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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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Shane Tuck: football royal who did it the hard way

Shane Tuck: football royal who did it the hard way

Shane Tuck had the difficulty of following an illustrious father, who up until four years ago had played in more games than any other footballer in the competition's history.

Yet Tuck managed to carve out a distinctive identity, separating himself from his fabled lineage to become a 173-game player after overcoming rejection at Hawthorn, the club where his father, Michael had played 426 VFL/AFL games and which joined Richmond in mourning Tuck's sudden death on Monday.

Shane Tuck: football royal who did it the hard way
                              Shane Tuck dead at 38: A footy royal who was handed nothing

Shane Tuck was bred to play Australian football at the highest level. The son of a seven-time premiership player and bona fide legend at Hawthorn, he was also the nephew of the explosive, phenomenally-gifted Gary Ablett senior, his mother Fay's brother. His younger brother Travis played 20 games for the Hawks from 2006 until 2010.

If such breeding and background was advantageous to Tuck, his AFL career was a study in persistence, grit and self-improvement; his path to those 173 games was due to pluck, not genetic endowment.

Drafted by the Hawks from the Dandenong Stingrays as a lowly rookie – pick No.24 in the 2000 rookie draft – Tuck was discarded after the 2001 season without playing a single game.

In 2003, he went to West Adelaide in the SANFL, at the behest of the coach, the former Adelaide great Shaun Rehn. There, he caught the eye of Richmond's football manager Greg Miller, who had seen Tuck kick the winning goal on the siren from a long distance.

The Tigers drafted him late, at pick 73 in the 2003 national draft, a speculative choice that would net the club a flint-hard player who would finish inside the top 10 in the best and fairest seven times.

In his first season at Richmond, the last for senior coach Danny Frawley, Tuck remained a marginal player.


But the incoming coach, Terry Wallace, had played with Tuck's father in three Hawthorn premierships. The Tigers were not convinced about Tuck and were considering keeping either him or, another player, Tim Fleming.

Wallace, however, knew that Tuck's father, who had played two full seasons in the reserves at Hawthorn, was a noted late developer and, as Miller confirmed on Monday, this awareness of Tuck's heritage influenced the decision to keep him.

At 189cm and 92kg, Tuck played a different style to his rangy, skilful father. He was a contested-ball beast, who, as one Richmond official recalled, had a record 14 tackles in Damien Hardwick's first win with the Tigers in 2010.

Miller called Tuck "a see ball, get ball" player, who played on instincts.

"You didn't give him too many instructions. You had to let him play his game," he said.

Of the man, Miller added: "He was popular with teammates in the rooms."

Wayne Campbell, who was Tuck's skipper in 2004 and an assistant coach for Tuck's final five seasons at Tigerland, said Tuck was "a unique person'' who turned into a cult figure for the club's faithful.

"He's sort the bloke you smile when you think of,'' said Campbell. "He was so loveable, unique, fun, tough.''

Campbell observed that Tuck had "really good finesse with his hands'' and that team mates were "always confident to kick to him one on one'' due to his aerial prowess.

Tuck famously almost ended the career of Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson in 2010, when, running to boot the match-winning goal, he was brought down by a lunging tackle from behind by Sam Mitchell; had Tuck converted, the view within Hawthorn was Clarkson would have been sacked by Jeff Kennett.

Shane Tuck: football royal who did it the hard way
Shane Tuck dead at 38: How did AFL star die?

Tuck's career at the Tigers spanned a period when Richmond struggled, financially and on the field, but he was there, under Hardwick, just as the club was emerging from a dismal decade.

His final game was his first and only final, in 2013, before 90,000-plus fans, when Carlton overran Richmond in the second half.

Post-football, Tuck briefly turned his hands to boxing, fighting on the undercard to the Danny Green v Anthony Mundine bout at the Adelaide Oval in 2017, a career move that encapsulated how Tuck played and made the grade in footy: the hard way.
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Google doodle celebrates female Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt

Google doodle celebrates female Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt

Google doodle celebrates female Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt. A Google doodle for July 20, 2020, celebrated the legacy of Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt. ... Eryurt's research focused on stellar astrophysics, in particular of main-sequence stars like our sun.

It's the 51st anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, the Google Doodle program is celebrating by commemorating the scientific legacy of Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt.

Google doodle celebrates female Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt
A Google doodle for July 20, 2020, celebrated the legacy of Turkish astrophysicist Dilhan Eryurt.

Eryurt lived from 1926 to 2012, studied in Turkey, and worked at, among other institutions, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland and the University of California, according to a brief biography compiled by a group of astrophysicists.

Eryurt's research focused on stellar astrophysics, in particular of main-sequence stars like our sun. You can read some of her publications here.

In the Google Doodle, Eryurt is shown looking out on a sky full of stars, as well as a few planetary bodies, including the moon, and a Saturn V rocket, a nod to her time at NASA during the Apollo program.

In the late 1970s, she was also one of a group of scientists who encouraged the Turkish government to establish a national observatory, according to a paper recounting the history of astronomy in Turkey.

The project broke ground in 1991 and made its first observations in 1997.

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Esther Salas: Son of federal judge killed after gunman opened fire at her New Jersey home

Son of federal judge killed after gunman opened fire at her New Jersey home

The son of US District Court of New Jersey Judge Esther Salas has died after a gunman opened fire on her North Brunswick home Sunday, the top judge at the federal courthouse confirmed to CNN.

Chief Judge Freda Wolfson told CNN late Sunday that Salas' son Daniel Anderl, 20, was killed in the shooting and her husband, Mark Anderl, was injured. Salas was unharmed, Wolfson said.


Son of federal judge killed after gunman opened fire at her New Jersey home
              Esther Salas Son of federal judge killed after gunman opened fire at her New Jersey home

Both the US Marshals and FBI are investigating the shooting. Initial reports from law enforcement said Daniel Anderl opened the door with his father right behind him. The door opened to a hail of gunfire and the gunman fled, a law enforcement source told CNN.

"We are looking for one subject," the FBI said in a statement. "We are working closely with our state and local partners and will provide additional updates when available."

The gunman appeared to be wearing a FedEx uniform, a law enforcement official with direct knowledge of the investigation told CNN.

It is not yet known whether the gunman was a FedEx employee or someone posing to be an employee.

"We are aware of the media reports and are fully cooperating with investigating authorities," Jonathan Lyons, a spokesman for FedEx, said in an email statement.

Law enforcement has not been aware of any threats against the judge, the source told CNN. Right now investigators don't know the motive.

"Judge Salas and her family are in our thoughts at this time as they cope with this senseless act," New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said in a statement. "This tragedy is our latest reminder that gun violence remains a crisis in our country and that our work to make every community safer isn't done."

Democratic US Sen. Bob Menendez, who said he was proud to have recommended Judge Salas to former President Barack Obama, also issued a statement sending his prayers to the family.

"My prayers are with Judge Salas and her family, and that those responsible for this horrendous act are swiftly apprehended and brought to justice," Menendez said.

Son of federal judge killed after gunman opened fire at her New Jersey home
               Son of federal judge killed after gunman opened fire at her New Jersey home

North Brunswick Mayor Francis "Mac" Womack told CNN over the phone Sunday night that Judge Salas' husband Mark Anderl is "one of the most straight-up honest attorneys" he has dealt with.

"He's a very very exuberant, vibrant, one hundred percent pleasant person," Womack said. "He loves to talk about his wife, and he loves to brag about his son, and how his son would excel in baseball, and how he was doing down in college in Washington ... I'm just very sorry to see him going through this."

The FBI urged anyone with relevant information to call FBI Newark at 973-792-3001.
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Happy National Ice Cream Day!

Happy National Ice Cream Day!

(WIAT) — It’s National Ice Cream Day! How do you plan on celebrating the sweet foodie holiday?

Its origins are believed to have taken place thousands of years ago when Persians put snow in a bowl with juice. Fast forward, from Neapolitan to chocolate chip cookie dough, there’s no shortage of flavors.


Happy National Ice Cream Day!
                                                                Happy National Ice Cream Day!

And that’s not all. Ice cream has truly evolved.

You can also get it nitrogen-blasted, hand-rolled, or charcoal-infused.

Share you’re favorite flavors on social media with the hashtag #NationalIceCreamDay.

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Face masks to be mandatory in Melbourne from this week amid coronavirus spike

Face masks to be mandatory in Melbourne from this week amid coronavirus spike

A mad rush to buy face masks is expected to continue across Victoria today, with millions told they will be required to cover up from Thursday.

Face coverings will be mandatory for all residents in Melbourne and the Mitchell Shire coronavirus hotspots whenever they leave their homes.

Anyone who fails to wear a mask could be fined $200.

Face masks to be mandatory in Melbourne from this week amid coronavirus spike
                    Face masks to be mandatory in Melbourne from this week amid coronavirus spike

The rule will be enforced from 11.59pm on Wednesday night to allow people time to purchase masks, with five million people affected.

It doesn't have to be surgical facemasks with authorities saying scarves or anything to cover the face will be acceptable.

Residents are being urged to begin wearing them immediately wherever possible.

Victoria recorded 363 new COVID-19 cases since yesterday – a significant rise on yesterday's figure of 217, Premier Daniel Andrews confirmed.

Three more elderly Victorians have died – two men in their 90s and a woman in her 90s.

Of the new cases, only 36 have so far been connected to known and controlled outbreaks.

Masks will be compulsory for all residents over the age of 12 years, Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton clarified.


"That is in recognition that it's likely to work for all of those age groups," Professor Sutton said.

"Below the age of 12, it's a consideration. We say not for toddlers - so not two years and below - but it's a consideration for all other children."

"But it is mandatory, really, from that high school age onwards."

The inside of supermarkets, service stations, workplaces and schools for senior students are all included in the mandatory mask requirement.

Despite that, teachers won't be forced to front a classroom with their faces covered and childcare workers will also be exempt.

Medical exemptions will also be applied to eligible people, while going for a run without any covering is allowed but exercises must carry a mask.

The coverings are also not recommended for children under two.

Professor Sutton said the desire not to have some primary school aged children required to wear masks while others were not was taken into consideration in determining the age cut off.

Face masks to be mandatory in Melbourne from this week amid coronavirus spike
               Face masks to be mandatory in Melbourne from this week amid coronavirus spike

Police will be expected to enforce the measures, with patrols to ramp up in public places, transport, parks and workplaces.

Premier Daniel Andrews said the move could be the answer to Victoria avoiding entering Stage Four COVID-19 restrictions.

"If we can see high degrees of compliance, if we see people wearing masks then that will mean it is less likely that we will have to move to things like only having exercise in your own local postcode or things like saying you can only go shopping within a certain radius," he said.
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'Heavy heart' for Paul Green as he steps down as Cowboys coach

'Heavy heart' for Paul Green as he steps down as Cowboys coach

Paul Green says he leaves the North Queensland Cowboys with a "heavy heart" after he announced he will step down as the club's head coach, effective immediately.

Green addressed players on Monday morning before the club confirmed the move in a statement, which said Green departed "after consultation with club management" and it had become clear "that it was best for all parties to call time on his tenure as head coach".


'Heavy heart' for Paul Green as he steps down as Cowboys coach
                           NRL: Cowboys coach Paul Green punted mid-season

"After seven years as head coach it is with a heavy heart that I make this announcement," Green said. "The board felt that the club was at a juncture where they needed to move in a different direction and I can only respect their views.

"Whilst this is obviously disappointing news, I am grateful to the board for allowing me to lead this club whilst creating some lifelong memories. I will use this next period to freshen up, spend some time with my family and assess options before moving on to my next coaching role."

Josh Hannay, a former Maroons Origin player and the assistant, will coach the club for the remainder of the 2020 season. He will be assisted by David Tangata-Toa.

It has been slim pickings for the Cowboys this season. With injuries to a number of leading players, including star recruit Valentine Holmes, they have won just three games, the same number as the Warriors, Titans and Broncos.

The Warriors have already sacked their coach Stephen Kearney, while the Bulldogs did the same to Dean Pay, with Green now likely to be in the frame for the Warriors position with Trent Barrett favourite to take over at the Dogs.

Regardless of the state of the side as he departs, Green will always be the coach that helped deliver a maiden premiership to the Cowboys in 2015, when they beat the Broncos in arguably the greatest grand final in the NRL era.

"I'd also like to thank all of those who aided in delivering the club's first premiership to the North Queensland community – being a part of that historical season is something I will always treasure," Green said.

'Heavy heart' for Paul Green as he steps down as Cowboys coach
                      'Heavy heart' for Paul Green as he steps down as Cowboys coach

"I'm pleased the club is providing an opportunity for Josh Hannay and David Tangata-Toa to stretch themselves in the coming weeks and thank them, our football staff and our players for their support. We have some terrific young players coming through our system which will set up the club for further success in the future."

Cowboys chairman Lewis Ramsay said Green had made an enduring contribution to the club.


"Paul has spearheaded some remarkable achievements during his time with us and we will be forever thankful for the club-defining moments he has generated," Ramsay said. "Two Nine's trophies, two grand final appearances, a premiership, a World Club Challenge, coached three Dally M winners, all form an excellent resume for Paul to take with him as he embarks upon the next stage of his career.

"The club appreciates Paul's sincerity in choosing the best time for him to pass the baton and we wish him and his family the very best as they embark on their next journey."
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What to look for when buying reusable face masks in Australia and how you need to clean them

What to look for when buying reusable face masks in Australia and how you need to clean them

With face coverings to be mandatory in Melbourne and Mitchell Shire, and strongly recommended Victoria-wide, millions of Australians have had to quickly get their hands on face masks.

There are a few things to consider when buying a reusable face mask, and even wearing a single-use mask.




From washing to microwaving, here are five things you need to know.

1. Look for a face mask that's triple-layered

When buying a reusable fabric face mask, or a single-use surgical mask, make sure they are good quality and that you are buying from a reputable source.

Ideally, a reusable cloth mask should have three layers of washable fabric and should fit snugly to cover your nose and mouth.

If you cannot find a suitable face mask in the shops or make a triple-layered one yourself, don't stress.

Victorian authorities have said a simple scarf or piece of fabric would be better than nothing in a pinch.

You can purchase cloth masks or surgical masks from chemists, hardware stores and other shops.
While surgical, N95 and P2 masks are being sold in shops and online, Victoria's Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) recommends not using these outside of healthcare settings.
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Revamped and re-targeted JobKeeper for workers

Revamped and re-targeted JobKeeper for workers

The government is set to continue a revamped and re-targeted wage subsidy when it delivers its Thursday economic statement amid massive uncertainty about the trajectory of COVID-19 in the two largest states.

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann on Sunday said JobKeeper would be extended but with changes.

“There will be some adjustments to the scheme to make sure it is appropriate for the next phase,” he said.


Revamped and re-targeted JobKeeper for workers
                                        Revamped and re-targeted Jobkeeper for workers

Thursday’s statement is being framed when it is unclear whether Victoria, under a new shutdown, will get on top of its second wave – Sunday’s tally was 363 cases for the previous 24 hours and three deaths – and things are at a tipping point in NSW, with 18 new cases.


Mask-wearing in public will be compulsory from midnight Wednesday in Melbourne and in the Mitchell Shire.

The NSW government announced late Sunday there will be further restrictions on entering NSW from Victoria. There will be a strict new border zone, tightened permit conditions and stronger enforcement powers.

The doubt about where the COVID-19 situation will go from here makes projecting the economic numbers extremely difficult.

Cormann told Sky businesses particularly severely hit by the crisis would need an extra period of support so they could hang onto their workers.

Towards the end of September – when the JobKeeper program was due to finish – it would be important to reassess which businesses should still be receiving the support, he said.

“In the first six months, irrespective of what happened to your turnover after you initially qualified, you were in.

“But as we go into this new period, there is a need to reassess whether that support is still needed for specific businesses.”

The government is trying to set a determinedly upbeat tone.

“The situation now is better than what we feared would be the case now,” Cormann said.

He said the aid would not be specifically targeted to Victoria, but given the circumstances more businesses there would qualify.

The government is also dealing with the future of JobSeeker which was effectively doubled for the pandemic. It is expected to be lowered but not to the old level.

Cormann said: “The current enhanced JobSeeker arrangements come to an end at the end of September. We will, the same as with JobKeeper, in a responsible fashion, seek to phase this back into a more situation as normal.”

Scott Morrison announced at the weekend the parliamentary sitting fortnight that was due to start on August 4 will be cancelled.
He said Acting Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly had advised there would be significant risk in having parliament sit then, given increased community transmission in Victoria and the trends in NSW. Kelly had advised the risks were “unlikely to be resolved in the next month,” Morrison said.

Morrison quoted Kelly as saying, “The entry of a high-risk group of individuals could jeopardise the health situation in the ACT and place residents at unnecessary risk of infection. In addition, the health risk to members and senators and their staff from other jurisdictions is a material concern.”

The next parliamentary sitting is now scheduled for Augusts 24.

Labor’s finance spokeswoman Katy Gallagher said parliament couldn’t continue to be cancelled every time there was an outbreak.

She said in light of businesses adapting, “it is going to require parliament to do the same thing”.

Meanwhile the Senate committee examining the government’s COVID responses, which she chairs, will convene extra hearings.
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God, abortion and better acoustics: Kanye West launches campaign with chaotic rally

God, abortion and better acoustics: Kanye West launches campaign with chaotic rally

Rapper’s rambling and emotional address – which included an apparent $1m for new mothers – was almost drowned out by a rowdy crowd in Charleston

Kanye West has launched his campaign tour for the US presidential election in chaotic fashion at an event in Charleston, South Carolina, delivering a rambling address that touched on theology, homelessness, corporate power, and involved a long debate with an audience member about abortion. West also suggested that women should be given $1m when they have a baby.


Kanye West launches campaign with chaotic rally
              God, abortion and better acoustics: Kanye West launches campaign with chaotic rally

The rapper took to the stage at the event wearing a bulletproof vest, and “2020” shaved into his head. Without a mic, he proceeded to address a rowdy audience of a few hundred people, asking for complete silence before asserting that future events “will be in rooms where the acoustics will be incredible because I will be involved with the design”.

West repeatedly referenced the terms of his deal with Adidas, his faith in God and racism in the US, including an assertion that “[abolitionist] Harriet Tubman never actually freed the slaves, she just had the slaves go work for other white people”.

Tubman is one of the most respected figures of 19th century America. An African American who escaped slavery, she helped enslaved Black men and women travel north to freedom and fought for the Union during the Civil War. She later became a supporter of women’s suffrage.

But the event hit peak emotional intensity when West began to tell a story about what he believed was divine intervention into his life in a way that caused his wife, Kim Kardashian West, to refuse to terminate a pregnancy.


“I was having the rapper’s lifestyle,” he said. “I was sitting up in Paris, and I had my leather pants on … and I had my laptop up and I got all of my creative ideas … And the screen went black and white and God said, ‘if you fuck with my vision I’m going to fuck with yours’.

“And I called my wife and she said, we’re gonna have this baby. I said we’re gonna have this child … So even if my wife were to divorce me after this speech, she brought North into the world when I didn’t want to. She stood up and she protected that child.”

West then started crying when speaking about his father, who he said had wanted his mother to have an abortion when she was pregnant with him.

“My mom saved my life. My dad wanted to abort me. My mom saved my life. There would have been no Kanye West because my dad was too busy,” he said, sobbing into his hand, before shouting: “I almost killed my daughter! I almost killed my daughter!”

Referencing the media coverage of the event, he then said: “They’re going to run this, they’re going to tell you that I’m crazy. [Well] the world’s crazy!”

He then called up to the stage a pro-choice activist who had been yelling questions to him in response to his story. He claimed he understood “why someone would make the choice of getting an abortion” and eventually clarified that his position wasn’t that abortion should be banned, but rather that maximum financial assistance should be made available to women who do have children.

“My stance is not to make abortion illegal at all. It should always be legal. But there should be an option of maximum increase available … Maximum increase would be, everybody that has a baby gets a million dollars,” he said. He did not say where this money would come from.

“It takes a village to raise a child,” he said. “Society has been set up for single moms to not have a village, to not have a child.”

West’s remarks, which were mostly yelled in order to be heard by the crowd, repeatedly circled back to his Christianity.

“We are all equal in God’s eyes,” he said. “Sometimes people are controlled by demons, sometimes people are controlled by the environment that we are in but we are all God’s people, there [are] no bad people. There are lost people, but we are all God’s people.”

Struggling to be heard, West repeatedly told audience members to be quiet at the same time as assuring them that he was “not trying to quiet their voices”. The event ended after West was substantially drowned out by the shouting crowd.

Kanye West launches campaign with chaotic rally
                                 Kanye West launches campaign with chaotic rally

West announced his intention to run for president on 5 July but he missed the deadline to qualify for the ballot in several states, and it was unclear if he was willing or able to collect enough signatures required to qualify in others.

Last week, he qualified to appear on Oklahoma’s presidential ballot, the first state where he met the requirements before the filing deadline.

West needed to collect 10,000 signatures by noon Monday to appear on the South Carolina ballot, according to state law. The entertainer tweeted out a list of locations around the Charleston area where petitions could be signed.
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Edward Colston statue replaced by sculpture of Black Lives Matter protester

Edward Colston statue replaced by sculpture of Black Lives Matter protester

Exclusive: Artist Marc Quinn leads secret mission to install resin-and-steel figure of Jen Reid at site of toppled Bristol slave trader

The statue of slave trader Edward Colston was replaced in Bristol on Wednesday morning – with a sculpture of one of the protesters whose anger brought him down.

Edward Colston statue is replaced by unofficial sculpture of Black Lives Matter protester who helped topple monument to the slave trader in Bristol in secret dawn installation by activists
                   Edward Colston statue replaced by sculpture of Black Lives Matter protester

The figure of Jen Reid, who was photographed standing on the plinth with her fist raised after the 17th century merchant was toppled by Black Lives Matter demonstrators last month, was erected at dawn by a team directed by the artist Marc Quinn.

Arriving in two lorries before 5am, a team of 10 people worked quickly to install the figure of Reid, who said she had been secretly working with Quinn on the idea for weeks. It came as a complete surprise to the authorities, who are yet to announce their plans for the location.

A cardboard placard reading “black lives still matter” was placed at the bottom of the plinth.

Shortly after the vehicles drove away, Reid stood in front of the statue with her fist in the air. “It’s just incredible,” she said. “That’s pretty fucking ballsy, that it is.”

After meticulous planning to ensure the statue could be erected quickly enough to have it in place before officials arrived, the vehicles left the scene about 15 minutes after they got there. “I just knew it was going to happen,” said Reid. “They were so efficient.”

Sanna Bertilsson, who was cycling past, did a double take as she saw the figure and stopped to look. “I didn’t know they were replacing it,” she said. “It’s absolutely beautiful.” Told that it had been put up without permission, she said: “I’d better get a picture before they take it down.”

By 8am a crowd of commuters and passersby was gathered to take pictures and discuss the statue, but there was still no sign of the council or police. The only council presence had been a roadsweeper, whose driver stopped to take a picture before continuing on his shift.

“It is incredible seeing it,” said Jen Reid’s daughter, Leila Reid, arriving and gazing up at the statue a little later. “It’s surreal. From the kneecap to the shape of her hands - it’s just her.” She said she had struggled to keep the secret since her mother told her. “She’s proud to represent a movement, and if there’s a better way to do that I can’t think of it.”


Earlier, Reid said her “stomach has been flipping upside down”. “Being up there, with my fist raised – it was an amazing moment, and this captures it. It gives me goose pimples.”

Reid, a stylist, attended the march with her husband, who one of the group that rolled the statue of Colston to the river after it was pulled down. She said that to stand for the BLM movement was “massive”, but “it would be just as big if it was someone else representing the same thing. This is going to continue the conversation. I can’t see it coming down in a hurry.”

Quinn – whose best known works include his “blood head” self-portrait Self and a sculpture of an artist that temporarily occupied the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square, Alison Lapper Pregnant – said he viewed it as a duty for prominent white artists to amplify other voices.

“I’ve always felt it’s part of my job to bring the world into art and art into the world,” said Quinn, who previously made a series of works inspired by the riots that followed the police killing of Mark Duggan in 2011. “Jen created the sculpture when she stood on the plinth and raised her arm in the air. Now we’re crystallising it.”

“The only thing that could have stopped it would have been some kind of official intervention, but it didn’t happen,” he added. “It looks like it’s alway been here.”

The ambush sculpture is likely to reignite the debate over public statuary in the UK that began with the toppling of the Colston figure five weeks ago. In the weeks that followed, and amid growing pressure from the Black Lives Matter movement, Oriel College bowed to a longstanding campaign and backed calls to remove a figure of Victorian imperialist Cecil Rhodes, though it is still in place for now.

After the prime minister, Boris Johnson, responded by saying that to remove statues was “to lie about our history”, counter-protesters – including some far-right groups – assembled in London to combat a supposed threat to a statue of Winston Churchill.

In the weeks since, although ideas including a Banksy proposal and calls for a statue of civil rights campaigner Paul Stephenson have been floated, and a mannequin of the notorious paedophile Jimmy Savile was briefly installed before falling off, no permanent decision on the future of the Colston site has been reached.

The figure of Colston has been retrieved from the bottom of Bristol Harbour, where it was thrown by protesters, and is being restored – with graffiti and an old bike tyre it collected in the water preserved – ahead of a proposed new home in Bristol Museum.

The new black resin and steel figure – entitled A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020 – was transported from Quinn’s studio on Tuesday and stored overnight outside the city. It was put in place by a group Quinn described as “a professional outfit I’ve known a long time” using a hydraulic crane truck parked next to the plinth.

The team carried out the same surveys and health and safety checks it would have gone through on a more conventional work, Quinn said, adding that it had been installed in such a way that it would be “extremely difficult to move”.

“But it is ultimately moveable,” he added. “This is not a permanent artwork.”

Reid said it had been difficult to keep the secret from friends and family. “When friends say ‘I’ll see you later,’ I think … yeah, you will!”

On whether there was an issue with a white artist being behind the work, Reid said: “It’s not even a question. If we have allies, it doesn’t matter what colour they are. He has done something to represent BLM, and to keep the conversation going.”

While the team behind the sculpture of Reid is confident it has broken no laws, Bristol police and council will now face questions about how to respond.

Edward Colston statue replaced by sculpture of Black Lives Matter protester
Toppled Edward Colston statue in Bristol replaced with Black Lives Matter sculpture at dawn by protesters

“It’s a really great addition to the centre of Bristol,” said Bobby Loyal, an engineer who stopped on his bike. “It’s a really nice move. I just hope no one is angry about it and tries to rip this down. The statue before was offensive to a lot of people, I don’t think this is. I think the council should leave it in place.”

After the Colston statue came down, Bristol mayor Marvin Rees said he could not condone criminal damage but regarded the action as a “piece of historical poetry”. In June he told the Guardian he wanted a “citywide conversation” on the subject.

Quinn echoed Rees’s view, calling the removal of the Colston statue “an amazing act of poetic justice”. He added: “Bristol will eventually work out something to put on, or to do with, the plinth.

“But in the meantime it is this charged space. It can take decades for things to come into and out of the public sphere, as we’ve seen, even though that’s where the most important issues of the day are being discussed. So it seemed to us it was time for direct action.”
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Carole Baskin Was Tricked Into Giving Convicted Pedophile Rolf Harris A Shoutout On Cameo

Carole Baskin Was Tricked Into Giving Convicted Pedophile Rolf Harris A Shoutout On Cameo

Carole Baskin, star of the hit Netflix True Crime series Tiger King, has fallen victim to a bad-taste prank by Australian comedian Tom Armstrong. The big-cat rights activist was filmed delivering a message to convicted paedophile Rolf Harris, unaware of the disgraced singer-songwriter's past.

Another day, another Cameo prank. This time an Aussie comedian has pranked Tiger King’s Carole Baskin into giving a shoutout to none other than disgraced children’s entertainer/pedophile Rolf Harris.

Carole Baskin Was Tricked Into Giving Convicted Pedophile Rolf Harris A Shoutout On Cameo
             Tiger King’s Carole Baskin tricked into sending video message to Rolf Harris

Tom Armstrong, who just recently pranked a 7th Heaven star into giving serial killer Ivan Milat a shoutout, said on TikTok his goal was “to get another American celebrity to shoutout Australia’s most notorious sexual predator.”

His plan worked.

“Hi Rolf Harris, all your kids wanted to get together and tell you that you have really touched them and that they love all that you have done for them,” Baskin said.

“I hear there’s a lot of great stories about you and your best friend, Jimmy Savile. Can’t wait to hear those,” she added.

Savile is another children’s TV personality, who after his death in 2011 was accused of more than 300 counts of child sexual abuse.

A Cameo from Baskin costs US$199 (AU$285). That’s a steep price to pay for a few seconds of footage.
It’s not the first time Baskin’s been the target of pranks on social media, either. Earlier this year, two YouTubers convinced her to give a Zoom interview pretending she was on the Tonight Show.

On the Cameo front, too, it’s similar to the time Flava Flav was tricked in to giving Cardinal George Pell a shoutout.

At this point, the choice of two notorious pedophiles seems a to be going a bit too far, and it also seems a bit unfair to constantly be dunking on Carole Baskin.

“Of course, I have never heard of Rolf Harris, and would not have done the Cameo had I known,” Baskin told the Mirror in an email.

Tiger King’s Carole Baskin tricked into sending video message to Rolf Harris
                  Tiger King’s Carole Baskin tricked into sending video message to Rolf Harris

“The signature line in my email reads, ‘I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made – Franklin D. Roosevelt’, and I think that tells you all you need to know about the kind of people who abuse me in their efforts to make others hate me.”

However if past accusations (and actions) against her are anything to go by, this cool cat is probably still unfazed and $200 richer.

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