Sunday, 30 June 2019

Demonstrators Clash With Police in Hong Kong


By REUTERS and THE ASSOCIATED PRESS from NYT World https://ift.tt/2RM22nK

As Wimbledon Begins, Ashleigh Barty Is on Top of the World


By BEN ROTHENBERG from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2YoIYP8

Of Comic Books and Couture


By DANA THOMAS from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/322agwZ

What’s on TV Monday: ‘Divorce’ and ‘Veronica Mars’


By SARA ARIDI from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/2Jbkfra

‘Big Little Lies’ Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Unhinged


By ALI TRACHTA from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/2Nloi9F

What to Watch Monday at Wimbledon


By MAX GENDLER from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2KMyTZ7

Japan will restrict the export of some materials used in smartphones and chips to South Korea

Japan’s trade ministry said today that it will restrict the export of some tech materials to South Korea, including polyimides used in flexible displays made by companies like Samsung Electronics. The new rules come as the two countries argue over compensation for South Koreans forced to work in Japanese factories during World War II.

The list of restricted supplies, expected to go into effect on July 4, includes polyimides used in smartphone and flexible organic LED displays, and etching gas and resist used to make semiconductors. That means Japanese suppliers who wish to sell those materials to South Korean tech companies such as Samsung, LG and SK Hynix will need to submit each contract for approval.

Japan’s government may also remove South Korea from its list of countries that have fewer restrictions on trading technology that might have national security implications, reports Nikkei Asian Review.

Earlier this year, South Korea’s Supreme Court ruled several Japanese companies, including Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, that had used forced labor during World War II must pay compensation and began seizing assets for liquidation. But Japan’s government claims the issue was settled in 1965 as part of a treaty that restored basic diplomatic relations between the two countries and is asking South Korea to put the matter before an international arbitration panel instead.



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Pride! Parades In NYC, San Francisco, And Paris

NBC News covers Pride Parades in New York City, San Francisco, and Paris.

Open thread below...




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C&L's Late Nite Music Club With Naked Raygun

Saturday, 29 June 2019

Jeanine Pang, Brent Parsons


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2YpNBIS

In Hae Lee, Eugene Baek


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2XiwxrF

Ben Horvath, Andrew Begel


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2KKoVr6

Sally Holmes, Christopher Magalhaes


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2YpMB7A

Sabrina Rahman, Haseeb Frahmand


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Louisa Ferguson, Lukasz Mosakowski


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Laura Wells, Samuel Murray


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Kara Morgenstern, Charles Gary


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2Xa2RYD

Julie Lindenman, Dayne Jervis


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2FEgAkE

Jocelyn Hinman, Michael Coffee


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2NlVMoe

Elizabeth Paton, James Wise


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2FEqKBF

Avery McNeil, Daniel Kay


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/306B1Pd

Anne Choike, Gabriel Rauterberg


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2FJ6Jdn

Alexandra Feuer, Joseph Portale


By Unknown Author from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2YvFTg0

Venezuelan Navy Captain Accused of Rebellion Dies After Signs of Torture


By ANATOLY KURMANAEV from NYT World https://ift.tt/2IZ6Dk3

Kamala Harris Is Supported by Rivals After Trump Jr. Questions Her Race


By DERRICK BRYSON TAYLOR from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/2JiD1g7

Canadian Cartoonist Fired After His Trump Cartoon Goes Viral

Canadian Cartoonist Fired After His Trump Cartoon Goes Viral

I've used 'fired' in the headline, but more accurately de Adder had his contract terminated with the Brunswick News, a privately-held publishing company that operates in New Brunswick, Canada. The sole owner, James K. Irving is one of the wealthiest people in Canada and he and his family have a vast array of interests and holdings, many of them dependent on access to the United States. So, when their little newspapers published a political cartoon that went viral completely excoriating the vile and awful border practices of Trump something had to give.

Source: Daily Cartoonist

Michael de Adder was born, raised, and educated in New Brunswick province and was a regular presence in its newspapers. Brunswick News Inc., which owns the Saint John Telegraph-Journal, the Moncton Times & Transcript, and the Moncton Daily Gleaner, has now disassociated itself from de Adder.

The above cartoon is apparently the one that went a step too far for Brunswick News Inc.

According to Wikipedia de Adder “draws approximately 10 cartoons weekly and, at over a million readers per day, he is considered the most read cartoonist in Canada.”

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C&L's Sat Nite Chiller Theater: Seven Days In May

When General James Mattoon Scott becomes convinced that liberal President Jordan Lyman is rolling over for America's enemies, he sets in motion a military coup to take over the United States government.

Directed by John Frankenheimer and written by Rod Serling. The jaw-jutting, scenery-chomping competition between Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas alone is worth the price of admission.

Enjoy!




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Yankees’ Bats Are Too Much for the Red Sox in London


By JAMES WAGNER from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2JisjXj

Whitney North Seymour Jr., Former U.S. Prosecutor Who Fought Corruption, Dies at 95


By ROBERT D. McFADDEN from NYT Obituaries https://ift.tt/2XyMWYk

Joy Reid Explains Why It's Going To Be Hard To Recover From Damage Being Done By Trump

Joy Reid Explains Why It's Going To Be Hard To Recover From Damage Being Done By Trump

During the Overtime segment on this Friday's Real Time with Bill Maher, MSNBC host Joy-Ann Reid discussed why the next president of the United States is going to have a tough time undoing the damage that's already been done by this administration and their reckless trade policies, and what's left of America's reputation since Trump has taken office.

MAHER: Joy, your new book is all about Trump's impact on America. Do you think we'll be able to recover from his presidency once he finally leaves office? I keep saying he never will.

REID: Well, you know what? He keeps saying he never will. Right? Now he's doing it. You know,it’s going to very hard. I interviewed a lot of people from around the world who all said one thing.

The thing that America has said about itself since World War II, we kind of suspected might be bullshit, Donald Trump has made us feel, yep, it always bullshit. We don’t believe it anymore.

So getting the world to believe again, to believe that we are the good people, the leader of the free world, the real democracy, the multi-cultural democracy...

MAHER: I think that went pretty far down after Vietnam, you know...

REID: Yeah, but he's cratered it, and the other thing is, it's like the supply chains, right?

So Donald Trump does a tariff war, people stop buying our soybeans. You think because Kamala Harris is president, they're suddenly going to be like, oh, we're going to buy your soybeans again?

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With Little to Celebrate, Mets Honor a Title-Winning Team


By TYLER KEPNER from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2XdK8vi

Trump Lavishes Praise On Saudi Murderer

The United States, via a Trump presidency, now courts favor with murderers and international criminals like the Saudi Crown Prince. Trump even called the man who ordered the murder and dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi, a U.S. based journalist for the Washington Post , 'a friend of mine'.

The world should spit on both of them.

Source: The Guardian

Donald Trump has praised Saudi Arabia’s crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, saying he was doing a “spectacular job” as the pair met on the sidelines of the G20 summit.

“You have done a spectacular job,” Trump told the powerful crown prince on Saturday, calling him “a friend of mine”.

The young royal has faced international pressure after the US-based dissident Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi was murdered in the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul last year.

But Trump ignored questions from the media about whether he would raise the journalist’s death during his working breakfast with the prince.

The Best Gear for a Bird-Watching Trip


By WIRECUTTER STAFF from NYT Travel https://ift.tt/2ZPvlsC

Serena Williams’s Coach Says She Is Pain Free. Watch Out, Wimbledon?


By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2NlAqYp

He Found Out He Had 32 Siblings. For The Times Magazine, He Took Their Pictures.


By PIA PETERSON from NYT Reader Center https://ift.tt/2ZZZ6am

Move Over, Nevada: New Jersey Is the Sports Betting Capital of the Country


By NICK CORASANITI from NYT New York https://ift.tt/2FHITi2

For Young People of Color, a Safe L.G.B.T.Q. Space in the Bronx


By RICK ROJAS from NYT New York https://ift.tt/2Xc2UIq

Mom, Can I Stay Up to Prepare for My Pitch?


By JON HURDLE from NYT Business https://ift.tt/2KJa9Rv

Friday, 28 June 2019

Trump Invites Kim Jong-un to Meet Him at the DMZ on Sunday


By PETER BAKER from NYT World https://ift.tt/2JhttC3

The Week in Arts: Sarah Jessica Parker Back for More ‘Divorce’; a Farewell to ‘My Fair Lady’


By THE NEW YORK TIMES from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/2RHI0uR

Looking for ‘Wrist Power’? It’s All in a Distinctive Watch


By NAZANIN LANKARANI from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2Nkoki7

Rado Watches Adopts Le Corbusier’s Colors


By ROBIN SWITHINBANK from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2ZWiGnz

50 Years On, the Omega Watch That Went to the Moon


By ROBIN SWITHINBANK from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/31ZvviN

Your Leather Watch Strap and N.F.L. Footballs May Have Something in Common


By RACHEL FELDER from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2ZVxAdW

A Watch That Is All a Pilot Would Ever Need


By PENELOPE COLSTON from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2RIsY82

Apple Watch Hasn’t Crushed the Swiss. Not Yet.


By ROBIN SWITHINBANK from NYT Fashion https://ift.tt/2YknAup

What’s on TV Saturday: Ramy Youssef and ‘The Spy Who Dumped Me’


By SARA ARIDI from NYT Arts https://ift.tt/2NkoRAD

Mets Lose to Braves and Reach a Season Low


By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2XAHbsZ

Best Viral Videos Of The Week

This week's offering features a sky filled with lightning, a heart-grabbing near-miss with a truck, and a skateboarder with more guts that I will ever have.

Open thread below...




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A rare glimpse into the sweeping — and potentially troubling — cloud kitchens trend

Independent restaurant owners may be doomed, and perhaps grocery stores, too.

Such is the conclusion of a growing chorus of observers who’ve been closely watching a new and powerful trend gain strength: that of cloud kitchens, or fully equipped shared spaces for restaurant owners, most of them quick-serve operations.

While viewed peripherally as an interesting and, for some companies, lucrative development, the movement may well transform our lives in ways that enrich a small set of companies while zapping jobs and otherwise taking a toll on our neighborhoods. Renowned VC Michael Moritz of Sequoia Capital seemed to warn about this very thing in a Financial Times column that appeared last month, titled “The cloud kitchen brews a storm for local restaurants.”

Moritz begins by pointing to the runaway success of Deliveroo, the London-based delivery service that relies on low-paid, self-employed delivery riders who delivery local restaurant food to customers — including from shared kitchens that Deliveroo itself operates, including in London and Paris.

He believes that Amazon’s recent investment in the company “might just foreshadow the day when the company, once just known as the world’s largest bookseller, also becomes the world’s largest restaurant company.”

That’s bad news for people who run restaurants, he adds, writing, “For now the investment looks like a simple endorsement of Deliveroo. But proprietors of small, independent restaurants should tighten their apron strings. Amazon is now one step away from becoming a multi-brand restaurant company — and that could mean doomsday for many dining haunts.”

The good news . . . and the bad

He’s not exaggerating. While shared kitchens have so far been optimistically received as a potential pathway for food entrepreneurs to launch and grow their businesses — particularly as more people turn to take out —  there are many downsides  that may well outweigh the good, or certainly counteract it. Last year, for example, UBS wrote a note to its clients titled “Is the kitchen dead?” wherein it suggested the rise of food delivery apps like Deliveroo and Uber Eats could well prove ruinous for home cooks and as well as fresh food providers, including restaurants and supermarkets.

The economics are just too alluring, suggested the bank. Food is already inexpensive to have delivered because of cheap labor, and that will cost center will disappear entirely if delivery drones every take off. Meanwhile, food is becoming cheaper to make because of central kitchens, the kind that Deliveroo is opening and Uber is reportedly beginning move into, as well. (In March, Bloomberg reported that Uber is testing out a program in Paris where it’s renting out fully equipped, commercial-grade kitchens to serve businesses that selling food on delivery apps like Uber Eats.)

The favorable case for cloud kitchens argues that businesses using the spaces are paying less than they would for traditional restaurant real estate, but the reality is also that most of the businesses moving into them right now aren’t small restaurateurs but quick service brands that already have a following and aren’t particular known for emphasis on food quality but instead for churning out affordable food, fast.

As Eric Greenspan, an L.A.-based chef who has appeared on many Food Network shows and has opened and closed numerous restaurants over the course of his career, explains in a new, independent documentary about cloud kitchens: “Delivery is the fastest growing market in restaurants. What started out as 10 percent of your sales is now 30 percent of your sales, and [the industry predicts] it will be 50 to 60 percent of a quick-serve restaurant’s sales within the next three to five years. So you take that, plus the fact that quick-serve brands are kind of the key to getting a fat payout at the end of the day . . .”

During an age when fewer people frequent them traditional restaurants —  with their overhead and turnover and razor-thin margins — running one simply makes less and less sense, Greenspan continues.

“[Opening] up a brick-and-mortar restaurant these days is just like giving yourself a job. Now [with centralized kitchens], as long as the product is coming out strong, I don’t need to be there as a presence. I can quality control remotely now. I can go online and [sign out of a marketplace like Postmates or UberEats or Deliveroo] and not piss off any customers, because if I just decided to close the restaurant one day, and you drove over and it was closed, you’d be pissed. But if you’re looking for [one of my restaurants] in Uber Eats and you can’t find it because I turned it off, well, you’re not pissed. You just order something else.”

Big players only need apply . . .

The model works for now for Greenspan, who is running numerous restaurant “concepts” from one cloud kitchen in L.A. Perhaps unsurprisingly, that facility belongs in part to Uber cofounder Travis Kalanick, who was early to grok the opportunity that shared kitchens present. In fact, it was early last year that he announced he was investing $150 million in a startup called City Storage Systems that focused on repurposing distressed real estate assets and turning them into spaces for new industries, like food delivery.

That company owns CloudKitchens, which invites chains, as well as independent restaurant and food truck owners, to lease space in one of their facilities for a monthly fee, along with additional fees for data analytics meant to help the entrepreneurs boost their sales.

The pitch to restaurateurs is that CloudKitchens can reduce their overhead, but of course, the company is also amassing all kinds of data about its tenants in the process that one could seeing using over time. Little wonder that Amazon wants in or that these outfits have at least one serious competitor in China — Panda Selected — that is doing exactly the same thing and which raised $50 million led by Tiger Global Management earlier this year.

No one can fault these savvy entrepreneurs for seizing on what looks like a gigantic business opportunity. Still, the kitchens, which make all the sense in the world from an investment standpoint, should not be embraced so readily as a panacea, either.

Most obviously, they rely on the same people who drive Ubers and handle food deliveries — people who aren’t afforded health benefits and whose financial picture is forever precarious as a result. As with Uber drivers, Deliveroo employees tried to gain status as “workers” last year with better pay and paid but they were denied these rights because they have the option of asking other riders to take their deliveries. The EU Parliament more recently passed new rules to protect so-called gig economy workers, though the measures don’t go far.

Meanwhile, in the U.S, Uber and Lyft continue to fight legislation, including in California, that would turn their drivers and other gig workers into employees. In fact, though a bill passed the California assembly late last month that would give employee status to contract workers, Uber and Lyft are worried enough about its possible passage now in the state’s senate that the fierce rivals have teamed up to battle it.)

Ripple effects . . .

As Moritz suggests, shared kitchens stand to benefit some far more than others. While big chains, and renowned chefs like Greenberg, can take advantage of them given their brand recognition, smaller restaurants are more likely to be adversely impacted by them, and if they disappear, there are other ripple effects, including on housing markets.

Even Matt Newberg, a founder and foodie from New York, could see the writing on the wall when he recently toured CloudKitchen’s two L.A. facilities, along with the shared kitchens of two other companies: Kitchen United which last fall raised $10 million from GV, and and Fulton Kitchens, which offers commercial kitchens for rent on an annual basis.

Newberg is responsible for the aforementioned documentary (which you can also watch below), and he suggests that he most taken aback by the conditions of the first facility that CloudKitchens opened and operates, on West Washington Boulevard in South L.A. Though most restaurant kitchens are chaotic scenes, Newberg said that as “someone who loves food and sustainability” the easy-to-miss warehouse didn’t feel “very humane” to him. It’s windowless for one thing (it’s a warehouse). Newberg says that he also counted 27 kitchens packed into what are “maybe 250-square-feet to 300 square-foot spaces,” and a lot of people who appeared to be in panic mode. “Imagine lots of screaming, lots of sirens triggered when an order gets backed up, tablets everywhere.”

Adds Newberg, “When i walked in, I was like, holy shit, no one even knows this exists in L.A. It felt like Ground Zero. It felt like a military base. I mean, it seemed genius, but also crazy.”

Notably, Newberg says CloudKitchen’s second, newer location is far nicer, as are the facilities of Kitchen United and Fulton Kitchens. “That [second CloudKitchen warehouse] felt like a WeWork for kitchens. Super sleek. It was as quiet as a server farm. There were still no windows, but the kitchens are nicer and bigger.”

Growing pains . . .

Every startup has growing pains, naturally, and presumably, shared kitchen companies are not immune to these. Still, Moritz, the venture capitalist, recalls a telling story in that FT column. He says that in the early 2000s, his firm, Sequoia, invested in a chain of kebab restaurants called Faasos that planned to delivery meals to customers’ homes but was getting crushed by high rents and turnover among other things, so opened a centralized kitchen to sell kebobs. Now, he says, Fassos produces a wide variety of foods, including other Indian specialities but also Chinese and Italian dishes under separate brand names.

It’s the same playbook that Eric Greenspan is using, telling Food & WIne magazine last year that his goal was ultimately to have six delivery-only concepts running simultaneously, with two menus each for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Greenberg, who is obviously media savvy, can probably pull it off, too, as has Fassos. But for restaurants that are not known franchises or have the star appeal of celebrity chef, the future might not look so bright.

Writes Moritz: “In some markets there is still an opportunity for hardened restaurant and kitchen operators — particularly if they are gifted in the use of social media to build a following and refashion themselves. But they need to move quickly before it becomes too expensive to compete with the larger, faster-moving companies. The mere prospect of Amazon using cloud kitchens to provide cuisine catering to every taste — and delivering these meals through services such as Deliveroo — should be enough to give any restaurateur heartburn.”

It should also worry people who care about their neighborhoods. Cloud kitchens may make it easier and cheaper than ever to order take-out, but there will be consequences, some of which most of us have yet to imagine.



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C&L's Late Nite Music Club With Jimmie Dale Gilmore

BREAKING: ACLU Blocks Trump From Using 'Emergency Powers' To Build His Stupid Wall

BREAKING: ACLU Blocks Trump From Using 'Emergency Powers' To Build His Stupid Wall

HUGE win late Friday in the battle over Trump's abuse of "Emergency Declaration" to siphon money away from legitimate causes in hopes of expediting the construction of his despicable Border Wall of Hate.

The ACLU tweeted the following: