawing through depression and cultivating healthy artistic practices.

    The Front Porch roots music school is also pivoting to an online lessons model, to keep instructors paid and to keep students in practice. Songwriter Devon Sproule (who had to cancel her upcoming U.K. tour) usually teaches somewhere around 80 students a week between group classes and private lessons, and, so far, a handful of them have made the leap to live virtual lessons. Keeping the routine and personal connection of a lesson could be particularly important right now, says Sproule. She had to teach one young pupil how to tune a ukulele, a task Sproule had taken on in their in-person lessons. I had no idea this kid could tune their own ukulele, and I dont think they did either, says Sproule. I think it was empowering.

    The Charlottesville Players Guild, the citys only black theater troupe, has postponed its run of August Wilsons Radio Golf, originally scheduled to premiere at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center April 16. The paid cast and crew were in the middle of rehearsals, and while they hope to be able to open the show on April 30, things are still very uncertain, says CPG artistic director Leslie Scott-Jones. When you hear medical professionals say this might go through July or longer, its like, Whatll we do?

    The JSAAHC has also had to cancel two benefit concerts for Eko Ise, a music conservatory program for local black children, that the center hoped to launch later this year. Now, theyll be months behind in that fundraising effort, says Scott-Jones.

    The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative, which provides not only a physical gallery space for visual and performance art, but funding for public art and after-school programs, has canceled all in-person events (though it is finding creative ways for people to participate from a distance, such as its virtual Quarantine Haiku video series). The Bridge has also postponed its annual Revel fundraiser, originally scheduled for May 2. Revel brings in between 20 and 30 percent of the organizations operating budget for the year, says director Alan Goffinski,

    Gulledge makes an excellent case for continued support of the arts as we face uncertainty: This is the sort of moment where people will look to the creative thinkers to generate hope, and to generate positivity and be beacons of light in this moment of darkness. This is part of our purpose.

    The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative and New City Arts announced Friday, March 20, that it has established the Charlottesville Emergency Relief Fund for Artists. We will have more information on that soon.

    The Front Porch and WTJU 91.1 FM are also teaming up to broadcast live concertsFriday and Wednesday evenings. Follow us at @cville_culture on Twitter for regular updates about virtual arts eventsthat will take place over the coming weeks.

    Continued here:
    State of the art: How COVID-19 is affecting Charlottesvilles arts community - C-VILLE Weekly

    Front Porch: Follow health experts advice, and lets also think long term – The Spokesman-Review

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The partial but increasingly growing, self-imposed isolation has begun.

    I am writing these words on Sunday, and it will be a couple of days before they are out in print and online. Who knows what will happen between now and then, what with how fast this coronavirus is moving and affecting society?

    Like many of us, I am voraciously consuming news about the COVID-19 pandemic. No need to panic, but definitely time to respond, to take steps and to not be stupid as in overreacting and moving into the old Cold War bunker out in the backyard or ignore everything and go about life as usual with a false sense of invincibility.

    And even though it appears most people who get this darn thing will come through it OK, I do think a bit of alarm is understandable and maybe even helpful. But please, keep perspective.

    I went to Costco on Saturday. I needed a few things and had been waiting until my list was long enough to merit a trip there (toilet paper was not on the list). I had tried the day before, but there were cars parked everywhere, including in spots Im sure were not actual parking places, and I saw maybe just a dozen shopping carts available outside the store. Yikes. I came back Saturday morning about 20 minutes before the store opened, so I could park within sight of the store.

    By the time I shopped and fled, the place was jammed. The butcher told me the day before they sold out all the products they made from scratch (meatloaf and mashed potatoes, chicken enchiladas, mac n cheese, etc.), and were working feverishly to catch up and restock. The checker told me they had just experienced their highest volume sales days two days in a row.

    I kept looking at the overloaded carts that went by me. Every one had in it at least one giant size or multiple packages of the following: toilet paper, paper towels, cleaning products, liquid hand soap and the like. I saw one of the big flat carts that had stacked on it about half a pallet of ramen meals.

    Theres preparedness and then theres whatever this was.

    When I was growing up in Florida, there was a regular drill when a hurricane was approaching. It was fairly simple, and it made sense. And it was adapted based on specific circumstance. For example, we had a neighbor with a swimming pool who was often out of town. If he wasnt there when a storm approached, wed go over to remove and stash the cushions from his outdoor furniture and throw the furniture into the pool. In a hurricane, everything becomes a potentially lethal projectile.

    Since then the state has created an incredible preparedness and response network, including staging areas of material, which can be relocated quickly depending on where the storm will hit. Its a model for the nation.

    Anticipate, prepare and do what makes sense.

    Our son was supposed to fly into Spokane this week. My husband wisely nixed the trip. Sam agreed. He texted: Although Im not in a high-risk group, should I catch something on the plane and visit my, ahem, elderly parents, well

    And hes right. Bruce and are I are in our 70s, which is the hardest-hit population, with the highest death rate. And while we dont have the kinds of respiratory or immuno-suppressed ailments that appear to be exacerbating factors, by virtue of our age and the fact that we do have some health things were dealing with, we reside in COVID-19s target demographic.

    The good news, if its even appropriate to think in those terms yet, is that this pandemic seems largely to be skipping the children. A silver lining to be sure.

    I remember when I first began writing about historic landmarks, Id spend time tromping through cemeteries in Spokane and in rural areas of the region. I saw so many grave markers with the date of 1918 on them and often a simple Baby Jones or Infant girl Smith. Those, of course, were the result of the infamous Spanish flu pandemic that infected fully one-third of the worlds population at the time and killed 20-50 million people (675,000 of whom were Americans), mostly between the ages 20 to 40.

    And for those of us with the target on our backs now, we love the little ones in our lives, but they could quite likely carry the disease to us when we grab them up in the hugs that we love to give them. A lot of things need to change, at least until were on the downside of the coronavirus bell curve we are climbing. And yet, we dont want to scare the children.

    Washing hands, social distancing, limiting large-group exposure, staying home more, covering a cough with the crook of our elbows, not shaking hands and not touching our faces easy(ish) to do. Not hugging a grandchild is a whole lot tougher.

    And then theres the issue of trying to work at home. I do that already. But my husband goes to peoples homes and businesses to do his work. If you are a server in a restaurant, for example, you cant work from home. Kids are out of school. How do you manage child care and still work?

    I dont need to itemize all the hurdles and problems were in the midst of, or are coming. Or to jump into the discussion of how and why were not farther along in dealing with this. Conversation for another time.

    Were here now, so for now, lets just proceed with an abundance of caution, do what the virologists and health care professionals tell us.

    But lets begin the process of thinking long term, getting set up, preparing for next time, too. Like with hurricanes, its not if, but rather when one will hit. Lets get smart about these viruses. They may well be the hurricanes of the future.

    Voices correspondent Stefanie Pettit can be reached by email at upwindsailor@comcast.net.

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    Front Porch: Follow health experts advice, and lets also think long term - The Spokesman-Review

    Millions of Americans are suddenly working from home. That’s a huge security risk – CNN

    - March 22, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    At one major US agency, some officials have resorted to holding meetings on iPhone group calls because the regular conference bridges haven't always been working, according to one federal employee. But the workaround has its limits: The group calls support only five participants at a time, the employee noted.

    "Things have worked better than I anticipated, but there are lots of hiccups still," said the employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak on the record.

    As they increasingly log on from home, Americans are having to meld their personal technology with professional tools at unprecedented scale. For employers, the concern isn't just about capacity, but also about workers introducing new potential vulnerabilities into their routine whether that's weak passwords on personal computers, poorly secured home WiFi routers, or a family member's device passing along a computer virus.

    "All it takes is one of their kids to get [electronically] infected and it spreads inside the house," said Marcus Sachs, a former vice president for national security policy at Verizon.

    From there, experts say, malware could easily jump from a compromised employee's machine into a connected office network.

    A big test for government computer systems

    This year, those numbers may shift dramatically.

    "I'm sure every agency right now is scrambling to load-test their VPNs and access points to make sure not just 10 or 20 percent of their workforce can log on, but 70 or 80 or 90 percent," said the former chief information officer of a major US agency. "That will be a challenge, for sure."

    Not all government agencies use VPNs exclusively anymore. As online storage and computing platforms have taken hold in corporate America, so too have they spread in government IT systems. Now, it's more common to see civil servants logging into cloud-based applications and services from wherever they are.

    Others may not have access to office computing devices that they can take home with them either because they were never expected to work remotely, or perhaps because their work may be extremely sensitive.

    How the intelligence community is adapting

    Among the federal workers most hamstrung by efforts to reduce their presence in the workplace are members of the intelligence community. Working on topics and systems that are classified makes it difficult at best to work from home, if not impossible.

    "There are some very senior military and government officials who have the capability to do up to Secret [work] from their house, but we're talking about four-star generals and admirals and things like that," said Jamie Barnett, a retired US Navy rear admiral and senior vice president of government services for the secure communications firm RigNet.

    "For other classified work, there's going to be limited facilities to be able to do that," Barnett added, "so that's going to take some grappling."

    Agencies have already enacted safety measures and made leave policies more flexible. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence -- which oversees 16 different intelligence agencies -- says it is "reducing staff contact88 through a variety of options including staggered shifts, flexible schedules, and social distancing practices."

    In a business that demands 24/7 attention, the agencies "are also developing and implementing appropriate response plans" an ODNI spokesperson added.

    Dealing with COVID-19, however, "is a contingency for which the IC never prepared," said former National Intelligence Council chairman Greg Treverton.

    Some who work in intelligence are contractors who, due to contract provisions, must physically report to a government facility and do their jobs under direct oversight, said the former CIO. It's possible those contracts may be reinterpreted in light of the coronavirus crisis, he said.

    Intelligence officials certainly have technology and practices that would make them among the most digitally secure to work outside the office, but they're still exposed. In the best of times, for example, intelligence officials can't even bring their mobile phones into the workplace, recognizing the security risk that they are.

    Working at home, "you get more vulnerable and you get much less efficient because you're being careful," adds Treverton, who said that for the country at large, the security issues associated with teleworking are an "enormous vulnerability."

    Still, the rise of cloud computing means many workplaces are in a much better position for telework than they were even a few years ago.

    "If this had happened five years ago, I would guess that a very, very large percentage of government employees would not be able to remotely access their systems or do anything from home," said Gordon Bitko, a former FBI chief information officer. "Today, that's definitely not true. I can't speak to every agency, but it's far, far greater than it was."

    Continue reading here:
    Millions of Americans are suddenly working from home. That's a huge security risk - CNN

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