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Tesla: What Tesla’s Stock Split Does And Does Not Signal

What Tesla’s Stock Split Does And Does Not Signal

Today, Tesla TSLA -0.9% stock traded for the first time since splitting 5-for-1 last Friday. The company’s shares rose by $55.64, a 12.6% increase, to $498.32, taking the company’s market capitalization to a record high.

Tesla announced the stock split on August 11, and since that date its shares have increased by 81%, while in contrast the S&P 500 increased by 5%.

What Tesla’s Stock Split Does And Does Not Signal


To place Tesla’s stock split into context, with a view to sorting out what Tesla’s stock split signals, and for that matter does not signal, consider some key insights from behavioral finance.

In contrast to the approach in traditional finance, which emphasizes that stock splits are essentially cosmetic changes with no major financial impacts, behavioral research has documented that stock splits tend to feature real subsequent effects.

The shares of the typical firm that engages in a stock split, but not a reverse split, are associated with a positive abnormal return of about 8% over a twelve month period following the split.1

What is really interesting is that companies which choose to split their stocks tend to find themselves the objects of pessimistic earnings forecasts by analysts. Just over a month ago, Tesla surprised analysts when it announced second quarter GAAP earnings per share of 50 cents compared to analysts’ consensus forecast of a $1.06 loss. Tesla also surprised analysts in respect to revenues and free cash flow.

The general finding from behavioral finance research is that companies which announce stock splits tend to be much less likely to experience declines in future earnings than companies with comparable market capitalizations and price-to-book ratios.

In a nutshell, the behavioral approach indicates that if we take the outside view of Tesla, meaning that we focus on the reference class to which Tesla belongs, then by splitting its stock, the company is signaling that it is confident that it will be able to deliver future earnings that do not decline.

What Tesla’s stock split does not signal is that its shares are fairly priced relative to fundamentals. Analysts at Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan have been communicating to investors for more than five years target prices that correspond to fundamental values. The reports from the end of last month, from both analyst teams, agree on one thing. Tesla’s market value lies above its fundamental value.

Tesla Stock Split 2020: What You Need to Know


On July 28, 2020, Tesla’s stock was trading at $1,476. At that time, Morgan Stanley analysts established a twelve month target price of $1,050 for Tesla, based entirely on a discounted cash flow valuation. One week earlier, JP Morgan analysts established a fundamental value for Tesla’s stock of $295 per share, which they related to a target price of $325 for the end of December 2020.

Although both analyst teams agreed that Tesla’s stock was overvalued, they clearly had very different views about its fundamental value. In this, they were not alone. Post stock split, the range of target prices for analysts covering Tesla is $17.40 to $500, with the median target price being $295. Remember, Tesla’s August 30 closing price was $498!

Few analysts use discounted cash flow to arrive at their target prices. Even JP Morgan’s analysts set a target price for Tesla above their estimate for fundamental value. This is in line with the behavioral approach which posits that because of sentiment, market prices and fundamental values can part company for long periods of time, with the gap between the two being large and plausibly widening before narrowing. In this regard, it is worth noting that according to Morgan Stanley’s valuation framework, 75% of Tesla’s fundamental value derives from Tesla’s free cash flow stream after 2030. New information about what is likely to occur after 2030 is scant relative to the volatility in Tesla’s current market price.

Gaps between market prices and fundamental values can be especially wide for stocks that feature high sentiment betas. Sentiment beta reflects sensitivity to general market sentiment in the same way that traditional beta reflects sensitivity to the return on the market.

Here’s what it will take for Tesla’s stock to recover from the coronavirus selloff


One of the most important features of stocks that feature high sentiment beta is that these stocks are highly volatile, are difficult to value, are difficult to arbitrage, and are associated with companies that are young and while currently low in profitability have great profit potential. Not surprisingly, Tesla’s stock qualifies as featuring high sentiment beta.

Short selling high sentiment beta stocks is risky business, even when these stocks appear to be wildly overvalued on fundamentals. This is one of the main lessons I communicated to investors in my book Beyond Greed and Fear: Understanding Behavioral Finance and the Psychology of Investing, published two decades ago. That lesson has not changed; however, for psychological reasons, many investors seem to need to learn that lesson the hard way.
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Emma Roberts Finally Revealed Just How Pregnant She Actually Is In Recent Instagram Post

Emma Roberts Finally Revealed Just How Pregnant She Actually Is In Recent Instagram Post

And it's a boy!

After much speculation, our favourite 'Wild Child' has officially confirmed she is in fact pregnant!



Heavily pregnant, if we do say so ourselves...

Emma Roberts took to Instagram to post a very poised, very adorable series of pregnancy pics alongside her Hubby,  Garrett Hedlund.

Her Instagram caption read, 'Me...and my two favorite guys.'

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We're no detectives but judging by her simple yet specific caption, we can safely assume that she is, in fact, having a baby boy!

Emma Roberts Finally Revealed Just How Pregnant She Actually Is In Recent Instagram Post


Congratulations guys!
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Lady Gaga dominates during unusual pandemic broadcast MTV VMAs 2020

MTV VMAs 2020: Lady Gaga dominates during unusual pandemic broadcast

Singer reigns supreme in awards show filled with calls for social justice and recognition of Covid tragedy

Lady Gaga dominated an unusual year for the MTV Video Music awards, winning five awards in a strange and disconcerting evening.

ENTERTAINMENT: LADY GAGA DOMINATES 2020 MTV VMAs


The singer, who led the evening with nine nominations and wore a variety of masks through the night, accepted awards for artist of the year, song of the year, best cinematography and best collaboration for Rain on Me and the inaugural Tricon award, which recognizes an artist who is highly accomplished across three or more disciplines.

“Just because we’re separated right now, and culture may feels less alive in some ways, I know a Renaissance is coming,” she said during her final acceptance speech. “Stay safe, speak your mind, and I might sound like a broken record, but wear a mask — it’s a sign of respect.”

The VMAs was the first major awards broadcast to air since the coronavirus pandemic shuttered production in America. The hybrid program mixed video acceptances, audience-less performances, and an unearthly, unidentifiable studio base in New York City and leaned heavily on video effects and star enthusiasm.

An ebullient Keke Palmer hosted from an outdoor set somewhere near the Empire State Building (“They’ve got me on top of every building,” she joked) before an “audience” whose reality was difficult to discern (“crowd noise” tracks were almost certainly used). The multi-hyphenate host kicked off the ceremony with a pre-recorded video honoring Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman, who died at age 43 on Friday after a previously undisclosed, four-year fight with colon cancer. Boseman was “a true hero”, said Palmer, “not just on screen, but in every thing he did.”

ENTERTAINMENT: LADY GAGA DOMINATES 2020 MTV VMAs


Whereas last year’s VMAs were criticised for host Sebastian Mansicalco’s tone-deaf jokes about “safe spaces”, Palmer minced no words in addressing the present of Black Lives Matter protests; the nationwide response to the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor have demonstrated that young people will “step up, take to the streets, and make sure they’re heard.” Palmer, whose video pleading with police officers to listen during protests in Los Angeles went viral, also directly addressed the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin. “We must continue the fight to end systemic racism,” she said. “It’s our time to be the change we want to see.”

Other winners included The Weeknd for best video for Blinding Lights, Taylor Swift for best direction for The Man, Maluma’s Qué Pena for best Latin, Megan Thee Stallion’s Savage for best hip-hop, On by BTS for best pop, and Doja Cat for best new artist.

Calls for unity and racial justice echoed throughout the evening – rapper DaBaby performed on a police car with the sign Stop Killing Us, R&B star HER won best video for good for her song I Can’t Breathe – in a show which continued last year’s celebration of Latin music as a dominant cultural force. The night featured two Spanish performances from Colombian star Maluma and the Latin group CNCO, both at a drive-in theater in Brooklyn, as well as a retro-themed rendition of Dynamite by K-pop superstars BTS, whose music video set the record last week for most YouTube views within 24 hours.

But the main throughline was the ongoing pandemic and the show directly spoke to the tragedy and resiliences of the past six months – Palmer introduced a segment in which frontline healthcare workers danced and sang, cameras cut frequently backstage to reveal masked stars walking along taped distancing guidelines. Lady Gaga, Ariana Grande and their backup dancers wore masks for the performance of Rain on Me. MTV introduced two distinctly 2020 categories – best music video from home (Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande for Stuck with U) and best quarantine performance (Latin supergroup CNCO for De Cero / Honey Boo) – as a nod to strange times.

Perhaps nothing captured the tone of the ceremony quite like the last five minutes, when The Weeknd accepted the night’s capstone award for best video with a brief, subdued speech – “like I said, hard to celebrate, so I’m just going to say: justice for Jacob Blake and justice for Breonna Taylor” — that cut quickly into the finale performance by the Black Eyed Peas. The band closed out the night with 2010’s I’ve Got A Feeling – an ode to better times.

MTV VMAs 2020: Lady Gaga dominates during unusual pandemic broadcast


“I know it’s tough right now, but we’ve gotta keep the love alive,” said the group’s frontman Will.i.am, adding as the night’s final words: “Wakanda forever. Black lives matter.”

Should the Bears sign former Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette?.
Report: Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson dead.
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Should the Bears sign former Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette?

Should the Bears sign former Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette?

Bears starting running back David Montgomery's status for Week 1's opener in Detroit is very much up in the air after the second-year pro injured his groin in practice last week. His injury exposed one of the Bears' roster weaknesses - running back depth - and has led to questions about who will replace Montgomery in the starting lineup if he's out for a couple of games.

The candidates who are currently on the team include Tarik Cohen, Cordarrelle Patterson, and Ryan Nall. None of them inspire much confidence as a lead back. But a new contender may have just become available on Monday: Leonard Fournette.

Should the Bears sign former Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette?


The Jaguars released Fournette in a surprise move after failed attempts at a trade, according to multiple reports on Twitter.

Fournette was the fourth overall pick of the 2017 NFL draft and while his career hasn't been nearly as productive as his pre-draft hype predicted, he's been a quality NFL starter.

Fournette totaled 1,152 yards and three touchdowns in 2019 and has topped 1,000 rushing yards in two of his three seasons in the league. He had a career-high 4.3 yards per carry last year and, at times, ran like one of the league's toughest backs.

At just 25 years old, Fournette will have plenty of suitors for his services. He's a legitimate three-down starting running back whose best seasons are likely ahead. That said, his reported clashes with the Jaguars coaching staff will be a red flag as teams weigh the risks associated with signing a player who will have little choice but to sign a one-year deal in 2020 but could be a contract nightmare next offseason if he's productive.

Report: Jags have had discussions to trade Leonard Fournette


Would signing Fournette make sense for the Bears? It's hard to argue why it wouldn't.

Fournette will command something in the neighborhood of $4 million on a one-year deal in the open market. It'll be a classic prove-it deal for a player with a lot of juice left in his legs, and it's the pay he would've received in Jacksonville had he remained on the roster in 2020. The Bears have the cap space to make a move like that.

A one-two punch of Montgomery and Fournette would flip the identity of this offense from a group that doesn't have one to a Titans-like ground-and-pound attack. With Mitch Trubisky and Nick Foles vying for the starting quarterback job, it probably makes sense to feature a two-headed rushing attack as the primary gameplan on offense.



General manager Ryan Pace preaches competition (every year) as the key variable in getting the most out of players. Adding Fournette to the running back room will create that kind of competition (and insurance) in the backfield that this team needs right now.

Report: Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson dead.
CenturyLink: PSA: CenturyLink outage takes down Amazon, Hulu, Playstation Network, etc for many users.
Adele Shared a Photo of Her Wearing Bantu Knots With a Jamaican Flag Bikini Top, and the Internet Lost It.
VMAs 2020: How to watch, performances and nominations.
Portland shooting: What Happened in Portland? Here's What We Know.

Should the Bears sign former Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette? originally appeared on NBC Sports Chicago.
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Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson dead

Report: Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson dead

John Thompson, who led the Georgetown Hoyas basketball team for 27 seasons, has died, according to a Washington, D.C., radio station.

Thompson’s death was reported first by The Team 980 & 95.9FM.

Report: Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson dead


Thompson, 78, compiled a coaching record of 596-239, and 97% of his players stayed all four years and left with a college degree. He was the first Black head coach to win the NCAA national championship when the Hoyas defeated the University of Houston Cougars in the 1984 NCAA title game.

A Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame inductee and three-time Big East Coach of the Year, Thompson retired from coaching in 1999. During his tenure at Georgetown, he coached several NBA first-round picks including Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning, Bill Martin, Sleepy Floyd and Allen Iverson.

Thompson was born and raised in Washington, D.C. At Archbishop Carroll High School, he emerged as a standout center, playing in three consecutive city championship games. During his senior year, Thompson led Carroll to a 24–0 record, preserving its 48-game winning streak along the way.

After graduation, Thompson went to Providence College, where he played on the 1963 NIT Championship team and was part of the first Providence NCAA tournament team in 1964. He was an All-American in his senior year of 1964.

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Thompson was drafted in the third round in 1964 and played two years in the NBA for the Boston Celtics.

Thompson then became the head coach at St. Anthony High School in Washington, D.C., from 1966 to 1972, racking up a 122–28 record. He was then hired to become the head coach of Georgetown’s men’s basketball team, where he spent the remainder of his Hall of Fame career.

Legendary Georgetown coach John Thompson dead


Over the following 27 years, Thompson’s Hoyas had a .714 winning percentage and ran off a streak of 24 postseason appearances, including a 14-year streak of NCAA appearances from 1979 to 1992 that saw three Final Four appearances in 1982, 1984 and 1985, a national championship in 1984 and narrowly missing a repeat the next year by losing to underdog Villanova.

Thompson won seven Coach of the Year awards.
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CenturyLink: PSA: CenturyLink outage takes down Amazon, Hulu, Playstation Network, etc for many users

PSA: CenturyLink outage takes down Amazon, Hulu, Playstation Network, etc for many users

If you’re waking up this morning finding that a lot of the services you use on the internet are not working, don’t worry, it’s not just you. Earlier this morning, an outage with CenturyLink has interrupted services for many across the world.

CenturyLink outage takes down Amazon, Hulu, Playstation Network, etc for many users


When I woke up this morning, I found my abode security system to be disconnected from Wi-Fi and connected to its LTE connection. I quickly noticed that I had several other services that didn’t seem to be working when connected to Wi-Fi.

I initially thought it was something with my local internet provider, but as the rest of the US began waking up, it became clear that the outage was widespread. Downdetector is reporting issues with Amazon, Starbucks, Chase, GoDaddy, Peloton, Venmo, and countless others.

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Searching for Hulu on Twitter also shows many users are having difficulty accessing the service this morning. So it’s safe to say if you’re having issues with your internet this morning, it’s not just you.

CenturyLink outage takes down Amazon, Hulu, Playstation Network, etc for many users


CenturyLink purchased Level 3 in 2017, and it provides core IP, voice, video, and content delivery for many internet carriers in North America, Latin America, Europe, and parts of Asia.
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Adele Shared a Photo of Her Wearing Bantu Knots With a Jamaican Flag Bikini Top, and the Internet Lost It

Adele Shared a Photo of Her Wearing Bantu Knots With a Jamaican Flag Bikini Top, and the Internet Lost It

Hardly anything in the year 2020 seems strange anymore. Then something new happens, like a photo that singer Adele posted to Instagram that found its way around the internet on Sunday. The strangeness of it had her followers questioning not just the attire, but the singer herself.

Adele is shown wearing bantu knots in her hair and a Jamaican flag bikini top, and her post read, "Happy what would be Notting Hill Carnival my beloved London." Her post was followed by emoji flags of both Great Britain and Jamaica.

Adele Shared a Photo of Her Wearing Bantu Knots With a Jamaican Flag Bikini Top, and the Internet Lost It


The Notting Hill Carnival is a popular annual event that's significant in Black British culture, and it takes place during the Sunday and Monday of the country's August Bank Holiday weekend. The carnival that began in 1966 has taken on a Caribbean flavor since 1976, but it was canceled this year because of COVID-19.

Because of its cancelation, many people have celebrated virtually—or online—in their own ways. This is where the famous British singer made her virtual mark.

First, she wore bantu knots in her hair, but what are they? It's a traditional African hairstyle that's been around more than a century, according to NaturallyCurly.com. The term "Bantu" itself is a term that collectively describes hundreds of African tribes that spoke the "Bantu" language, but it doesn't refer to any one homogenous group of people.

Though the hairstyle that's sometimes called "twisted mini buns" was popular among African women, it also became popular among Black women all over the world. And recently, non-Black celebrities and models have worn the hairstyle, even drawing criticism for doing so.

VMAs 2020: How to watch, performances and nominations

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The Jamaican flag bikini top worn by Adele was an obvious nod to the Caribbean country and culture.

Her photo had Twitter, Instagram and other outlets on fire Sunday night.

Frederick Joseph, author of "The Black Friend," said people have seen enough this year already.

Ernest Owens, an author who has more than 20,000 followers on Twitter, said "This officially marks all of the top white women in pop as problematic."

Adele Shared a Photo of Her Wearing Bantu Knots With a Jamaican Flag Bikini Top, and the Internet Lost It


Adele is from the Tottingham section of London, where the annual Notting Hill Carnival is held every year. She has three studio albums: 19, 21 and 25, and a live album. She told friends at a wedding this year that a fourth studio album that would be released in September 2020, but that has since changed because of COVID-19.
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What Happened in Portland? Here’s What We Know

What Happened in Portland? Here’s What We Know

A man was shot and killed after supporters of President Trump clashed with counterprotesters.

Portland, Ore., has had nightly protests since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

What Happened in Portland? Here's What We Know


On Saturday night, a caravan of supporters of President Trump traveled through the city, clashing with counterprotesters. A man was shot and killed during the unrest.

Here’s what we know so far.

What happened in Portland?

Supporters of the president gathered on Saturday at a shopping center a few miles southeast of Portland. The caravan of hundreds of trucks then traveled into the city. Most were flying “Trump 2020” or thin blue line flags, which are commonly associated with support for the police and often seen as antithetical to the Black Lives Matter movement.

The caravan clashed with counterprotesters at times. People shot paintball guns from trucks and protesters threw objects at them. Some conflicts devolved into fistfights in the streets. A video showed a small group in the street, where gunfire erupts and a man collapses.

Police Chief Chuck Lovell said the caravan stretched for miles and there were pockets of violence. The police tried to take precautionary measures to prevent vehicles from making their way downtown.

“We have limited resources,” Chief Lovell said at a news conference on Sunday. “We can’t be everywhere at the same time.”

Portland police officers heard reports of gunfire shortly before 9 p.m. local time and found a man with a gunshot wound to the chest, the police said.

Medical responders determined that the man was dead, the police said.

Officials asked people to not jump to conclusions about what happened and to stay away from Portland as some have expressed a desire to seek retribution.

Who was the man who died?

The man’s identity has not been released.

He was wearing a hat with the insignia of Patriot Prayer, a far-right group based in the Portland area. The group says it seeks to combat “corruption, big government and tyranny, using God for strength and the power of love,” according to its Facebook page, which has more than 40,000 followers.

VMAs 2020: How to watch, performances and nominations

A Patriot Prayer leader, Joey Gibson, said on Sunday that the man was a good friend and a supporter of the group, but he did not offer further details.

Do we know who the gunman was?

The police have not released information about who fired the shots.

Chief Lovell said on Sunday that the police were “working diligently to find and apprehend the individual or individuals responsible.”

The police said on Sunday that they had concluded an investigation of the shooting scene and asked witnesses or those with video of the episode to contact detectives.

What else has been happening in Portland?

Protests have occurred nightly in the city since the killing of George Floyd in May.

In recent weeks, right- and left-wing groups have clashed. On Aug. 22, a demonstration outside the U.S. courthouse in Portland turned violent as right-wing demonstrators, including Proud Boys members, clashed with Black Lives Matter protesters. Objects were thrown, paintballs were fired and shouting turned to shoving and punching.

What Happened in Portland? Here’s What We Know


The city is no stranger to demonstrations that devolve into chaos, often stoked by conflicts with the police or between opposing groups.

In 2016, protests over Mr. Trump’s election were marred by vandalism and fires. The unrest was labeled a riot by the police, who deployed pepper spray and rubber “distraction devices” against the crowd.

In August 2018, Mr. Gibson led a demonstration that drew hundreds of Patriot Prayer supporters, many from outside the state, The Oregonian reported. Counterprotesters were ordered by the police to disperse before officers deployed flash-bang grenades and shoved counterprotesters out of the street.

Last month, camouflaged federal agents were sent to the city, against the wishes of the local authorities.

What has President Trump said about the situation?

Mr. Trump has not spoken specifically about the shooting death in Portland, but on Sunday morning he retweeted a message that said Portland “needs to be federalized at this point.”

Mr. Trump added to the message: “The National Guard is Ready, Willing and Able. All the Governor has to do is call!”

In another tweet, Mr. Trump said the “big backlash going on in Portland cannot be unexpected.” He called Portland’s mayor, Ted Wheeler, “incompetent” and “a FOOL,” adding that “the people of Portland won’t put up with no safety any longer.”

On Sunday afternoon, the mayor sharply criticized Mr. Trump, saying the president wanted Mr. Wheeler to “stop the violence that you helped create.”

Portland, Ore., has had nightly protests since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.


“Do you wonder, Mr. President, why this is the first time in decades that Americans have seen this level of violence?” Mr. Wheeler said. “It’s you who have created the hate and the division.”

Mr. Wheeler said the caravan was “supported and energized” by Mr. Trump.

“I’d appreciate that either the president support us or he stay the hell out of the way,” Mr. Wheeler said.
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VMAs 2020: How to watch, performances and nominations

VMAs 2020: How to watch, performances and nominations

Sunday's MTV Video Music Awards will be unlike the any of the event's previous shows.

Although the broadcast will go on despite the coronavirus pandemic, producers have made major adjustments for health precautions.

Sunday's MTV Video Music Awards will be unlike the any of the event's previous shows.


The backdrop for this year's show will be New York City, featuring performances set outside, with limited or no live audiences.

Keke Palmer is set to host.

Performing and presenting:

BTS will make their first VMA performance debut with their new single, "Dynamite." Miley Cyrus is set to perform her new single, "Midnight Sky." Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande's will sing "Rain on Me." You'll also be treated to performances by Black Eyed Peas, CNCO, The Weeknd, Da Baby, Doja Cat and Maluma. Presenters include Bebe Rexha, Bella Hadid, Drew Barrymore, Jaden Smith, Kelly Clarkson, Machine Gun Kelly and more.

VMAs 2020: How to watch, performances and nominations


Honoring frontline medical workers

The event will pay tribute frontline medical workers, "who kept everyone going with their impromptu and off-the-cuff performances,' according to MTV.

The nominees:

Ariana Grande and Lady Gaga lead in nominations with nine, followed by Billie Eilish and The Weeknd with six. They're all in contention for video of the year, along with Eminem, Taylor Swift, Future/Drake and Juice WRLD. MTV has created two new categories -- best music video from home and best quarantine performance -- for artists who have best adapted their craft for the times. Click here for full list of the nominees.

VMAs 2020: Complete list of winners and nominees


Where to watch

The 2020 MTV VMAs will air on Sunday, August 30, 2020 at 8pm EST on MTV.
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Portland clashes: Fatal shooting as rival groups protest

 Portland clashes: Fatal shooting as rival groups protest


A man has been shot dead in Oregon as a large procession of supporters of President Trump clashed with Black Lives Matter protesters in Portland.


Images from the scene showed medics trying to save the man, who appeared to be white.


1 shot dead in Portland as rival protesters clash



Police have not given an identity or specified whether the shooting was directly linked to the clashes which broke out in a downtown area.


Portland's streets have been the scene of frequent protests in recent weeks.


The city has become a focus for demonstrations against police brutality and racism since the police killing of African-American George Floyd in Minneapolis on 25 May triggered a wave of national and international outrage.


Federal forces were sent by President Trump to Portland in July in what was described as a move to prevent violence.


What is known about the shooting?

The latest pro-Trump rally was on the third Saturday in a row.


In a statement, Portland police said: "Portland Police officers heard sounds of gunfire from the area of Southeast 3rd Avenue and Southwest Alder Street. They responded and located a victim with a gunshot wound to the chest."


The man did not survive, they said.


Oregon Live reported that "camouflage gear" with "thin blue line patches" was seen next to the body - a common sign of support for the police.


How BLM went from Facebook post to global movement

Teen billed for police overtime after BLM rally

Trump's crackdown on Portland protests explained

Should Wisconsin police have used different tactics?

The man was wearing a hat linked to far-right group Patriot Prayer, the New York Times reports.


Another image shows police trying to restrain a man who was apparently with the person who was shot.


What was the background to the shooting?

The shooting came amid fights between the Trump supporters and BLM protesters in the city centre.


Tension rose after a convoy of some 600 vehicles flying flags and carrying an estimated 1,000 Trump backers gathered at a mall in Clackamas county on the outskirts before entering Portland's downtown.


Video showed some people firing what local media described as pepper spray and pellets at BLM groups who had tried to prevent them entering the city by blocking streets.


Police reported "some instances of violence" between "demonstrators and counter-demonstrators" and said some arrests had been made.


The violence followed last week's Republican convention which formally anointed Mr Trump as the party's presidential candidate.


Accepting the nomination in a speech on the White House lawn, he sought to characterise Portland as another Democratic-run city prey to "rioting, looting, arson, and violence".


The clashes also come in the wake of the shooting by police of a black man in Wisconsin. Jacob Blake was seriously wounded last week after he was shot in the back seven times by an officer in Kenosha as he was getting into a car.


Portland clashes: Fatal shooting as rival groups protest



Why is Portland a flashpoint?

Some protests in Portland over George Floyd's death have been marred by violence, arson, damage to property, arrests and allegations of police brutality.


In July, federal officers drew strong criticism for cracking down on crowds - against the wishes of the local authorities - who had gathered in the city. Federal officers in unmarked vehicles appeared to forcefully seize protesters from the streets and detain them without justification.


A-League final: Sydney go back-to-back to make history as wild extra-time winner decides A-League final


The Trump administration described the protesters as a violent mob, but city officials drew a distinction between peaceful demonstrators and smaller groups bent on making trouble.


Portland has also seen violence between far-right groups, such as Proud Boys and Patriot Prayer, and left-wing counter-demonstrators known as antifa, or anti-fascist movement.

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A-League final: Sydney go back-to-back to make history as wild extra-time winner decides A-League final

 SKY FIVE: Sydney go back-to-back to make history as wild extra-time winner decides A-League final


That’s five.

Sydney FC have now won the most titles in Australian football league history after outlasting Melbourne City in a 120-minute A-League decider at Bankwest Stadium that finished 1-0.


Sydney FC  vs Melbourne City in a 120-minute A-League decider at Bankwest Stadium that finished 1-0.



It was Sydney’s mulleted man, Rhyan Grant, who was the unlikely deadlock-breaker in the 100th minute as the Sky Blues, who have now gone back-to-back as champions, finally found a way past a heroic Tom Glover in goals in extra-time.


Looking for their maiden title, Melbourne City started stronger and were unlucky not to take the lead, before Sydney’s experience came to the fore.


After five shots in the opening 10 minutes, and a shot cleared off the line from Craig Noone, City thought they’d finally broken through in the 18th minute, until VAR intervened.


A Harrison Delbridge strike from just outside the box beat Andrew Redmayne, but after further investigation, referee Chris Beath decided Lachlan Wales, in an offside position, obstructed the Sydney goalkeeper’s eyesight.


Not long after, Sydney striker Adam le Fondre appeared to be brought down by Curtis Good in the box, with penalty shouts ignored by Beath, and backed up by VAR.


The Sky Blues, who finished in top spot after the regular season, looked far more comfortable after the break, growing into the game and taking control.


Milos Ninkovic had a golden chance when he was sent through on goal in the 62nd minute; the Sydney star unable to place it past Glover who stayed big in goal.


As City pushed for a goal of their own, Noone scuffed a shot from a Florin Berenguer cutback in the 75th minute, before Scott Galloway forced Redmayne into a tough save just three minutes later with a tricky long-range effort.


Glover once again denied Sydney in the 89th minute as his right leg blocked what would have been a dramatic late Nathaniel Atkinson own goal.


But Sydney FC finally found the answer in the 100th minute as a perfect Luke Brattan pass was turned in by Grant, via his chest, to give Steve Corica’s team the lead.





Glover couldn’t keep that one out, but made a couple more saves to keep City alive, and Melbourne gave Sydney some scary moments before the whistle was blown.


Grant, the hero, was awarded the Joe Marston medal.


“Maybe a little bit lucky with it,” Grant said of his goal. “But I thought put the keeper off with the chest, rather than the head, and it looked like it worked.


“So happy days.”

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Black Panther: Chadwick Boseman

 'Black Panther' star Chadwick Boseman dies at 43


Actor Chadwick Boseman, who brought the movie "Black Panther" to life with his charismatic intensity and regal performance, has died.


Boseman has battled colon cancer since 2016 and died at home with his family and wife by his side, according to a statement posted on his Twitter account. He was 43.

"A true fighter, Chadwick persevered through it all, and brought you so many of the films you have come to love so much," the statement said.




"From Marshall to Da 5 Bloods, August Wilson's Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and several more, all were filmed during and between countless surgeries and chemotherapy."


With his role as King T'Challa in the boundary-breaking film "Black Panther," he became a global icon and an inspiring symbol of Black power. That role was the "honor of (Boseman's) career," the statement said.


He graduated from Howard University


A South Carolina native, Boseman graduated in 2000 from Howard University, a historically Black college in Washington, DC. While there, he also attended the British American Drama Academy at Oxford in 1998.


"It is with profound sadness that we mourn the loss of alumnus Chadwick Boseman who passed away this evening. His incredible talent will forever be immortalized through his characters and through his own personal journey from student to superhero! Rest in Power, Chadwick!" University President Wayne A. I. Frederick said in a statement.


Boseman's breakout performance came in 2013 when he played Jackie Robinson in the film "42."


"His transcendent performance in '42' will stand the test of time and serve as a powerful vehicle to tell Jackie's story to audiences for generations to come," Major League Baseball tweeted Friday.


Boseman made his Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in 2016 as T'Challa/Black Panther in "Captain America: Civil War. Black Panther then got his own stand-alone movie that released in 2018, which broke box office records. Marvel Studios president had previously announced the second movie of the "Black Panther" saga would debut in theaters in May 2022.


The actor starred in other films, including playing James Brown in "Get On Up" and Thurgood Marshall in "Marshall."


Boseman returned to his alma mater in 2018 to give the commencement speech. He told the graduates about his early days acting on soap operas, saying he was fired from an unnamed production after he questioned what he felt was its stereotypical portrayal of Black characters.



"The struggles along the way are only meant to shape you for your purpose," he said at the time.


He concluded with his iconic "Wakanda Forever" salute.


'A superhero to many'


Boseman "brought history to life" with his roles, Martin Luther King III said.


"As Black Panther, he was also a superhero to many," he wrote on Twitter. "And despite his 4 year long battle with cancer, he kept fighting and he kept inspiring. He will be missed."


The NAACP also paid tribute to the actor, saying Boseman showed "us how to conquer adversity with grace."


"For showing us how to 'Say it Loud!' For (showing) us how to walk as a King, without losing the common touch. For showing us just how powerful we are," their Instagram statement said. "Thank you #ChadwickBoseman."



Sen. Kamala Harris, who also attended Howard, said she was heartbroken over Boseman's death.


"My friend and fellow Bison Chadwick Boseman was brilliant, kind, learned, and humble," she tweeted. "He left too early but his life made a difference. Sending my sincere condolences to his family."


Actor Mark Ruffalo, who starred aside Boseman in the Marvel movies as the Hulk, said the death adds to the growing list of tragedies in 2020.


"What a man, and what an immense talent," Ruffalo tweeted. "Brother, you were one of the all time greats and your greatness was only beginning. Lord love ya. Rest in power, King."

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Nicki Minaj announces pregnancy

Nicki Minaj announces pregnancy

First came love, then came marriage and soon will come Nicki Minaj with a baby carriage.

On Monday the rapper announced via her official social media accounts that she and husband Kenneth Petty are expecting.

Nicki Minaj announces pregnancy
Nicki Minaj announces pregnancy

Minaj posted a photo showing her in what appeared to be a two-piece sporting a prominent baby bump.

"Onika Tanya Maraj-Petty 10•21•19," the caption read, seemingly sharing her new legal name and the date she made it official with boyfriend Kenneth Petty.

Last month she talked to People magazine about how much she enjoys married life.

"When you have someone that feels like your soulmate or someone who understands you, it just makes you feel like you're on top of the world," Minaj said.

This will be Minaj's first child.

Nicki Minaj announces pregnancy
Nicki Minaj announces pregnancy

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Juventus on brink of Scudetto after Ronaldo makes history against Lazio

Juventus on brink of Scudetto after Ronaldo makes history against Lazio

Juventus are on the brink of retaining the Scudetto after beating Lazio 2-1 thanks to Cristiano Ronaldo's historic brace. Cristiano Ronaldo became the fastest player to 50 Serie A goals as Juventus put themselves on the cusp of a ninth successive Scudetto with a 2-1 win over Lazio.

Cristiano Ronaldo became the fastest player to 50 Serie A goals as Juventus put themselves on the cusp of a ninth successive Scudetto with a 2-1 win over Lazio.

Juventus on brink of Scudetto after Ronaldo makes history against Lazio
Juventus on brink of Scudetto after Ronaldo makes history against Lazio

Juve went into Tuesday's (AEST) clash with the chance to go eight points clear at the top with four games to go after both Inter and Atalanta dropped points over the weekend.

They made no mistake against a Lazio side that has seen their title challenge fade badly since the restart, Ronaldo scoring twice in the space of three second-half minutes to secure victory.

A 51st-minute penalty took him to his half-century in 61 matches and had an easy finish for a second that looked to have ended the game as a contest until Ciro Immobile's penalty set up a tense finale that Juve survived to all but ensure the title will remain in Turin.


Alex Sandro, who rescued Juve in their 3-3 draw with Sassuolo last time out, headed against the post from Matthijs de Ligt's cross in the 11th minute.

However, Thomas Strakosha was not legitimately tested until the 35th minute when he turned Adrien Rabiot's effort over after a surging run from the Frenchman, with Ronaldo heading wide from the resulting corner.

Lazio were also denied by the woodwork shortly before half-time when Immobile sent a rasping strike cannoning off the post.

Ronaldo attempted to prod over the line on the rebound after Strakosha thwarted Dybala following quick feet in the box from the Argentina forward, only for a goalmouth clearance to maintain parity.

But there was no denying Ronaldo his place in Serie A history after the VAR overturned the decision that Bastos had handled his shot outside the area.

Strakosha correctly dove to his left but did not get a touch to a typically confident penalty and he was similarly helpless as Dybala won possession in midfield and surged through on goal before laying the ball off for Ronaldo to tap into an empty net.

Ronaldo clattered the crossbar with a header after a cross from Dybala, who again found Strakosha in fine form to keep out another close-range effort.

Juventus on brink of Scudetto after Ronaldo makes history against Lazio


Leonardo Bonucci paid the price for nonchalant defending as he felled Immobile, who won and emphatically converted an 83rd-minute finish to fray Juve nerves.

The hosts were grateful to a flying save from Wojciech Szczesny to keep out Sergej Milinkovic-Savic's free-kick, but they held firm and the title now appears a formality for Maurizio Sarri's men.

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Jane Seymour gears up for new film production in Sydney

Jane Seymour gears up for new film production in Sydney

 https://abcmedia.akamaized.net/radio/local_sydney/audio/202007/aas-2020-07-21-jane-seymour.mp3
 https://abcmedia.akamaized.net/radio/local_sydney/audio/202007/aas-2020-07-21-jane-seymour.mp3

Over the last five decades Jane Seymour has appeared in almost 150 roles across TV, stage and silver screen. She has taken personal interest in Michael Budd's new production Ruby's Choice in which she plays the main character Ruby, a grandmother with dementia. While the shooting of the film has been delayed by COVID-19, Seymour has recently arrived in Sydney and this morning spoke to Wendy & Robbie, beginning with how she was coping with hotel quarantine.

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Finnish prodigy Makela takes classical music by storm

Finnish prodigy Makela takes classical music by storm

He is the new wunderkind of classical music.

At only 24, the young Finn Klaus Makela has been appointed musical director of the Orchestre de Paris.

Finnish prodigy Makela takes classical music by storm
Finnish prodigy Makela takes classical music by storm

While he may seem head-spinningly young for such a post, Makela has actually been training to be a conductor since he was 12.

"I must confess it is relatively uncommon," the modest millennial admitted to AFP when asked about taking on the baton so young.

Also a brilliant cellist, he did himself no harm by wowing audiences in the French capital last year with a rapturously received concert.

The age question in a profession dominated by grey heads is not something that bothers a man who was named chief conductor of the much sought-after Oslo Philharmonic two years ago.

"I never thought of it, but I was very lucky because I've been conducting every week since I was 12," said Makela, a graduate of the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki, which has turned out a long line of podium stars including Esa-Pekka Salonen, Mikko Franck, Jukka-Pekka Saraste and Susanna Malkki.

- 'Natural thing to do' -

"It became a very natural thing to do," said the latest "Flying Finn" to turn heads in the classical music world.

Indeed, Makela was bitten early by the bug, his eureka moment coming when he made his debut on the stage of the Finnish National Opera at seven as a part of the children's choir for "Carmen".

While the "drama and great music" of Bizet's opera intoxicated him, it was the conductor which really caught his eye.

"We were in the middle of this amazing machine, for a child it is a great experience," he recalled.

"My attention was on the conductor" in the middle of everything.

Makela -- who will stay on at Oslo when he takes up the Paris baton in September 2022 -- said he learned early that "leadership is quite a complicated thing".

From his long apprenticeship, standing week after week "on the podium became this very natural place to be. I think authority does not come from dictating or forcing people to do things, it comes from proving what you do, which is natural authority," he said.

That winning mix of swagger, precision and rigour was clear to everyone who saw Makela rehearse for a concert at the Paris Philharmonie earlier this month.

But so too was his warmth, slipping in little jokes to help the orchestra understand what he was looking for.

"Imagine Don Giovanni playing the mandolin at his window," he quipped at one stage, much to the musicians' amusement as they rehearsed Ravel's "Couperin's Tomb".

"Despite his young age, he is impressively mature," said one of the orchestra's violinists, Anne-Sophie le Rol.

"Like all great conductors, he does not need to speak, he can transmit everything through a gesture.

"He can help us create very particular sounds and to go further to bring out the nuances" of a piece, she added.

"You get the feeling that you are being led by a colleague," added solo oboist, Alexandre Gattet.

- The new 'revolutionary cool'? -

Much of this ease Makela puts down to his time in the Sibelius Academy.

"I was lucky to be in class every week to learn" under the conductor and composer Jorma Panula, "a fountain of wisdom", who has launched two generations of Finnish classical talent on the world, said Makela.

Even if the classical music audience is ageing despite innumerable attempts to attract younger fans, Makela is hugely optimistic about its future.

Finnish prodigy Makela takes classical music by storm
Finnish prodigy Makela takes classical music by storm

He acknowledges that young people have shorter attention spans.

"People look at their phones all the time. They want so many things at the same time and very quickly, which is good. But our art is totally the opposite.

"It is all about sitting quietly listening and watching."

But the fact that it is so different might actually make it "cool", argued Makela, who will take over in Paris from another relatively youthful conductor, Briton Daniel Harding.

"Because people are starting to become quite annoyed with the pace of life and many young people want to slow down, the most revolutionary thing you can do is to come to concert and listen to a Bruckner symphony," he insisted with a smile.

Flying Finn: Klaus Makela, who has been named the new musical director of Orchestre de Paris.

Makela is scheduled to take up the Paris baton in September 2022.

Makela will take over from another relatively youthful conductor, Briton Daniel Harding.

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Nicki Minaj announces she's pregnant with her first child

Nicki Minaj announces she's pregnant with her first child

Rapper says she is ‘overflowing with excitement & gratitude’ after revealing news on Instagram

Nicki Minaj is pregnant with her first child.

Nicki Minaj announces she's pregnant with her first child
Nicki Minaj announces she's pregnant with her first child

The rapper posted three images on Instagram, one featuring the caption “#Preggers” and another reading: “Love. Marriage. Baby carriage. Overflowing with excitement & gratitude. Thank you all for the well wishes.”

The father is Kenneth Petty, who Minaj married in 2019. “I didn’t think it would be as refreshing and calming as it is,” Minaj has said of her marriage. “Even if you’re not married, when you have someone that feels like your soulmate or someone who understands you, it just makes you feel like you’re on top of the world.”


Petty was convicted of attempted rape in 1995, and earlier this year, he pleaded not guilty when charged with failing to register himself as a sex offender after moving to California from New York, with a trial date yet to be set. He served a seven-year sentence for a 2006 manslaughter conviction, stemming from a 2002 shooting.

Nicki Minaj announces she's pregnant with her first child
Nicki Minaj announces she's pregnant with her first child

Having never scored a No 1 hit in the US before, Minaj has topped the US charts twice this year, first in May with her remix to Doja Cat’s single Say So, and then in June with Trollz, her track with 6ix9ine. Her most recent album was Queen in 2018.
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Brisbane-based fashion label Verge Girl eyes expansion after Ariana Grande becomes latest customer

Brisbane-based fashion label Verge Girl eyes expansion after Ariana Grande becomes latest customer

While many retailers are struggling amid COVID-19 pandemic, the sisters behind Brisbane fashion label Verge Girl say business is booming.

Founded in 2007 in Queensland with a focus on affordable clothing, the label has since grown a cult following having most recently been worn by pop star Ariana Grande.

Brisbane-based fashion label Verge Girl eyes expansion after Ariana Grande becomes latest customer

Ariana Grande dons a $119 set from Verge Girl in a birthday selfie. (Instagram)

In a recent post the Grammy-winner took a selfie wearing the Holidaying In Italy Knit Set ($119), causing the set to sell out in almost all sizes.

When style-savvy siblings and Verge Girl founders Daniella and Natalia Dionyssio saw the post, their stomachs dropped.

"I think one of the marketing girls sent it to us and we were like oh my god," Daniella said.

"Oh (it's) so cool," Natalia added.

"It's amazing that you know celebrities who are wearing designer clothing and designer pieces will wear like a $120 set."

The Brisbane sisters say they've been swamped with sales since Grande's post and are eyeing a move to the United States.

Despite other retailers only just getting back on their feet after a drop in sales, the pair said they were hiring more staff and looking to expand their warehouse facilities.

"We're in this little pocket of Brisbane, but our clothes are worn by people all over the world," Daniella said.

Brisbane-based fashion label Verge Girl eyes expansion after Ariana Grande becomes latest customer
Ariana Grande: Popstar wears $119 Brisbane outfit

"Our sales now are almost at 60 per cent in the US."

But Daniella said the business' base will always be in Australia.

"Our Australian head office is always Brisbane, we love Brisbane," she said.

Grande isn't the only Hollywood "it girl" eyeing off their clothes - Verge Girl designs have been spotted on the likes of reality TV stars Kourtney Kardashian and Kendall Jenner.

The Dionyssio sisters' secret to success: a bulletproof social media strategy and an unbreakable bond.

"We are best friends and we do everything together," Natalia said.

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