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USA Today’s Women of the Year list includes Michelle Obama, astronaut Nicole Mann and Goldie Hawn – CBS News

USA Today's annual Women of the Year list, which celebrates female figures who have broken ground and changed the world, includes former first lady Michelle Obama, astronaut Nicole Mann and actress Goldie Hawn, who told "CBS Mornings" she is honored to be included.

"I was very surprised, and at the same time, I get to really stand next to some extraordinary and very formidable women," Hawn said Friday. "So it really made me extremely happy and I feel very honored."

Other honorees on the 2023 list of dozens of women include the players of the U.S. women's soccer team, who won a historic equal pay agreement, and Sandra Day O'Connor, the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court. Michelle Obama was on the list for her work as an advocate for equal education for girls, and astronaut Nicole Mann was honored for her achievement as the first Indigenous woman to travel to space.

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Hawn, who is founder of the Goldie Hawn Foundation, was celebrated for her work focusing on children's mental health. Twenty years ago, her foundation created the program MindUP, which helps kids learn how to manage stress, regulate emotions and face challenges with resilience.

"What I learned (in 2003) was that children from 10 to 15 were already committing suicide and this really it really hit me to the core," Hawn said. "With that, I made a decision, and that was that no child should be doing that."

Hawn brought in neuroscientists, psychologists and other mental health experts to create a science-based mental health program for children that teaches about the brain and gives context on how emotions work and how they can be managed.

"I decided that, 'Why don't we do this?' We did it, we tested it, we researched it, and it showed incredible ... benefit to these children," Hawn said. "I decided at that point that I was just going to put this show on the road, and I did, and you know, it was a fearless act, but I decided that something has to happen. Our children cannot continue to grow this way."

Since its founding in 2003, Hawn estimates that MindUP has served about seven million children worldwide.

"This is probably one of the best, I guess, scripts, you could say, that I've ever produced. I produce a lot of movies, but this might be the best one," Hawn said.

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USA Today's Women of the Year list includes Michelle Obama, astronaut Nicole Mann and Goldie Hawn - CBS News

Will Kenan and Kel be taking orders from Harry Styles and Obama in … – Brunswick News

Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell will be taking fast food orders again in "Good Burger 2."

But which celebrities will be doing the ordering?

Thompson and Mitchell announced the long-awaited sequel, which starts filming this summer, on "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" on Friday. The next day, Thompson crashed an "All That" panel at 90s Con in Hartford, Connecticut, and teased some potential cameos.

The longtime "Saturday Night Live" cast member first gushed that he would make "cameo calls" to former "All That" co-stars Danny Tamberelli and Lori Beth Denberg, who sat alongside Mitchell during the panel. Denberg also appeared in the original 1997 "Good Burger" movie. Thompson said he also had his sights on even bigger stars.

"I keep saying Harry Styles. I just feel like it would be a really big one, you know what I'm saying? One Direction!," Thompson said, according to People, before adding that "Barack Obama would be great."

Thompson further promised that comedian Sinbad would reprise his role as the short-tempered schoolteacher, Mr. Wheat.

"Sinbad definitely is gonna be back. Even if we got to go to him, we'll make sure we have Sinbad for sure," Thompson said during the panel, referencing the comedian's health. Sinbad was hospitalized in a coma in 2020 after a blood clot had caused a stroke. He has since regained consciousness and has been recovering and learning how to walk again.

Rumors about a "Good Burger" sequel have swirled for years.

Keeping the idea alive among its fan base mostly children of the 1990s Thompson and Mitchell reunited during a 2015 "Fallon" episode and parodied their iconic characters of Ed and Dexter Reed. Then, in 2019, Mitchell went on to reprise his role in the Paramount+ "All That" reboot.

In recent months, as the duo began to appear together onscreen more often, talk of a sequel began to ramp up.

First came the 2022 Emmys moment where Thompson, who hosted the show, walked up to a dozing man at the bar and asked him what he wanted to drink. The man lifted his head, revealing he was Mitchell, and asked, "You know what, can I get a Good Burger?" The crowd burst into applause as the pair embraced.

As the pair pretended to do martial arts into the camera, Thompson exclaimed, "Sequel comin' at ya!"

A month after the Emmys, Thompson told ET that he was "getting really close" on the sequel. "It's gonna happen, and I think it's gonna happen soon," he said.

In a December episode of "SNL," Thompson and Keke Palmer performed another"Good Burger" parody with Mitchell making a surprise appearance.

When Fallon asked the pair Friday what prompted production of the sequel, wondering whether it had been influenced by the 2015 "Tonight Show" skit or the recent "SNL" parody, Thompson deflected, giving sparse details: "It's been years since the first one, we've been wanting to do two."

Thompson said he hoped to get "as many cameos as we could possibly get anybody that wants to do it that is somewhat famous," before asking an eager Fallon if he would join. Fallon agreed.

Thompson and Mitchell first met as teenagers during auditions for Nickelodeon's "All That," which premiered in 1994. "Good Burger" was a spinoff of two characters from one of the show's recurring skits, Ed (Mitchell) and Dexter Reed (Thompson). "All That" also led to "Kenan and Kel," another spinoff starring Thompson and Mitchell that ran on Nick for four seasons.

The "Good Burger" sequel will begin with a reunion between the two characters. As Dexter's career as an inventor fails, he returns to the Good Burger restaurant, where Ed welcomes him back, according to a Paramount press release. While Dexter makes a plan to recover from his failures, it inadvertently threatens the fate of the restaurant.

The film does not have a release date, but it will stream on Paramount+.

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Will Kenan and Kel be taking orders from Harry Styles and Obama in ... - Brunswick News

America, Israel and the era of false messiahs – JNS.org

(March 23, 2023 / JNS) On the eve of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq 20 years ago this month, the anticipated war was accompanied by a sense of idealistic triumphalism. It was fueled by a still-righteous rage following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks and empowered by the U.S.s recent early victories over the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The overriding sense of U.S. troops as they gathered in force across the border in the Kuwaiti desert was that they were the great liberators who would free the Iraqi people from Saddam Hussein just as their grandfathers liberated Paris from the Nazis.

As an embedded reporter with the U.S. Armys 3rd Infantry Division at the time, I can attest that the enthusiasm was infectious and, frankly, inspiring.

But there was a bug in the system that, over time, devoured the system itself. That bug was reality. Americans had told themselves a story about Iraq and Iraqis that had nothing to do with Iraq or Iraqis.

Then-President George W. Bush and his top advisors were guided by an ideology of American messianism. By their lights, all men were latent Americans. Everyone aspired to the same freedoms that Americans enjoyed. Release the people of Iraq from the bondage of Saddams tyranny, so the thinking went, and freedom would reign from Nasiriya to Baghdad, Tikrit to Kirkuk, as Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, Christians, YazidisIraqis allwould join together and build a new American-style free Iraq.

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After the initial exhilaration of being welcomed with smiles by Shiites at the sides of the highways, the brutal reality of the real Iraq and the non-universality of American ideals became ever clearer with each passing day. In the end, that reality consumed the American war effort.

Americans responded in different ways to the cold shower they received in Iraq. Some doubled down, clinging to their messianic faith in the curative powers of elections and pushing for repeats of the Iraqi ordeal in Egypt, the Palestinian Authority and beyond.

Others washed their hands of the world, embraced isolationism and said to hell with everyone.

Still others recoiled not from the world outside and its pathologies, but from America, which they blamed for the worlds pathologies. It was those Americans who rose to power in 2009.

Barack Obama was also a messianist. But his messianism was different from that of his neoconservative predecessors. The anti-colonialist worldview Obama shared with his advisors and supporters posited that the real messiah, such as it was, wasnt America, but the noble savages of the non-Western world. Left to their own devices, far from American and Western imperialist predations, these non-Westerners were the purest, most authentic form of humanity.

Their violence, anti-Americanism and even their own cultural and military imperialism and war crimes were rooted in and justified by American excesses. The president who for 20 years sat in the pews of the preacher who responded to Sept. 11 by declaring triumphantly that Americas chickens have come home to roost could make excuses for everything and everyone opposed to America.

Aside from America itself, the first victim of both the neoconservative messianism and the anti-colonialist messianism was Israel. The Jewish state was the victim of neoconservative messianists because their universalist view of America meant that, from their perspective, there was nothing unique or intrinsically valuable about the Jewish state.

Neoconservatives popularized the notion that the basis for U.S. support for Israel was not their shared Judeo-Christian heritage and values, but the fact that the government of Israel, like the U.S. government, governed with the consent of the governed. Once Iraq was freed of Saddam and his Baathist goons, the neocons insisted that Iraqis would be allies just as good and reliable as the Israelis.

By the same token, there was nothing inherently wrong or negative about the Muslim Brotherhood and its terrorist spawn. As Bush insanely argued after Hamas won the Palestinian elections in 2006, the yoke of governing responsibility and public expectation of services would force the jihadist terror group to abjure terrorism and its dedication to Israels destruction and devote its energies to fixing potholes.

Guided by the belief that, like Americans themselves, Israelis, Palestinians, Iraqis, Egyptians and Saudis were all latent Jeffersonians (or, at worst, Hamiltonians), Bush, Condoleezza Rice and their team accepted at face value the pan-Arab claim that Israel is to blame for the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Rather than look at the unique pathologies of Islamism and Arab imperialism, Jew-hatred and tribalism, and understand their role in shaping the societies of the Arab world, the Americans insisted that all things being equal, the Islamic and Palestinian Arab terror war against Israel was distinct from the Islamist terror war against the United States and the rest of the world.

Unlike the likes of Al-Qaeda, Palestinian terrorism and the rejection of Israels right to exist were somehow justified. It had to be. Otherwise, how could the United States expect the Palestinians and the rest of the Arab world to act like Israelis once they held elections?

The Bush administrations messianic blinders made it incapable of understanding the significance of Israels experience in Lebanon to its experience in Iraq. Had the Americans recognized that Israel is intrinsically their ally because of its shared particularistic values and heritage, and seen as such by its neighbors, Washington would have recognized that the society most similar to Iraqs was Lebanon, and Israels experience in its 18-year war in Lebanon had the most to teach them as they prepared to topple Saddam Hussein.

Had the administration understood the true nature of the multiethnic, traditional, violent society they were entering, they would certainly have developed a different plan for victory than democratizing a land where the values of liberalism are as alien as UFOs.

For neoconservatives, Islamist violence was the product of local tyranny. For anti-Western colonialists, it was the product of American tyranny. In neither case did the American messianists view Islamists as the natural outgrowth of distinct national, religious or tribal cultures and traditions.

This brings us to Obama and Israel. Whereas the neoconservatives didnt recognize the intrinsic similarity of Jewish-Israeli and American values or understand that those values served as the unique rather than universalist basis for the U.S.-Israel alliance, Obama and his followers did see Israel as a microcosm of America. And just as they recoiled from Americanism for what they viewed as its imperialist chauvinism, so they hated Israel.

Like America, they believed Israel was inherently racist because it was particularist. Just as Native Americans, South Americans, Iranians and others were victims of American colonialism, and right to hate it, so the Palestinians were victims of Israeli colonialists and justified in their resistance.

The neoconservatives messianic blindness to reality led to Iraq falling to Iran and Iran rising unopposed by an America sapped of self-confidence by its devastating experience in Iraq.

Obamas anti-Western colonialist messianism, which has now been restored under President Joe Biden as the ideological basis of American foreign policy, brought about the restoration of Russian power in the Middle East and the rise of a near-nuclear Iran.

It brought revolution and counter-revolution to Egypt and destabilized the Sunni Arab world as a whole for the first time in 90 years, shaking the foundations of American power in the Middle East.

Donald Trump sought to right the ship of American statesmanship in the region and worldwide to one that abjured messianism in favor of national interests. His Middle East policies facilitated the Abraham Accords and the near collapse of the Iranian economy by the time he left office. Both achievements made clear that he was on to something.

But Trump was stymied and subverted at every turn by his messianic neoconservative and anti-colonialist predecessors and hemmed in by his isolationist supporters. The headway he made was insufficient to withstand the restoration of Obamas anti-Western messianism under Biden two years ago.

Today, after eight years of neoconservative messianism and 10 years and counting of anti-colonialist, anti-Western messianism, Americas position in the region and the world topples and falls towards destruction.

Obama hated Israel because, to him, the Jewish state is a microcosm of the America he believed was responsible for the wars of the region. He turned against Americas Sunni allies in the Persian Gulf and against Egypt because they viewed the United States as a positive rather than a negative force in the region.

For failing to hate American power as he did, Obama determined that the Sunni regimes werent authentic and he worked to destabilize them by supporting the Iranian mullahs and their allies in the Muslim Brotherhood.

Since jihad was a reasoned response to American aggression, so the thinking went and still goes, by empowering jihadists at the expense of Israel and the Sunni regimes, America could convince them to leave America alone or provide it with moral exculpation.

Americas spurned Sunni allies responded to Washingtons betrayal by casting about for other options. First, they turned to Israel. Then they turned to Russia and China. Chinas mediation of the Saudi-Iranian dispute is a testament to the Sunnis conviction that the United States can no longer be trusted.

The report this week that the UAE is considering downgrading its relations with Israel is a testament to the growing sense among the Arabs that Israel is going down with America.

The Biden administrations open support for the revolt of Israels post-Zionist elites seems to support this assessment. Those elites have a long record of scuttling Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus efforts to develop strategic independence and the means to physically destroy Irans nuclear program. Instead, they favor support for U.S.-led nuclear diplomacy and appeasement of the ayatollahs. If Israel will not serve as a counterweight to Iran, then it has no value to the threatened Sunnis.

Israels takeaway from a generation of failed U.S. messianism must be that the time has come to end Israels strategic dependence on Uncle Sam. A restored alliance can only be based on mutual respect and sovereign independence. The mutinous elites must be brought to heel.

Americas takeaway from its generational flight from reality must be to restore reality to its proper place as the basis for American foreign policy. This doesnt mean that the mythmakers and dreamers should be sent off to pasture. But the image of America that will rebuild its power and vitality isnt a crusading banner of universal freedom. It isnt an LGBT flag with a Black Lives Matter fist in the middle.

A restored America will be one that presents an updated version of the icons of the pastHoratio Alger and the Lone Ranger. Theirs told the story of a free people who persevered and prospered because they were willing to pay the price for freedom. They stood up for themselves and succeeded through hard work, courage and grit.

That was the dream Americans had and the one they shared with the world. If it is restored, America may still return to greatness. If it remains elusive, the American dream for its people and the world will disappear.

Caroline Glick is an award-winning columnist and author of The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East.

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America, Israel and the era of false messiahs - JNS.org

Jamie Dimon Is Bullish On Blockchain, But Not Bitcoin Satoshi … – Investing.com UK

Benzinga - Are investors making too many assumptions about Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC)? JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE: JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon is bullish on blockchain technology, but Bitcoin is another story.

"How do you know it's going to stop at 21 million? ... maybe it's going to get to 21 million and Satoshi's picture is going to come up and laugh at you all," Dimon said during a Jan. 19 appearance on CNBC's "Squawk Box."

What To Know: Satoshi Nakamoto is a presumed pseudonymous person responsible for the creation of Bitcoin. Many argue that Bitcoin holds value because of its scarcity, given the maximum number of coins that can be mined is capped at 21 million, according to Bitcoin's source code.

Related Link: Satoshi Nakamoto's Last Messages Before Disappearing, The Odds Of $250K BTC In 2023

Dimon reminded listeners that no one really knows what will happen, but he has strong opinions on the world's oldest and most valuable cryptocurrency.

"Bitcoin itself is a hyped-up fraud, a pet rock," Dimon said.

"I think all of that has been a waste of time and why you guys waste any breath on it is totally beyond me," he told CNBC during an interview at the World Economic Forum.

Blockchain, on the other hand, is a technology leger system and it's much different than cryptocurrency tokens, he said, adding JPMorgan uses blockchain technology to move information and money around.

The rest is more of a "decentralized Ponzi scheme," Dimon said.

"I don't care about Bitcoin, so we should just drop the subject."

It may take a while to find out if Dimon is right in his thinking. Bitcoin isn't expected to reach the 21-million mark until 2040.

Check This Out: If You Invested $1,000 In Bitcoin When Tesla Bought The Crypto, Here's How Much You'd Have Now

Originally published on Jan. 19, 2022.

Photo: Tumisu from Pixabay.

2023 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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Jamie Dimon Is Bullish On Blockchain, But Not Bitcoin Satoshi ... - Investing.com UK

VIDEO: What is XRP and what does it do? What is Ripple? – InvestorsObserver

2023-03-21 11:33:37 ET

Cryptocurrency is not an old industry. Bitcoin kicked off the industry as we know it when Satoshi Nakamoto mined the Genesis block on January 3rd 2009, as the world reeled from one of the worst financial crashes in recent memory.

Only three years later, XRP was launched, a decentralised asset built for payments. Today, it remains one of the most well-known and biggest cryptocurrencies, currently sitting in sixth place with a market cap of close to $20 billion.

And yet, so many are still confused as to what XRP does, as well as the distinction to Ripple, the company behind it. This week on the Invezz podcast, I interviewed Brendan Berry, Payment Products Lead at Ripple, to get into the weeds of what exactly XRP is, what Ripple is, and the distinction between the two, as well as what they both do.

We covered a bunch of topics. One of these was the issues with conventional banking a particularly pertinent topic given the startling events in the sector over the last couple of weeks.

But we focused mainly on payments. Ive criticised the process behind bank transfers, and I put to Brendan my curiosity around what feels like a total lack of innovation in the digital age from banks. I asked him about fees and lag times and why these were taking days for cross-border payments.

Of course, this is a big reason why XRP exists. We talked about the ins and outs of this, as well as a subsection within the area of payments: remittances. When I visited El Salvador last summer, I was fascinated by this area but the data shows that the pickup hasnt happened yet. I wanted to get Brendans take on this and how XRP can contribute in this area.

We also discussed the future of crypto, including what Brendan believes will be a streamlining of the front-end experience of a lot of transactions within the space.

Another topic we touched on was whether the recent banking turmoil would push people further into crypto, and what this could mean for the industry, and XRP, going forward.

All in all, it was a wide-ranging discussion centred on payments and what role XRP could have in this world.

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VIDEO: What is XRP and what does it do? What is Ripple? - InvestorsObserver