Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Q: My apartment on the 12th floor, with southeast exposure is wonderfully sunny. Plants do well, and I enjoy the light and the view all day. However, the sun has bleached both wood and upholstered furniture and some carpet. I don't want to close the drapes and live in the dark. Can my windows be treated? Who does this work and what is the expected cost
A: Having window film installed on the inside of your windows could be the solution. These films come with a wide variety of characteristics, enabling them to let certain wavelengths of light through while reflecting or absorbing other wavelengths.
Window film cannot totally prevent fading because other factors, such as humidity, account for about 5 percent of the problem. But depending on the window film you select, it can go a long way toward reducing the problem. All films block virtually all ultraviolet rays from the sun, which are responsible for about 45 percent of fading. Films also can block the rays that together cause about half of fading: visible light and infrared light, which causes heat.
Because you live in a tall building with many other units, begin by checking with the building managers about whether there are restrictions on window films. Some types make windows a lot more reflective on the outside. Some buildings have no rules on this, and let occupants decide how to treat their windows. Others want a uniform exterior appearance and rule out highly reflective films.
Once you know the rules, make an appointment to have a window film installer visit your apartment. Installers typically bring samples so you can see the differences in how the films affect your light and your view. Installers can also recommend suitable options if you have double-pane windows, because films that absorb infrared light can cause glass to heat up enough to break the seals of glass and void warranties. Be sure to ask the installer to leave you with a sample or two of films you like so you can check the effect in different conditions: sunny and cloudy and on different times of the day.
Before the visit, read up on the basics about window films. It will help you ask better questions and help keep you from wondering later whether you got an honest sales pitch. One good place to start is the Efficient Window Coverings website (efficientwindowcoverings.org), which allows you to compare the benefits of various window treatments from films to drapes to awnings and then drill down to the highest-rated products in each category. This website is focused on energy savings, which you didn't mention as a prime consideration. But solving your fading issue can also save energy, so failing to factor that in would be shortsighted. And one benefit of using this website as a starting point is it doesn't have a financial stake in its recommendations. It was developed by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in partnership with Building Green (buildinggreen.com), a consulting and training company that began as the publisher of Environmental Building News, a newsletter that played a pivotal role in developing the green building movement.
This website uses the term "applied film" to distinguish the type of film you might want from "seasonal film," which is the shrink-wrap-type plastic that people sometimes put up in the winter to cover drafty windows. Of all the many interior window treatments, applied film ranks highest if you select "view" and "visible transmittance" (i.e., the amount of visible light) as crucial factors and "solar heat control" and "glare control" as important ones.
For window-film manufacturers, the site lists only companies that meet two criteria. Their products must be tested according to standards from the National Fenestration Rating Council, the same industry group that ensures uniform comparisons of the energy issues related to windows. And the manufacturers must warranty their products for at least 10 years. The site says only three companies meet these standards Johnson Window Films (johnsonwindowfilms.com), Solar Gard (solargard.com) and Solutia Performance Films, which recently became part of Eastman Chemical Co. (eastman.com/pages/solutia.aspx). The manufacturers can point you to installers in your area.
Estimating the installed cost of window film is difficult without knowing all the specifics the size of your windows, how high they reach up from the floor, and whether the glass consists of large panes or small panels. And, of course, the cost varies by the type of film you select. The sales manager at General Solar Co. in Gaithersburg, which carries Eastman's Llumar line of window films and others, said that for 100 square feet of windows, the cost of film and labor could run $9 to $24 a square foot. The Efficient Window Coverings website estimates costs based on a single window 30 inches wide by 60 inches tall at $80 for standard films and $125 for ones that let more visible light through while rejecting other wavelengths, such as infrared.
If you can afford it, professionally applied window film is definitely the way to go. The product selection and warranties are better, and there's less risk of having hair, lint or other debris trapped between the film and the glass. But for people on a tight budget, especially for renters who aren't sure how long they will stay, do-it-yourself installation is an option. Efficient Window Coverings estimates the DIY-installed cost for that 30-by-60-inch window at $10. DIY films include ones that are glued on via an adhesive backing and ones that grip the glass through static cling. Gila Platinum Heat-Control Window Film blocks UV, lets most visible light through, and cuts down on heat. It's $37.97 for a 36-inch by 180-inch roll at Lowe's. Gila is an Eastman brand, one of the companies recommended by Efficient Window Coverings, but in this DIY product it comes with a two-year warranty, including against breaking seals on glass in double-pane windows, provided the windows are still covered by the manufacturer's warranty.
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Stop the sun from bleaching upholstery and carpets - Worcester Telegram
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Plans were announced last week to convert Meadowlark Commons, a transitional housing facility at 100 W. Second, into a new 20-bed social detoxification and drug and alcohol abuse treatment center for Hutchinson.
The move, however, is dependent on New Beginnings, the nonprofit that owns and operates the facility, coming up with some $200,000 to make necessary improvements to the aging building, including adding a fire sprinkler system.
Officials hope to have beds available by March or April.
The decision was one of two major announcements in the battle against drug and alcohol abuse in Reno County made during a meeting of the Community Drug Task Force on Tuesday.
The other is that Summit Surgical is now hosting a residential medical detoxification program within its facility on East 23rd Avenue. Itopened last week.
Conversion
While their primary focus for the past 30 years has been on housing, Shara Gonalez, executive director of New Beginnings, said shes been working with others to bring a detox center to Hutchinson since 1998.
Gonzales noted that Meadowlark Commons was repurposed in 2004 from a former hotel into transitional and emergency housing using 15-year tax credits. As those tax credits expire on Dec. 31, the agency will own the buildings free and clear, enabling it to modify its use.
It made so much sense that it becomes a detox center, Gonzales said. Its centrally located and has got a drive-through.
New Beginnings will be partnering with the Substance Abuse Center of Kansas, or SACK, to provide services. That agency has had an office at New Beginnings for 14 years and operates the 14-bed Recovery Center in Wichita.
In order to do it, there are adaptations that need to happen to the building to make it licensable for a treatment facility, Gonzales said. Thats part of why we were waiting to say anything, to get some ideas of what that would look like. At this point, its about $200,000. Thats money we have to find to be able to make this into a detox and treatment facility.
When they originally converted the building into emergency and transitional housing, it was grandfathered in so fire sprinklers didnt have to be added. With the change in use, however, now a system will be required. That will account for about half the remodeling cost, Gonzales said.
Another need will be drilling wells and installing pumps to deal with persistent under-flooding from the high water table created by last years floods.
Social detox
The priority will be establishing the social detox, said Harold Casey, president and CEO of SACK.
The highest risk person is the one coming from a hospital after being stabilized, he said. Two or three days after being back from the hospital they begin to withdraw from the depressants given at the hospital to stabilize them.
They hope to have beds available by March or April.
Initially, theyll try to open with 20 beds and over time expand it to 30 or 35.
They will put two people to a room and, in some larger rooms, up to three.
They expect to employ 17 or 18 people.
Theyll likely designate at leastfive or six beds for detox and the remainder for treatment, though some roomscould be swing beds that can be used for the greatest need.
We might have four detox beds one day and the next day need eight, Casey said.
The maximum detox, he said, would be 15, because more than that would require increasing staff.
The wait for an in-patient bed is currently as much as two months, Casey said, though a pregnant woman can usually get in within 48 hours.
If youre uninsured and not a priority, youre going to wait, he said. Thats why opening recovery services in Hutchinson is so important.
While the community will be losing those transitional housing beds, Gonzales said they'llbe able to move all those currently in that housing to Fox Run on West Second Avenue.
Thats been a concern of the organization, which was one of the reasons why we havent announced it until now, she said. We had to resolve that. But we havent been full since the roof was taken off in a storm a year and a half ago. The number just never came back up. So, we can accommodate everyone in our other facility.
The back half of the facility, she said, will remain affordable low-income apartments.
Length of stay
The average length of stay, Casey projected, will be three to five weeks.
For detox, the average length of stay is five days, but some of that might be determined by the state, he said. They have to go through a managed care process. There is no charge for detox for the individual. Anyone can come in. We bring them in to serve them and refer them to treatment.
After three to five days of detox will be three to five weeks of treatment. It will more often be three weeks, and then the can go into intensive out-patient at a place of their liking. If they have family in Liberal, theyll go to Liberal, or Topeka, or wherever it might be best supportive.
What were looking for is an 18-month commitment to provide services to them, Casey said. Nationally, according to SAMSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration), recovery rates have less to do with residential or outpatient treatment, but more to do with the length of time theyre provided treatment. Eighteen months seems to have the greatest success.
A unique aspect of the collaboration by New Beginnings with treatment is the ability to move people out of treatment into housing, Gonzales said.
Besides its more traditional transitional and low-income housing, New Beginnings owned six of the citys 10 Oxford Houses.
People will not be left to their own devices to figure out where to go after leaving treatment, she said, and they wont have to have money saved to pay upfront to get into housing.
Operating challenges
SACK has operated the Recovery Center in Wichita for five years.
Were pretty much full every day, Casey said. We do get referrals from Hutchinson to detox in Wichita, but its iffy at times because at 10 a.m. we could be full, at 2 in the afternoon we could have three or four beds, and at 10 that night, be full again. Its a transient population.
Some 70% of their admissions are for methamphetamine addictions, Casey said.
"Generally, we do 550 assessments a month at SACK, Casey said. Fifty of them have a medical card, the other 500 have nothing. Theyre uninsured. One-third of them are homeless.
The Recovery Center receives about $550,000 a year in outside funding, Casey said, including $100,000 from Sedgwick County. And it operates at a loss every year. That loss has declined from $100,000 the first year, to $30,000 to $40,000 this year.
Our fiscal year ends in June, he explained. We hope next year to break even.
The danger, Casey said, is getting too many patients covered by federal block grants, because it doesnt cover costs.
Because they are a nonprofit, they continue to take clients even when theyve reached their cap of beds funded by federal block grants, he said, though most other facilities in Kansas do not.
Medicaid doesnt pay for social detox, he said, and most clients dont have money.
What were hoping is to get a combination of clients covered by Senate Bill 123, Medicaid and self-pay, and then indigent or federal block grants, he said. Well work with as many as we can afford, based on the revenue streams we have. We know there is a waiting list for SB 123. We hope to be supported by referrals.
Our goal is to serve as many as we can and break even while paying staff a fair wage, Casey said.
Donations needed
This is what weve been after for a long time, Gonzales said. This is a major announcement. But it cant happen if we dont get started covering our costs. Its not an annual cost. This one time. But it will ensure were able to move forward on opening this facility. Weve been talking for a year and a half and we didnt have a focus where to go. We do now.
The public, in general, has to step up, Gonzales said. The city and county need to step up. There are private donors weve talked about, but we hate to keep going back.
Having such a facility in the community, Casey emphasized, will ultimately save the community more than it costs.
A study by Wichita State University estimated the savings from operating a local drug and alcohol treatment program there are around $10 million a year.
Thats savings to local hospitals, state hospital, police departments, and incarcerations, he said. The other part of detox is, if the police pick someone up, its not a medical problem Its a community-wise and safety-wise place to take people thats more appropriate and where they can be monitored. In Wichita, if theyre at our facility, theyre not in a police car, theyre not in jail, theyre not in an emergency room, theyre not in your front yard urinating on your porch.
Reno County Sheriff Randy Henderson noted that providing detox and treatment within the community is key to fighting drug abuse in the community.
We fight drugs on several fronts, he said. We fight it on the street with law enforcement, doing drug busts and working drug cases. We do it in the schools with Rise Up Reno County and educating our kids."
"One thing thats always stuck in my mind, when I was working narcotics years ago, President Bush 1 told the Mexican president you need to keep your people from bringing drugs to our country,'" Henderson said."He told our president When people quit wanting it, well quit bringing it in. Thats what our focus is now. Take that desire away.
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Meadowlark Commons to be converted into detox, drug treatment center - The Hutchinson News
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
I was a kid, eleven or so, the time I was locked in the church overnight. We were gathered in the hall consuming massive quantities of cookies and punch after the Easter Vigil when my mother embarrassed me. Who knows what she said? She was unpredictable and I was on the cusp of puberty. It was a ripe combination and our clashes were frequent, so perhaps its no surprise that something she said sent me flying up the stairs, through the vestry, into the musty walkway behind the altar, past boxes of blue-glass candles and into a cabinet of altar servers robes. I folded myself under the line of white cotton hemlines and waited, taking a childs cruel pleasure in ignoring the sound of my mother calling. Only the scrape of keys in the lock an hour later woke me to the gravity of the situation. I sprung from the cupboard and looked around the room in which Id been accidentally locked. A carpet was rolled along the length of one wall. A throng of religious statues leaned against the others their frozen features and glass eyes looking menacing in the dark. The gang of plaster saints and a thud from the church caused me to stuff myself, like prepubescent pimento, into one end of the carpet. I squeezed my eyes shut and waited for morning to come.
It was not quite daylight when the jangling keys returned. I slinked from my carpet and emerged heart-thumping near the altar of Mary. I didnt want to be discoveredand knew I should run toward the heavy wooden doorsbut I hesitated. I was not sure what I would find at home. Even when I wasnt an ecclesiastical stow-away, I never knew what Id find at home.
I turned toward the Virgin. Shed stood in the same spot my whole life. Id looked at her thousands of times, but the light slanting through stained glass was low and golden. Her face was lit with a soft glow, as were her open hands, and the sweep of her sky-blue cloak. Which is how, just before sunrise on Easter morning in the early 1980s, the statue of the Blessed Mother snagged my heart.
* * *
My heart was not so snagged that I remained at church. Like nearly everyone my age, I left in my twenties. Unlike everyone else, I returned a few years ago. It was Christmas Eve. The choir sang Joy to the World. Poinsettias lined the altar. And I stood staring toward the right-side altar, rubbing my eyes to be certain I was not imagining things. I blinked and checked again. I was not mistaken. My Mary was gone. Another statue stood in her niche. Crowned and set upon a globe, Id later learn that the new Virgin came from a nearby church that had closed. But then I only looked around, mystified.Wheres Mary? I asked the priest after Mass, but he only shook his head and backed slowly away.
The movement of statues is not so unusual. As parishioners continue to abandon their pews and churches close, sacred objects are reshuffled, discarded, or sold. My Marys twin is currently for sale on eBay, for instance. Cast from the same mold, the eBay Mary has been repainted with darker hair, comes with a money-back guarantee, and awaits shipment from Danbury, Connecticut. But I wasnt interested in replicas. I wanted to know what became of my Mary and made myself into some combination of church lady and Nancy Drew to find out. I searched closets and vestries and hounded people with my questions. The best guess anyone had was that shed been sold to someone in the next diocese over, which meant the Blessed Mother was lost somewhere in Buffalo.
* * *
Buffalo is not the easiest place to track down a Virgin. Thousands of blue-caped figures grace bathtub grottos and garden plots. Because I undertook my quest at the height of the Christmas season, an additional flock of Marys appeared in outdoor Nativity scenes. This did not deter me. What is a deluge of BVMs against a full-blown case of Statue Fever?
I must stop here to assert my levelheadedness. I was then and am now a mix of progressive optimism and cynical realism. A feminist who attended Lilith Fair back in the day and more recently celebrated Hillarys pantsuit a woman who leaves violets on Susan B. Anthonys grave whenever I pass, which is more than one might expect. Now, suddenly, at mid-life, Id worked myself into a froth over a figure regarded by some as the antithesis of feminine agency.
Youre a freakshow, I said to myself as I booked the hotel room to serve as the headquarters for my search. But even as I said it, I tore a sheet of paper from my notebook and plotted my course.
I searched old churches and new chapels and basements during coffee hours. What Id do if I found her, I did not know. I moved through the world in a churchy fog. I woke early for Mass, lit candles, and sat in near-empty sanctuaries. Snowstorms waged. Roads iced. I ate pierogi and cutout cookies and listened to the 24-hour Christmas station as I drove from Lackawanna to Lockport to Niagara Falls.The more I could not find her, the more I could not let her go.
I encountered marble Marys, Marys so old their capes puckered and flaked, and Marys cut from a single French oak, but the one I sought wasmore run-of-the-mill. She was not crowned or haloed. You had to squint to see the gold-leaf detail along her hemline. A chin that rounded into a babyish swell was the only hint of indulgence that, and her mantle, which was the color of oceans on old globes, of swimming pool tiles and the sky on certain winter mornings when everything is new. The blue is what I remembered as I walked into sanctuaries and out again into the snow.I became someone from an English novel sweeping the moors for a lost love except the moors were North Tonawanda and my love was fashioned of plaster and horsehair.
* * *
Cast in the 1930s by Chicagos Daprato Studios, my Mary was cut loose from her mold, sanded and cured, painstakingly painted and dried again, before being shipped from the shore of Lake Michigan to Erie and east again to Ontario, where she landed at the mouth of the smallest Great Lake. She was unloaded by the sons and grandsons of Irish immigrants whod come west on the Erie Canal 50 years earlier and installed beside the main altar of Corpus Christi Church.
My quest to find her followed the traditional pattern. I searched and searched until the searching broke me open with longing. Only when Id given up and headed back east along the Thruway did I receive the final clue that sent me back to Buffalo. It almost does not matter whether I found her, whether her face was even sweeter than I remember, whether her cloak was a thousand morning glories, and whether I set my hand upon her while something like violins went off in my head.
* * *
That my Mary is not alive does not sway my affection. Stability counts for something and fixedness is what statues do best. Unlike the house of seven children and the overworked single mother I came from, Mary is not subject to whims. Unlike the clerics whose outdated notions of purity make it difficult to attend Mass, Mary is locked into a position of unflinching love. Shes a statue, yes but a statue is no small thing. Shes amore identifiable and enduringsymbol of Catholicismthan even the pope and abeacon of humility in the face of an increasingly bombastic Christian world.
As a child I unthinkingly adored her. As a young woman from aneighborhood where girls were more likely to have babies than graduate high school,I rejected her unyielding acquiescence. As a woman at mid-life, Ive begun to see that her features are cast not so much in submission as in luminous contemplation as if Mary has something on her mind and has been chewing it over for two thousand years as if shes caught forever in the moment the angel appeared and rocked her world with the news that she, a nobody girl from a Podunk town, could give herself over to something larger than the snare of her surroundings.
Perhaps thats what I saw all those years ago as I emerged from a rolled carpet after a night of tears and shame and fear. Not an obedient virgin so much as a young woman, hushed and lowly in the eyes of the world, blooming in the front of church. A statue, yes. But more than that. A sign of how wondrous even a poor girl could be.
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My obsessive quest to solve the mystery of a missing Virgin Mary - Salon
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
We entered this decade in Snooki poufs and gladiator sandals. Trends reigned above personal preference or taste, a fact made evident by the fact that everyone wore low rise jeans despite the fact that no one looks good in them.
Things loosened up in the 2010s. Blame it on the Lady Gaga, Instagram, or Trump, but over the course of the last 10 years, tastemakers have encouraged women to dress exactly how they want, thank you very much.
Much has changed, but one thing hasnt: The people who make, model, or sell our clothes continue to screw up, as dramatically as possible.
The best-laid plans of marketing majors often go awry, leaving the rest of us to wonder who could have possibly OKd that racist advertisement or sexist T-shirt. The men who capitalize on the female form get outed as abusers. And simple black leggings will continue to make people very, very angry. Such is the decade.
The Red Carpet Goes Wild
Where were you when Lady Gaga wore her infamous meat dress to the 2010 MTV VMAs? Designed by Franc Fernandez, the get-up was criticized by PETA and remains one of the very few outfits to have its own Wikipedia page. (In this writers humble opinion, we talk more about about the frock and not enough about its accompanying flank steak fascinator.)
The outfit, which Gaga has said was both a protest against Dont Ask Dont Tell and a reminder to the world that she was not a piece of meat, got rightfully lampooned after its debut.
But the decidedly un-pretty style ushered in a wave of looks that livened up the red carpet, which until very recently was just a forced march of princess gowns and snoozy tuxedos. The meat dress suggested that celebrity fashion could be an art form.
An argument could be made that without the Meat Dress, there would be no Rihanna in her very meme-able yellow Guo Pei cape, or no Madonna in assless Givenchy at the Met Gala. And who wants to live in a world without those?
The Long Fall of Bad Men
By 2010, we knew full well that Dov Charney, who founded American Apparel in 1989, was a total predator. Hed already masturbated in front of a reporter, admitted to sleeping with employees, and encouraged store managers to fire unattractive staff.
This decade, he was sued for discrimination, accused of sexual assault, battery, and using homophobic slurs. But it took until 2014 for the company to revoke his title as chairman.
Likewise, Terry Richardson flaunted his creepy reputation as a photographer for years, allegedly pressuring models to get nude on set, publishing naked photos without their consent, and coercing some to have sex with himoften on camera.
Uncle Terry, as he sometimes asked to be called, was beloved by enablers like Miley Cyrus, Lady Gaga, Beyonc, and Kim Kardashian. Only after #MeToo swelled into a cultural juggernaut did Cond Nast, Valentino, and Bulgari drop the photographer in 2017. Last year, the NYPD opened an investigation into his misdeeds, years after many women first made their allegations.
Though Dior axed John Galliano and he was fined by the French government for his remarks, the designer staged an Anna Wintour-approved comeback in 2013.
John Gallianos Career Rises from the Dead
The decade of cancel culture did little to dull the legacy of John Galliano, a French designer beloved by many insiders for his long career at Givenchy, Dior, and his eponymous label. But in 2011, a viral video found the creative director spewing anti-Semitic remarks and declaring his love for Hitler in a Paris bar.
Though Dior axed Galliano and he was fined by the French government for his remarks, the designer staged an Anna Wintour-approved comeback in 2013. Since 2015, he has reclaimed his insider status as creative director for Maison Margiela.
The Decade in Dolce
Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana have seemingly never met a controversy they didnt like. The Italian design duo delight in their status as provocateurs, whether it be through their overtly sexy advertising or derogatory comments about female celebrities looks.
But in 2015, many accused the menwho are both gayof going too far, due to their comments about same-sex couples adopting children. We oppose gay adoptions. The only family is the traditional one, they told the Italian magazine Panorama, also calling babies born from IVF synthetic. Backlash ensued, some from the likes of Elton John and Ricky Martin, and #BoycottDolceandGabbana began trending. It would not be the first time.
Three years later, the founders would be accused of anti-Chinese sentiment due to an ad campaign seen as racist, which showed an Asian model eating spaghetti with chopsticks. Then, industry watchdog Instagram account DietPrada posted screenshots which appeared to show texts from Gabbana equating Chinese culture to the poop emoji and suggesting that Chinese people eat dogs.
Though the designers would later post an apology video, the damage was done; social media posts showed customers burning their products.
Since rediscovering religion this year, West set his sights on hawking $235 Holy Spirit hoodies and $50 Church socks.
Kanye West Plays Fashion Designer
Yes, this was the Kardashian decade (see cultural appropriation, below), but Kanye West, a family member by extension, also made his markand his money. The rapper became a clothing designer through launching Yeezy, first as an Adidas sneaker collaboration in 2013, then as ready-to-wear two years later.
His seasons, all staged in extravagant Fashion Week installations (minus the one on Roosevelt Island that gave attendees heatstroke), followed the same beige-and-brown color scheme, and West has a talent for drawing in thousands of dollars for simple sweaters and bland boots.
Since rediscovering religion this year, West set his sights on hawking $235 Holy Spirit hoodies and $50 Church socks. Whether through divine intervention or smart branding, the clothing sells.
Cultural Appropriation
Kim Kardashian in cornrows. Katy Perry as a geisha. Nicki Minaj performing on SNL with chopsticks in her hair. Perhaps no two words dominated fashion talk in recent years as cultural appropriation havean accusation leveled at celebrities or brands for capitalizing off dressing, acting like, or designing clothes that echo the clothing of various marginalized peoples.
Accused perpetrators in the last decade have included everyone from Miley Cyrus to Bruno Mars. Over the years, more people felt emboldened to say something when they saw a performance or cover spread that didnt sit right with them.
Still, some mainstream tastemakers were slow to address the sensitivity, such as Marc Jacobs, who said he didnt see color when he sent white models down the runway in dreadlocks, or Vogue magazine editors, who were accused of putting Kendall Jenner in an Afro as recently as last year.
The revolving cycle of these kinds of stories is familiar by now: A brand or star poses in perhaps-offensive garb, people get angry, an apology is issued, and we move onuntil the next Twitter moment.
The Slow Death of Victorias Secret
In 2009, the reign of Victorias Secret seemed long and endless. But by now, the underwear brand has become plagued with scandal. For years, its runway show full of supermodel Angels were dubbed sexist, with its models supposedly promoting unrealistic beauty standards.
The empire began to truly crumble last year, when CEO Ed Razek told Vogue he didnt think that plus-sized or trans models fit the companys idea of fantasy, and he would not have hired them for the annual show. To make matters worse, the brand got caught up in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal when it was revealed L Brand CEO Les Wexner was a close friend and client of the late businessman and sexual predator.
Razek later stepped down from his post, and VS hired a trans model named Valentina Sampaio, who told The Daily Beast This is just the beginning.
Except it wasnt. The brand opted out of hosting a show for 2019, and sales have reportedly fallen from $8 billion to $7.4 billion in one year.
Fashion Fails at Feminism
Post-#MeToo, post-Womens March, it makes sense that the fashion industry would want a piece of the populist pie that is modern feminism. Though some of the attemptslike Diors We Should All Be Feminists shirtswere laudable, the movement had its fair share of questionable players.
Who would have guessed that a man who was the CEO of a company called Feminist Apparel would confess to sexual misconduct? Or, who was truly surprised to see mega-retailers like Forever21 and Amazon rip off independent brands hawking girl power slogan shirts? These instances served as a reminder of what happens when resistance goes corporate.
Do you see anything wrong with putting a black child in a sweatshirt which reads, Coolest monkey in the jungle? H&M execs didnt.
Who OKd This?!?!
Can Urban Outfitters interest you in a $129 blood-stained Kent State sweatshirt? What about Zaras Holocuast prisoner uniform T-shirt? Do you see anything wrong with putting a black child in a sweatshirt which reads, Coolest monkey in the jungle? H&M execs didnt.
One of this decades most frustrating dosey-does became the predictable shuffle of watching high street brands release thoughtlessly inspired clothing and then claim ignorance or that there was never any intention to offend.
That was probably true, but this trend got many wondering, who exactly makes these kinds of decisions? And why didnt anyone speak up sooner?
Leggings. Just Leggings.
Forget Trump, forget the climate crisisperhaps no subject was more divisive this decade than the debate that refuses to die: Are leggings appropriate for work? Or school? Or airplane travel?
Leggings have become the miniskirts, or denim jeans, of our timeyouve got to fight for your right to wear them without being sent home by the school principal, shift supervisor, or flight attendant. No matter the season, a story about a woman kicked out of [x] for wearing the spandex bottoms remains evergreen, because it happens so damn much.
So as we enter the future, 2020, a blank slate of 10 more years, may we do so comfortably, and uncontested.
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Leggings, Creeps, and Cultural Appropriation: The Biggest Fashion Scandals of the Decade - The Daily Beast
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
MD Rajesh Punjabi (right), CEO Sonia Punjabi (2nd right) together with Directors Michael Polak and Kamala Kumpu Na Ayuthaya perform a religious ceremony to sanctify and install the sacred statue of Lord Brahma, creator of the universe on the holy altar.
It was another remarkable day for the condominium business in Pattaya when on Saturday 14 December, the Universal Group proclaimed the successful completion of the Seven Seas Cte dAzur project.
Early in the day, Brahmin monks chanted as MD Rajesh Punjabi, CEO Sonia Punjabi together with Directors Michael Polak (Director) and Kamala Kumpu Na Ayuthaya performed a religious ceremony to sanctify and install the sacred statue of Lord Brahma, creator of the universe on the holy altar.
Guests and the media were given an exclusive tour of the expansive 1.5 billion baht property which features 1,308 units in 6 luxury condo buildings on 24,800 sqm (15.5 rai) of land.
The evening reception was a Red Carpet affair. Guests were welcomed and walked on a bright crimson carpet to the reception area where they enjoyed cocktails and hors doeuvres and entertainment.
The proceedings were hosted by actress, singer and supermodel Pancake Khemanit and a mini-concert was held by talented singer Yingyong Yotbuangam.
Raj Punjabi, MD of the Universal Group, introduced his company by saying, Universal Group is a multinational company with a strong position in several business sectors around the world. Our core businesses include manufacturing, international project development, import & export, and property management. We stepped into Thailands property market in 2012 with one of the biggest themed condominium projects in Pattaya, the Seven Seas Condo Resort Jomtien.
After the resounding success of the first project, we launched two more projects here Seven Seas Cte dAzur and Seven Seas Le Carnival.
Asked where they got the concept of Cte dAzur, Michael Polak, the director said, One of the most beautiful places I have ever visited is the French Riviera. The architecture and atmosphere there are simply breath-taking. We wanted to bring that same carefree vibe and French experience to Pattaya which is what led to the birth of Seven Seas Cte dAzur.
Sonia Punjabi, the effervescent and charming CEO added, Not everyone can afford to buy a house in Cannes, Monaco or Marseille, as those types of places are for the top 1% rich and famous of the world. But you dont need to be a millionaire to experience luxury Mediterranean living right here in Pattaya at Seven Seas Cte DAzur.
We have 6 low rise buildings that provide a true South of France flavour; i.e., Nice, Cannes, Monaco, Marseilles, Monte Carlo and Montpelier.
From marinas and glamorous yachts to boulevard style shopping and stylish promenades, we have it all! Not to forget amazing restaurants and cafes, an arcade style games room, a fully equipped gym and a peaceful library is also located on the property.
Sonia concluded by saying, The project is now complete and handovers will start in January 2020 when the new owners can move in. We are now focusing on our 3rd project Seven Seas Le Carnival, a stunning condominium project with resort style pools, a rich mix of indoor and outdoor amenities, and iconic lifestyle offerings all year round.
Seven Seas Cte dAzur rolls out the Red Carpet
Hundreds of guests and clients attended the launch party.
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Frank Herbert, American science-fiction author best known for the novel Dune and its five sequels, once said"There is no real ending. It's just the place where you stop the story." So it is we stop the story on 2019 in Forsyth County.
Heres a rundown of some of the years top stories:
Barry Head became the countys fourth fire chief in January. Head, 43, began volunteering for the Forsyth County Fire Departmentat age of 18. He has served in various capacities within the department, most recently as interim fire chief, a position he was appointed to in 2018, following the retirement of Chief Danny Bowman. Head earlier served as division chief, field operations. He also served with the Forsyth County Sheriffs Office.
County clamps down on rentals
After more than two years of debate among residents, in April, the Forsyth County Commission voted 3-2 to place greater restrictions on short-term rentals in neighborhoods zoned for residential.
The code does provide for operations lying within areas zoned for agriculture or agriculture-residential, lots generally much larger than those in residential areas. Still, even these operations must go through a zoning process to receive a conditional use permit.
The vote followed more than an hour of debate over an issue that has stalked officials for more than two years and divided property owners.
Forsyth County has about 250 properties operating as short-term rentals, a classification defined as residences leased to tenants for fewer than 30 days.
Within a month of the vote, two groups representing short-term renters filed suit against the county arguing that new zoning restrictions violate the rights of property owners.
Cumming City Center breaks ground
When summer rolled around, many people headed to Lake Lanier for all sorts of water activities. Others headed out of town on vacation. There was a group that worked tirelessly in the Georgias sweltering temperatures to break ground on the Cumming City Center project during a ceremony in August.
Seeing the City Center start to take shape has been one of his greatest joys since becoming mayor, said Troy Brumbalow.
Establishing this facility has been not only my most prominent goal as mayor, but also my hearts greatest desire, because I believe it will truly become a place where we can all come together to enjoy our community as neighbors and friends just like we used to during simpler time, Brumbalow said.
The City Center is slated to open in 2021.
Once completed, the Center will provide sophisticated retail and restaurant facilities and a wide range of public amenities including walking trails, an outdoor amphitheater, picnic areas, and a town green area with a prominent water feature.
City improves fairgrounds
Another highlight of the summer of 2019 for the city of Cumming was the installation of the Cumming Fairgrounds new pedestrian sky bridge across Castleberry Road. The foot bridge is completely ADA-compliant and the ramp allows patrons to safely cross the busy highway while also greatly reducing traffic congestion in this area during major Fairgrounds events, like the Cumming Fair in October.
The construction projects took place on either side of Castleberry, until September when part of the road was closed in preparation for the bridge.
Weighing almost 90,000 lbs., the bridge was lifted by two huge cranes and set in place and bolted down. Once secured, concrete was poured, electric lines were run and landscaping was installed.
A big, colorful mural now provides an artistic touch to the cement wall surrounding the fairgrounds, courtesy of dedicated volunteer artists who werent put off by the heat, humidity and traffic.
Animal shelter earns award
Ending the year on a purr-fectly grand note, was the award-winning Forsyth County Animal Shelter being designated an Emerging Gold Standard Shelter for the state in September.
The Georgia Pet Coalition and the Humane Society of the United States, HSUS, recognized Cindy Iacopella, Forsyth County Animal Shelter manager and the shelter staff for the work done on behalf of animals in the county.
It was a great opportunity to discuss big-picture issues affecting animals in Georgia and local issues, Iacopella said.
The Coalition and Humane Society wanted to highlight the achievements of Forsyth County and its support from the commissioners, Iacopella said.
Included in the accomplishments were the reduction of euthanasia, the implementation of progressive programs, SPLOST funding for a mobile spay/neuter unit, partnerships with other agencies for unwanted pets and Pups With a Purpose, a partnership with the Sheriffs Office in which inmates work with shelter dogs.
Theres so much support from the commissioners, Iacopella said. Its great. Theyre all animal lovers.
Northside makes way for growth
Forsyth County took care of the well-being of its humans in 2019, with Northside Hospital Forsyth planning ahead for the next decade. Anticipating a population growth, Northside Hospital Forsyth filed a Certificate of Need application with the state to convert 16 existing rooms at Northside Hospital Forsyth to inpatient beds to be used for obstetrical patients in the hospitals Womens Center in November. The beds are needed to help Northside Forsyth meet patient demand in 2024, according to the application. The addition will bring the hospitals number of obstetrical beds from 16 to 32 and the hospital-wide inpatient bed count from 304 to 320. A decision on the project is expected in March. Over 3,000 babies were born at Northside Hospital Forsyth last year.
The hospital also opened six new operating rooms in the hospitals Center for Advanced Surgical Technology and expanded pre-op and PACU space in November. The new operating rooms support robotics, neuro and orthopedics/spine surgeries. More than 400 surgeries have taken place in the new ORs to date and surgeons have expressed that the new space exceeds their expectations. The hospital now has 24 ORs. More than 14,400 surgeries were performed at Northside Hospital Forsyth in 2018.
Cumming adds to landscape
The new City of Cumming water tower off Ga. 400 went into operation this year. The message "Cumming Home" is painted on the basin in red and black lettering.
The project included installation of a water pipeline along Castleberry Road, Hutchinson Road and Deputy Bill Cantrell Memorial Road. The new tower is double the capacity of its predecessor with a 2-million gallon tank. It was approved by the City Council in 2018 and constructed by John D. Stephens Inc. for a $7.5 million bid.
In a plot twist of sorts, Forsyth County has a connection to the 2020 Miss America competition after Victoria Hill made two appearances here as she campaigned for foster children across the state.
Hill was crowned Miss Georgia in June.
The Canton native performed in Foster the Cause, a red-carpet event in September at the Polo Golf & Country Club. The evening included a formal chef dinner and musical entertainment featuring Miss Georgia performing Broadway and classical numbers.
Foster the Cause, was the initiative of Forsyth County residents Wayne and Sally Richards and Cindy and John Moon who hosted the benefit.
Foster the Cause is designed to raise funds for two local homes that provide housing, guidance and support to foster children: Bald Ridge Lodge for boys in Cumming and North Georgia Angel House for girls in Canton.
Hill returned in September to share details of her campaign with the Lanier Forsyth Rotary Club.
Her platform, Flip the Script on Foster Care, has set three main goals that include raising awareness of the need of the Georgia foster care system, engaging businesses and organizations to help children in foster care and encouraging mentorship for the young adults aging out of the system.
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
2020 will bring big changes to Salinas' skyline as new affordable housing, a police station, a library, a homeless shelter and more are slated toopen.
The projects have been in the works for years and are spread throughout Salinas, including Chinatown.
Here areseveral big projects scheduled to open in 2020:
The new Moon Gate Plaza located in Chinatown is under construction in on Dec. 21, 2019.(Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
The exterior work on the MoonGate Plaza affordable housing complex in Chinatown is done, said Betsy Wilson, director of special projects at MidPen Housing, which is developing the project.
It will offer 88 unitsfor low-income tenants, with half of them reserved for those referred by health officials, she said.MidPen is waiting on some final work on elevators and then approval from inspectors.
"Just as soon as that's done, we're going to be ramping up to moving people in," she said.
MidPen has received more than 800 applications 23 had been approved as of last week, Wilson said.Most of the units are studios.
Workers in early 2018 beganbuilding the complex, which will also dedicate five apartments for artists.
The new Moon Gate Plaza located in Chinatown is under construction in on Dec. 21, 2019.(Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
State and federal tax credits provided the lion's share of the $38.9 million price tag.The city donated the property, valued at about $500,000, and $2.5 million.
The project also has space for storefronts and retail on the ground floor.
Wilson said she hopes MoonGate will be ready for tenants to start moving in by the end of January. She doesn't expect to have all the rooms filled until all applications are finished, which may take several months.
MidPen currently isn't building any other housing complexes in Salinas, Wilson said.
More: Affordable housing props could mean $55M for Monterey County
"This is... our first community in Salinas," she said. "... We continue to look for opportunities but there are a lot of constraints, the primary one being a lack of local funding."
Indeed, Salinas has an enormous affordable housing crunch and is well short of its 2023 goal of 2,229 homes being built, according to the Monterey Bay Econoomic Partnership.
855 E. Laurel Drive, the planned site of a new Salinas homeless shelter.(Photo: Joe Szydlowski, The Californian)
Salinas will be getting a new homeless shelter, expected to be completed by December 2020, at 855 E. Laurel Drive.
The 16,000-square-foot facilitywill have 100 beds and a fully functional kitchen, according to Monterey County. The board of supervisors in November awarded the $5,760,231 contract to Avila Construction, which is expected to begin work in January, according to a staff report.
It will also replace the current homeless shelter, which is housed in a repurposed modular at 111 W. Alisal Street.
But the East Laurel Drive locationprompted protests and galvanized Creekbridge residents to oppose the location.
They lobbied the Salinas city council to oppose the project, which is a joint effort by the city and the county, over concerns about it attracting crime and drug use to their neighborhoods.
City officials said it was the only site that had all the necessary traits and was publicly owned. In addition, it is close to Natividad for medical emergencies.
The location of the planned homeless shelter at 855 E. Laurel Drive.(Photo: PROVIDED/MONTEREY COUNTY)
Ultimately, the project moved forward. The county is handling the construction side, including awarding the bids.
About $6 million in state funds are paying for the project, with Salinas and Monterey County sharingthe remaining costs, most of which arefor professional services, testing, inspections and permitting, according to the county's Resource Management Agency.
More: UPDATE: Salinas council votes to move forward with homeless shelter near Natividad
More: New homeless shelter moves forward for Salinas
More: Creekbridge group protests proposed year-round homeless shelter site in Salinas
The old Rabobank building on Main Street, Dec. 21, 2019 (Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
Oldtown's Rabobank building will be transformed in 2020 into around 50 apartments.
The historic building's six floors of office space will be retooled into studio apartments, said Brad Slama, the owner and developer.
Workers spent 2019 tearing out the old office-space and will build the apartments this year.
He's hoping to have them ready by the end of the year for tenants and already has a wait list with 40 applicants.
The old Rabobank building in Main Street on Dec. 21, 2019 (Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
The renters will also have a rooftop terrace, he said. If they were on the market today, he'd expect the rent to be about $1,200 per month.
The apartments will also be pet friendly, he said.
The new Salinas Police Service Headquarters located between E. Alisal and John Street on Dec. 21, 2019.(Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
The most expensive addition to Salinas' skyline will be the new, $56 million Salinas police station at 312 E. Alisal St.
"We're on-time with the original construction schedule," said Cmdr. Stanley Cooper, who is overseeing the project for the police department.
The exterior is done, and workers are now focused on the interior, such as putting down carpet and tile and finishing up plumbing and electrical work.
"They're probably 80, 85 percent complete right now," he said.
The building's design also includes space for expansion.
"You dont build a new building to meet todays needs, you build it to meet future needs," he said.
The current police station, built in 1958, accommodated a much smaller police force, he said.
The new Salinas Police Service Headquarters located between E. Alisal and John Street on Dec. 21, 2019.(Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
"The building is literally falling apart," he said. "We've had a number of electrical, plumbing (issues) and roof leaks. It's well past its viable state."
The new facility will have a more spacious lobby and a community room open to the public. In addition, offenders needing to register will enter through a separate door.
It will also have a separate steel structure for storage.
The project is also coming in under budget, Cooper said, and it's expected to be occupied in March.
City officials broke ground on the new station in 2018.
More: Five things to know about your new $56M Salinas police station
More: Salinas Public Safety Center projected to open 2019
The new El Gabilan Library/Biblioteca on Dec. 21, 2019/ (Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
North Salinas' new library is nearly open, said Kristan Lundquist, Library and Community Services director for the city.
The project to replace the original 3,500 square feet of library space with a 21,000-square-foot, two-story library is on budget and on-time, she said.
Workers are finishing up the exterior and Lundquist plans to move in sometime in February.Funds donated by nearby residents also helped with the ambiance outside.
The new facility will feature a community room, an amphitheater, a children's discovery area with hands-on activities and a second floor for adults.
"The whole bottom floor is focused on youth, and we have some designated adult-use space as well," she said.
It will share parking with the allUSCredit Union, which paid $1.4 million in lease dues up front as seed money for the library, Lundquist said.
The total cost is about $21 million. The library has already received its temporary certificate of occupancy.
At the end of January, Salinas will close its temporary library at Northridge Mall.
"We're working now, in the process of planning our grand opening celebration," she said. "It'll be a day full of activities."
More: City breaks ground on new, much larger El Gabilan Library
More: New Salinas police headquarters, El Gabilan Library projects moving forward
More: As El Gabilan Library prepares to temporarily close, it's ready to party
The old municipal pool center located in Sherwood Park on Dec. 21, 2019. (Photo: David Rodriguez/The Salinas Californian)
The long-delayed Sherwood Community Center is close to opening.
The $3 million rehab for the former municipal swimming pool should be finished within three months, said Megan Hunter, director of community development for the city.
Workers have filled in the swimming pool as well as replaced windows and degraded wood, she said. Some of the space has been converted to office space and a new HVAC system was installed.
That HVAC system caused one delay because the city didn't have funding for it at the time.
Community Development Block Grants are funding the renovations, Hunter said.
It will have gym space for basketball and volleyball. In addition, it will have classroom space.
More: When will Salinas' new recreation center open?
This artist's rendering shows the interior of the planned Salinas Valley Memorial Healthcare System Center, which is expected to be open for the Spring 2021 class.(Photo: PROVIDED/HARTNELL COLLEGE)
Hartnell College is adding a 24,000-square-foot facility for its Nursing and Health Sciences students, said Scott Faust, director of communications and marketing at the college, in a press release.
The community college broke ground Dec. 12 on the Salinas Valley Memorial Healthcare System Center, named after the hospital and medical services organization that donated $3 million to the college.
Work will take place in 2020 with the opening scheduled in time for the Spring 2021 class, he said.
The facility will help train students of registered nursing, vocational nursing, respiratory careand emergency medical technicians in addition to other programs. It will also include a student health clinic.
The college's governing board chose Salinas contractor Tombleson Co., which placed a $21.42 million bid.
While Salinas Valley Memorial donated $3 million to the health sciences at Hartnell, the voter-passed Measure T 2016 ballot measure is paying for the construction.
Hartnell is also building two South County projects: A16,750-square-foot multipurpose education center in Soledad and a 12,500-square-foot expansion of its King City Education Center.
Both projects are planned to open for the 2021 Spring semester. A third education center in Castroville is expected to break ground in the summer.
Joe Szydlowski is a multimedia journalist for the Salinas Californian who covers local government, crime and cannabis. Follow him on Twitter attwitter.com/JoeSzyd_Salinas. He can be reached at 235-2360. Help support The Californian's work:https://bit.ly/2Qo298J
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Housing, homeless shelter and more: What's coming to Salinas in 2020 - The Californian
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Behind the Scenes at CFP Championship, Super Bowl LIII, NBA All-Star, NCAA Final Four, NFL Draft, Indy 500, and U.S. Open
Following on the heels of a year that saw both the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics Games and the 2018 FIFA World Cup, one might have expected the 2019 sports-production calendar to be a bit quieter. As this year draws to a close, its clear that that could not be farther from the truth. Broadcast networks and digital distribution platforms alike were busy from January on, upping the production ante on every event from the College Football Playoff National Championship Game to the Super Bowl to the Indianapolis 500 and more. In addition, 2019 saw the U.S. Womens National Soccer Team once again emerge victorious at the FIFA Womens World Cup.
Here is a look back at many of the events where SVG was onsite, including both traditional tournaments like the NCAA Mens Basketball Final Four and the US Open, as well as esports tournaments like Overwatch League Finals and the ESL One New York. Read on and remember the new technologies and production workflows that were introduced this year, and most importantly the people behind the scenes who brought these productions and many more to life. Also check out PART 2 and PART 3 of Road Warriors.
Levis Stadium, Santa Clara, CAJanuary 7
At the 2019 College Football Playoff National Championship, ESPN once again went all-in for the big game, deploying more than 310 cameras to cover all the action at Levis Stadium in Santa Clara, CA, and providing 17 viewing options via the MegaCast over 11 TV and radio networks and via the ESPN app.
The thing that makes this event is the volume and magnitude of what we put behind it but also the time frame, said John LaChance, director, remote production operations, ESPN, prior to the January 7 game. [There are] other marquee events, which stand alone, but, with the volume and viewer enhancements being done here in a 72-hour window to get everything installed, this event [is] in a unique classification. Trying to integrate everything into place was a herculean effort.
The core of ESPNs production efforts were done out of Game Creek Videos 79 A and B units with Nitro A and B handling game submix, EVS overflow, 360 replay, robo ops, and tape release. ESPNs team that created 17 MegaCast offerings was onsite, housed in Nitro and Game Creeks Edit 3 and Edit 4 trailers and TVTruck.tvs Sophie HD. Game Creek Videos Yogi, meanwhile, was on hand for studio operations, and Maverick was also in the compound. All told, 70 transmission paths (50 outbound, 20 inbound) flowed through the compound, and 40 miles of fiber and cable was deployed to supplement what already exists at Levis Stadium.
Also on hand was Fletcher, which provided robotics; BSI, which handled wired pylons and RF audio and video; 3G, which was in charge of the line-to-gain PylonCam and the first-and-10marker camera; Vicareo, with the Ref Cams; and CAT Entertainment, for UPS and power. SMT was on board for the 1st & Ten lines; PSSI, for uplink; Bexel, for RF audio and other gear; and Illumination Dynamics, for lighting. Ken Kerschbaumer
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GAFebruary 3
Super Bowl LIII is in the books and, for the production team at CBS Sports, it was the culmination of years of work, site visits, and planning. As usual, it was a massive effort and provided plenty of innovation, including a one-of-a-kind show open that featured an impressive technical undertaking.
Out in the truck compound, NEPs SSCBS A, B, C, and D units were at the center of the effort. The A unit housed game production, game graphics, and goalpostrobo-camera operation. The B unit had game audio and IPG distribution headend; the C unit housed the majority of EVS game replay operators, ChyronHego operations, and SMT first-down-line operations. The D unit, meanwhile, handled tease edits.
Game Creek Videos Encore A unit was on hand for additional game video, pre/postgame audio and video, and 8K operations; the B unit handled pre/postproduction, graphics, and C360 operations. The C unit was home to pre/post EVS, the Sony server operators who worked with the Fletcher-provided HDC-4800 4K cameras, and 8K operators.
F&F Productions GTX17 handled tape-release production, backup production, additional game EVS, and additional game video, and GTX18B was home to comms, Pico replay operators, a second pylon operator, augmented-reality operations, and EA Sports.
Game Creek Edit 3, 4, and B-5 also played key roles. Edit 3 handled ingests, game and pre/post editing, color tease, game After Effects operations, and MAM. Edit 4 housed pre/post After Effects, pre/post Duets, and graphics management. And B-5 was home to pan-bar robotic operations and all other Fletcher robos except for those on the goalposts, which were handled in NEP SSCBS A.
NEPs TX/ESU trailer was onsite for router distribution, transmission control, and distribution to the world feed, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, halftime show, and all other outside vendors. And the AVS RF truck managed all RF cameras for game and pre/post as well as camera-feed distribution to SSCBS B, Encore A, and video-paint control in those trucks. KK
Spectrum Center, Charlotte, NCFebruary 17
The 2019 NBA All-Star Game in Charlotte, NC, ushered in the use of Skycam as a production tool deployed to cover game action. It was used first on Friday for the Rising Stars game at the Spectrum Center and then during last nights Skills Challenge. For the main event, Skycam coverage was not only integrated into the main broadcast on TNT but was also available as the main camera in an alternative broadcast available on TBS.
People are enjoying the unique angles Skycam gives, said Chris Brown, director of technical operations, Turner Sports (pictured here along with Senior Technical Manager Pete Rintelman) . Its similar to what it brought to football coverage in that you can have a sense of the space between players.
Skycam deployment began with the answer to a key question: how can it be used but not be distracting to players or, more important, actually get hit by a basketball in play? Helping to answer those concerns was the use of shot data from Second Spectrum, which tracks the height of every shot taken during NBA games. As long as the Skycam stays above that height (approximately 28 ft.), it should steer clear of any balls in flight.
Also new this year was the use of NEPs EN1 as the production unit for the All-Star Game. NEP refurbished the EN1 C unit, and the layout allowed the Turner production team to consolidate replay and super-slo-mo operations; in previous All-Star events, they needed to be split apart.
Game coverage relied on approximately 40 cameras, with the major addition of a robotic camera on a large crane behind the basket. An important part of the weekend was the use of RF cameras, and AVS was on hand with two RF Steadicams and two RF handheld cameras.
NEPs SS16 was used for the halftime show. NCPX returned for All-Star Saturday and was also used to produce the live alternative broadcast that aired on TBS (the main broadcast, produced out of EN1, was seen on TNT). KK
U.S. Bank Stadium, Minneapolis, MNApril 5-8
The 2019 NCAA Mens Basketball Final Four in Minneapolis was another massive video operation with two full production compounds (one inside the bowels of U.S. Bank Stadium and another outside in a parking lot), more than 50 cameras in the bowl of the stadium, and more than 400 CBS staffers alone on site to pull everything together.
Its our typical Final Four circus that rolls into town, said Patty Power, EVP of Operations and Engineering for CBS Sports, during the tournament. Its all working as it should be. Everything is solid.
While there wasnt much thats new technologically, there were still plenty of fun production staples that have become expected at an event like this, including a SkyCam and RailCam, a robotic camera that slides on a track on the floor along the near sideline. Theres also been a new set of robos installed on the baskets behind the glass of the backboards to add an extra, unique look.
Thirty five cameras in the stadium worked the game coverage while another 13 were dedicated to studio programming. CBS and Turner had two different sets, each in the student sections behind each of the baskets that served as home for pregame and halftime coverage throughout Saturday and Monday evening.
The biggest challenges of this years venue were lighting and finding the right camera angles in such a massive bowl for basketball. A lot of work went into the blacking out of open glass features of the stadium, including on the roof and along the front entrance gates. Last years Final Four at the Alamodome served as a much more intimate atmosphere for basketball, in comparison, so much of the prep in the days leading up to tip off this year have been dedicated to calibrating cameras and juggling positions to get the most ideal angles for a basketball television broadcast in a non-basketball facility.
Down inside the main production compound, Game Creek Videos 79 was the primary game support vehicle, while NEPs Supershooter 22 ran studio shoulder programming. Brandon Costa
Lower Broadway, Nashville, TNApril 25-27
In its 40th consecutive year coveringtheevent, ESPN assembled its largest NFL Draft productiontodate in Nashville. With dual primetime telecasts on ESPN and ABC forthefirst time, plus a cavalcade of onsite studio shows, ESPNs NFL Draft footprint was bigger than ever. In addition, both ESPNs traditional Draft telecast andtheABCsCollege GameDay-styletelecast were produced in 1080p forthefirst time.
This year is by far our biggest Draft production ever, said Steve Carter, senior operations manager, ESPN, duringtheNFL Draft. Wehave seven mobile units, five sets, and over 60 cameras including eight RF cameras betweenthemain Draft [on ESPN], ABC, and all our other shows out here. Plus, boththeDraft [telecasts] are being produced in 1080p. Even thoughweve got all these shows going on here,weve builttheinfrastructure andtheinterconnectiontobe abletohandle it all pretty seamlessly.Insidethecompound, NEPs EN1 and ND1 seven mobile in total were tightly integrated, allowing any source (video, audio, comms, etc.) from throughoutESPNs Broadway setuptobe accessed from anywhere.
Meanwhile, NFL Media fully embracedtheNashville scene attheDraft, bookending Lower Broadway with a pair of NFL Network sets located ontheDraft Main Stage and attachedtothelegendary Tootsies Orchid Lounge honky-tonk bar. Whilethedowntown streetside locations made for breathtaking on-air visuals,theconfined space on Lower Broadway also presented plenty of challenges fortheNFL Media team.
We always try to tell the story of the city and give viewers the feel of being here at the Draft, said Dave Shaw, VP Production, NFL Media, in Nashville (pictured here). Broadway truly highlights the fabric of Nashville its always crowded and hopping with music everywhere until 3 a.m. Of course, we wanted to be right in the middle of all that, so we knew we needed to find a way to make this work. The biggest challenge has been the limitations in terms of space here on Broadway, but I think we were able to handle that really well.
Game Creek Videos Encore served as hometoNFL Medias Draft production, whiletheNFL NetworksRed Carpet ShowandGood Morning Footballshows were at-home productions run out of NFL Medias Culver City, CA, broadcast center. Jason Dachman
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Indianapolis, INMay 26
When Memorial Day Weekend rolls around in the U.S., racing fans know what time it is. At the world-renowned Indianapolis Motor Speedway, 33 drivers revved their engines and embarked on a mechanical sprint towards history in the 103rd Indianapolis 500. The weekend also marked a massive milestone for the team at NBC Sports, who take over as the host broadcaster this year, bringing The Greatest Spectacle in Racing to homes across America for the very first time.
NBC deployed an impressive arsenal of live video technology to give this years race a truly elite on-air look. Much of it was made possible by working alongside the racetracks experienced in-house operations unit, IMS Productions.
From the engineering and operational side, it has been a success working directly with IMS Productions, said Ken Goss, SVP, Remote Operations and Production Planning, NBC Sports Group, speaking before the race. Theyve been great partners, and they did a terrific job [with helping us] converge all of our operations here. Were looking forward to our first Indy 500 and are happy to forge a strong, ongoing partnership with IMS Productions.
A whopping 80 cameras were scattered across the sprawling 560-acre campus, highlighted by a grouping of five Sony HDC-4300s at 6X super-slow motion. These high-speed cameras were located on the cars right side at Turns 1, 2, 3, and 4.
Inside the operational nucleus, five trucks supplied by IMS Productions housed a fair number of the 200 staffers onsite. The main race coverage operated in IMSPs HD-3 and HD-5 mobile production units. HD-3 was built around a Grass Valley Kayenne K Frame 5M/E switcher, while HD-5 featured Grass Valleys Kayenne K Frame 8M/E switcher. The main race telecast also had 103 iso record channels at its disposal and a full slate of replay equipment from EVS: four 12-channel servers with ChannelMAX and 10 eight-channel XT3 servers, two with SpotBox and two with IPDirector. Kristian Hernandez
Pebble Beach Golf Links, Pebble Beach, CAJune 13-16
This years U.S. Open featured great shots from the drone patrolling the Pebble Beach Golf Links coastline as well as shots from four robotic hard cameras that were able to capture the action from new angles.
There are few courses as good as this one to use drone technology, said Mike Davies, SVP, technical and field operations, Fox Sports, speaking at the tournament. There are so many active holes along the coastline, and director Steve Beim has done a great job directing the drones and doing some cool things. Drone technology has come of age here at the U.S. Open.
Last years U.S. Open at Shinnecock saw two developments in compound layout that have carried over to this year. First, space constraints required some of the personnel and operations (such as camera and audio support) to be moved to a Technology Tent located closer to the course. But another change was to move beyond a compound full of office trailers lined up next to each other.
Instead, under the direction of Fox Sports Brad Cheney, VP, field operations and engineering, and Sarita Meinking, director, field operations, multiple trailers were combined, literally eliminating the walls between the operations, production, digital, PR, and other departments.
There were three key partners for Fox Sports. Game Creek Video provided the production facilities; CP Communications, fiber and RF infrastructures; and Filmwerks, handled power needs.
The core of Fox Sports U.S. Open coverage was mobile units from Game Creek Video, specifically Encore A, B, and C, which have been at the center of all five of the networks U.S. Open broadcasts.
Pride A and B were also onsite, handling audio submix, super-slo-mo replay, graphics, HDR-video support, engineering, and an emergency production area. KK
NOTE: This Road Warriors article appears in the 2020 SVG Mobile Production Yearbook. CLICK HERE to read the digital version of the full publication now!
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Road Warriors 2019, Part 1: The Top Sports-Production Highlights of the Year - Sports Video Group
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
As homelessness surged to crisis levels in California in 2019, so did the violent attacks on people living in tents and on sidewalks and the political and law enforcement efforts to keep homeless encampments off the streets.
Physical assaults and criminalization efforts combined have made 2019 a particularly grim and terrifying year for many Californians struggling to survive without a roof over their head.
They are trying to shove us underneath the carpet, and its just not fair, said Shanna Couper Orona, 46, who is currently living out of an RV in San Francisco. San Francisco is supposed to be progressive, a place where you love everyone, take care of everyone But theyve turned their backs on us just because were unhoused. They are leaving us with nothing.
In a state with the worlds fifth largest economy, an IPO tech boom and some of the richest people on earth, Californias severe affordable housing shortage has become what advocates describe as a moral failing and public health emergency.
Los Angeles experienced a 16% increase in homelessness this year, with a total of 36,000 people now homeless across the city, including 27,000 without shelter. San Franciscos homeless count surged 17% to more than 8,000 people. There was a 42% increase in San Jose, a 47% increase in Oakland, a 52% increase in Sacramento county and increases in the Central Valley agricultural region and wealthy suburbs of Orange county.
There were patterns across cities: huge numbers of people experiencing homelessness for the first time, evictions and unaffordable rents leading people to the streets, families and seniors increasingly homeless, and higher rates of the homeless not getting shelter.
Homeless people are everywhere now, and they are becoming more and more desperate, said Stephen Cue Jn-Marie, an LA pastor who was formerly homeless and now works with people living on Skid Row, known for its massive encampments. All of these people are human beings. We need to respond to this as if its an earthquake.
The growing visibility has led to an increase in complaints, news coverage focused on housed people who reside near encampments, and intense media attention on the rare cases of violence perpetuated by people living on the streets.
Communities have largely declined to treat the crisis like a natural disaster that demands humanitarian aid. In many places, what followed instead was a backlash, and in some cases overt attacks.
There were at least eight incidents in LA where people threw flammable liquids or makeshift explosives at homeless people or their tents this year, according to authorities and the Los Angeles Times.
A 62-year-old beloved musicians tent was set on fire in Skid Row in August, killing him in what police say was an intentional killing. That month, two men also allegedly threw a firework at an encampment, causing a blaze that grew into a major brush fire just outside of the city. One of the men arrested was the son of a local chamber of commerce president. Police said this fire was intentional. In a separate attack, a molotov cocktail destroyed tents and donations.
In San Francisco, a man was caught on video appearing to dump a bucket of water on a homeless woman and her belongings on the sidewalk in June. Witnesses said it seemed to be a deliberate attack.
Three months later, San Franciscans who said they were upset with homeless people in their neighborhood paid to install two-dozen knee-high boulders along a sidewalk in an effort to stop them from living on the streets.
In neighboring Oakland, a resident recently put up an unauthorized concrete barrier in the middle of the street to deter homeless people from parking RVs. A real estate developer taunted homeless people by shouting free money at them and offering to pay them to leave their encampment in Oakland.
Residents repeatedly organized against proposed homeless shelters in their neighborhoods, most notably in a wealthy San Francisco area where locals crowdfunded $70,000 to hire an attorney to fight a shelter project.
A lot of it is brought out by this fear of the other as if their homeless neighbors are not neighbors at all, or not even people for that matter, said TJ Johnston, who is currently staying in shelters in San Francisco and is an editor with Street Sheet, a local homelessness publication. Hearing wealthy residents complain this year was like watching angry online comment sections come to life, he said: Its very dehumanizing to be looked upon as a nuisance.
As the crisis has worsened, local governments have spent billions to create new housing and provide services, but the scale of the response has been inadequate. Cities have increasingly looked to law enforcement and legal maneuvers to tackle the problem.
Those political efforts to further criminalize the homeless in turn have sparked intense anger and fear among the homeless population and their advocates.
LA leaders fought to ban people from sleeping on streets and sidewalks throughout the city. In Lancaster, a desert city north of LA, the mayor has pushed a proposal to ban groups that provide food to homeless people and suggested people should buy firearms to protect themselves from violent people on the streets.
This month, in a case closely watched by many west coast cities, the US supreme court dealt a victory to homeless advocates by allowing an existing ruling to stand that states governments cannot ban people from living on the street if they dont offer enough shelter beds.
Officials in Oakland have proposed a new policy to cite homeless people in parks while some have suggested setting up a shelter in a defunct jail. Law enforcement leaders in Bakersfield in the Central Valley pushed a plan to throw homeless people in jail for misdemeanor offenses. A state taskforce has also suggested a similar system of forcibly placing homeless people into shelters.
These efforts ignore the overwhelming evidence that criminalization and locking people up are costly and harmful responses that fail to fix the crisis, said Eve Garrow, homelessness policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California.
Theres a dangerous and disturbing movement in California to address homelessness not by expanding access to safe, affordable and permanent housing but by jailing people, she said. Its a terrifying prospect of a world in which we segregate, incarcerate and restrict the civil liberties of people just because they have disabilities and they are too poor to afford a home in our skyrocketing private rental market.
Fears and unfounded stereotypes about people experiencing homelessness seem to be driving these policy pushes to jail those in need, she said.
The Trump administration has created further anxiety by repeatedly suggesting he might pursue some kind of police crackdown in California to clear the streets of encampments.
The president has used the crisis to attack Democratic leaders in the state, and has complained about homeless people in LA and San Francisco taking up space on the best highways, our best streets, our best entrances to buildings where people in those buildings pay tremendous taxes, where they went to those locations because of the prestige.
Its a huge concern are they just going to take people to jail? said Kat Doherty, an LA woman who became homeless this year and is living at a shelter at Skid Row. Trumps talk has terrified her and others, she said. Its horrendous. It sounds like a death camp situation.
With the president promoting criminalization, it could inspire some anti-Trump Democrats in California to push back, said Jennifer Friedenbach, the executive director for the Coalition on Homelessness in San Francisco. Theres some hopefulness that it will force the local municipalities to shift in opposition to Trump and talk about how criminalization doesnt work.
But some are not optimistic about 2020, especially since the crisis is on track to continue escalating, with people falling into homelessness at rates that far outpace governments ability to find housing for those on the street.
Conditions are going to get worse and the responses are going to get worse, said Jn-Marie.
If the political attacks continue next year, some said they hoped to see more communities fighting to stand up for the homeless.
I want people to give a fuck and help. Dont just ignore it, Orona said. Just because were unhoused doesnt mean were not San Francisco residents. We still have a heartbeat. We still buy food. We still exist.
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Theyve turned their backs on us: California's homeless crisis grows in numbers and violence - The Guardian
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December 28, 2019 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The damage outdoor air pollution is doing to our planet and our health has never been more apparent, and you could be forgiven for thinking you're safer indoors. Sadly, you're not.
Although the European Federation of Allergy and Airways Diseases Patients' Associations (EFA) estimates we spend up to 90% of our time indoors, levels of air pollutants inside homes and workplaces may be up to 10 times higher than outdoors.
Such pollution is caused by many things, including chemicals used for cleaning or decorating, heating, cooking, building materials, tobacco smoke, house dust mites and pet dander. And it can be exacerbated by poor ventilation, room temperature, damp, condensation, and pollution that has come indoors from outside.
Indoor air quality is crucial for human health, and particularly important for vulnerable groups, such as babies, children and the elderly, as well as people living with respiratory and allergic diseases.
Dr Nick Hopkinson, medical director at the British Lung Foundation (blf.org.uk), says: "Everyone knows outdoor air pollution poses a serious risk to health, but people often overlook the impact of air quality within our own homes. Smoking and any other source of smoke, as well as fumes from chemicals used for cleaning, can contribute to lung disease, and one of the major problems is for people in cold, damp homes where mould can grow."
So, what can you do to improve the air quality in your home?
1. Reduce the use of cleaning and decorating products
Some home cleaning and decorating products, including detergents, furniture polish, air fresheners, carpet and oven cleaners, paint, varnish and glue, can contain chemicals called volatile organic compounds (VOCs), like acetone, xylene and formaldehyde, which evaporate into the air when used or sometimes even stored, says the BLF. Products labelled allergy-friendly tend to have lower VOC levels, so try using those, or even just use a damp cloth if possible. Try to use solid or liquid cleaning products, rather than sprays, as when sprays get into the air, they can be breathed in more easily and can get further down your airways.
"Overuse of cleaning products should be avoided," advises Hopkinson, who says more rigorous research is needed before there's certainty about the effects of breathing in chemicals in homes, although about half of studies suggest being exposed to them increases the risk of developing allergies or asthma.
2. Ban tobacco smoke
If anyone smokes in your home, tiny particles from tobacco smoke can drift throughout the house and remain at harmful levels for up to five hours, says the BLF. If you smoke at home, smoke outside, close the door behind you and move away from the house. Or, even better, quit!
3. Ensure good ventilation
Always open a window when cleaning or decorating to ensure there's plenty of ventilation, so any pollution can escape outside. Allergy UK (allergyuk.org) points out that house dust mites need moisture, and ventilation will reduce humidity. Generally opening windows, particularly in the bedroom, will ensure good air flow throughout the house, and help expel pollution created in the home by heating and cooking. "Keeping homes as well ventilated as possible to reduce the build-up of moisture from bathing and drying laundry can help," says Hopkinson.
4. Purify your air
Allergy UK says running an air purifier continually, as per the manufacturer's instructions, can help to reduce/remove airborne allergens such as house dust mites, mould spores, dander, VOCs and smoke.
5. Keep floors and furniture clean
Pollutants like house dust mites and pet dander can settle on floors and furniture, so Allergy UK recommends carpets are kept clean using a vacuum with efficient pick up and filtration, hard floor surfaces are washed with hot, soapy water, and soft furnishings are washed regularly on a hot wash cycle.
6. Make your tile grouting water-resistant
In kitchens and bathrooms, Allergy UK recommends householders use water-resistant grouting for tiled areas, applied flush with the work surface to eliminate any chances of mould, which can cause respiratory problems.
7. Ventilate when cooking and heating
Cookers, heaters, stoves and open fires can release pollutants into your home, warns the BLF. They can release particulate matter (PM) - microscopic particles of dust and dirt in the air - and gases including carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and sulphur dioxide. Even when you cook with gas or electricity, tiny easily-inhaled particles are released, particularly when cooking with gas, which can release carbon monoxide, formaldehyde and oxides of nitrogen.
To keep such pollution to a minimum, make sure the house is well-ventilated and gas heaters and cookers have a flue, chimney, or other vent that releases the polluted air outside.
8. Sweep chimneys regularly
Burning wood and coal in a stove or on an open fire releases particulate matter. The BLF says this can irritate your nose and throat, giving you a cough or breathing problems. Studies show smoke from wood heating enters neighbouring homes, too. If you must burn coal or wood, says the BLF, make sure the chimneys are inspected and swept regularly by a HETAS-qualified sweep. Avoid buying a wood-burning stove or using an open fire if someone in your household has a lung condition. Install alarms for both smoke and carbon monoxide, and check the batteries regularly.
9. Service your tech
Dangerous, and potentially lethal, amounts of invisible and odourless carbon monoxide can be produced if cooking and heating appliances are faulty. The BLF advises householders to ensure such appliances are regularly maintained by a certified engineer. Install extractor fans over gas stoves and ranges, and always use them.
10. Use pea shingle for plants
Cover houseplant soil in plant pots with pea shingle, to stop mould settling and forming, suggests Allergy UK.
11. Be careful with candles and incense
Candles and incense sticks emit particles and other pollutants when they burn. According to the BLF, incense sticks emit more than 100 times the number of fine particles than a candle does. However, while one candle in a room can substantially increase the particle concentration in the air while it's burning, over a 24-hour period, the increase is minimal. Scented candles emit small amounts of formaldehyde and VOCs but if only used occasionally, they're unlikely to pose much of a health risk.
12. Watch your radon risk
Radon is a natural colourless and odourless radioactive gas that comes from rocks and soil. The radon level in air outside is very low, but it can be higher inside poorly-ventilated buildings, and high levels can cause lung cancer. The higher the level of radon, and the longer you're exposed, the greater the risk, warns the BLF. Indoor radon often varies from building to building. If your home is affected, UKradon (ukradon.org/information/reducelevels) has a tool to help you decide if you need to reduce the level and how - methods include creating a sump pit under the house, or introducing special types of ventilation.
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12 ways to improve the air quality in your home - MyLondon
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