After job cuts, here’s how leaders can boost ‘layoff survivor’ morale and productivity

US Top News and Analysis 

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Here’s how to rebuild company morale post-job cuts

Amazon and Salesforce are among the latest tech companies to announce job cuts, after rapid hiring over the last several years. For every company announcing layoffs, senior leaders and managers must keep the remaining employees motivated and productive. 

Among U.S.-based companies, announced layoffs were up 172% in the fourth quarter of 2022 — with more than 154,000 jobs cut, as compared with nearly 57,000 in final quarter of 2021, according to the latest report from Challenger, Gray and Christmas.  

“Managers should know what to expect after a layoff,” said Connie Whittaker Dunlop, founder of Monarch Consulting Group, which develops leaders, teams, and organizations through coaching and training. “Layoffs done wrong are going to incur additional costs of hiring and defeat the initial purpose.”

The aftermath of a layoff is significant not only for those who lose their jobs but also those who remain. Companies that go through layoffs are often left with employees who are less trusting, less committed and less satisfied, experts say.

Leading and managing ‘layoff survivors’

About 70% of “layoff survivors” say their motivation at work has declined since the layoff, according to a survey done in late November by BizReport. Additionally, 66% report they feel overworked since the job cuts, and a third of those who survived a layoff believe that things will worsen for their company in the future. 

Workers feeling insecure in their jobs and higher levels of stress lead some employees to quit out of frustration. To counter those negative sentiments, experts say leaders need to communicate the organization’s near-term goals and plans very clearly with front-line managers.

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“Leaders have to show how they’re in tune with what’s the most important thing for their teams to accomplish with fewer people,” said Mark Dollins, president of North Star Communications Consulting, a consulting firm focused on talent development.

Having a clear and compelling story about how the layoffs are going to better prepare the company for the future is an important component to managing change.

That means “giving employees confidence that we’re doing this because it’s not just a reactive thing,” Dollins said, “and when we get to the end of this state, as a result of this restructuring or layoffs or whatever we’re calling it, we’re gonna be in a better place.”

Be transparent about ‘quiet hiring’

Marko Geber | Digitalvision | Getty Images

Quiet hiring” is when an organization acquires new skills without actually hiring new full-time employees. That may mean current employees temporarily move into new roles.

To avoid the pushback from layoff survivors who already feel overwhelmed, experts say leaders should let workers know what skill sets will be needed and how they can get them and communicate that clearly. Otherwise, they risk a public employee backlash.

“Workers don’t take this out in the breakroom anymore, they take it out on TikTok,” said Sam Caucci, founder and CEO of workforce training platform 1Huddle.

Signal an ‘all-clear’ 

Layoffs tend to come around the end of the fiscal year, as companies close their books and make adjustments for the future. Of course, economic conditions can always change, but giving employees an ‘all-clear’ signal when the company is done with a round of layoffs can help reset the stage.

“That creates a sense of ‘OK, now let’s get back to work’,” Dollins said.

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Mercedes-Benz Reinvents The ‘Wackeldackle’ Nodding Dog With Superdackle

Carscoops 

Mercedes-Benz has partnered up with an emerging entertainment brand by the name of Superplastic and collaborated on a number of projects.

The partnership announced at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) has spawned a new character to the Superplastic universe dubbed Superdackle, conceived as a reinterpretation of the Wackeldackel nodding dog ornament often seen on the dashboards of motorists.

An animated short film has been released to celebrate the creation of Superdackle, starring both this new character as well as Janky and Guggimon from the Superplastic universe. The film shows the three characters borrowing a Mercedes-Benz from a dealership late at night and proceeding to embark on a joyride through the streets of New York City.

Superplastic’s presence can be felt at Mercedes-Benz’s CES stand where an 8.2-foot Superdackle figure is featured.

Mercedes-Benz says the collaboration with Superplastic is part of its “strategy to explore new realms in arts and entertainment and give customers memorable brand experiences.”

Read: Mercedes-Benz To Use Nvidia Systems To Create Digital Twins Of Its Factories

Mercedes-Benz has reinvented and reinterpreted its brand and vehicles for a modern, digital era – so why shouldn’t the iconic Wackeldackel receive an update, too? We warmly welcome Superdackel to the Mercedes Benz family,” Mercedes-Benz vice president of communications and marketing, Bettina Fetzer said in a press release.

Superplastic founder and chief executive Paul Budnitz is similarly excited about the collaboration.

“I’ve been a fanboy of the Wackeldackel forever, and actually had a classic version on the dashboard of my vintage Mercedes 230CE forever. So when Mercedes-Benz approached us about inviting him into the SUPERPLASTIC universe, the answer was an immediate YES.”

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American Airlines scraps its longest Tel Aviv route in surprise move

The Points Guy 

In a surprising turn of events, American Airlines is making a big adjustment to its long-haul network.

The Fort Worth-based carrier is pulling out of the Miami to Tel Aviv market effective March 24, 2023, as confirmed by a carrier spokesperson.

The flights will be pulled from American’s schedule this weekend, and the carrier will reach out to affected customers with rebooking options once the schedule change is posted.

The 6,603-mile flight was the airline’s longest route from its Miami hub, and it launched in June 2021. American originally flew the route on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays in the eastbound direction using a 273-seat Boeing 777-200.

ZACH GRIFF/THE POINTS GUY

The service was so successful that the airline upgraded the route to daily service on Oct. 28, 2022, roughly 16 months after it first launched. The route is now flown by a smaller 234-seat Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, but the daily frequency brought a big capacity boost to the market.

“The initial reception was very strong, but it has actually grown that much more. That is the principal driver of us going to daily service,” explained Juan Carlos Liscano, American’s vice president of the Miami hub, in an interview with ABC10 News about the upgraded service.

Yet now, just three months later, American is doing a 180 and canceling the route entirely. When asked for an explanation, a carrier spokesperson shared the following statement.

“As part of the continuous evaluation of our network, American Airlines has made the difficult decision to discontinue its Miami (MIA) – Tel Aviv (TLV) service effective March 24, 2023. We will continue to operate daily service to Tel Aviv from New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK). We’re proactively reaching out to customers affected by these changes to offer alternate travel arrangements.”

Unfortunately, American isn’t providing much of an explanation for this cut, aside from its usual “continuous evaluation of our network” talking point.

That’s likely to irk some travelers who booked this flight with the confidence that it would continue to operate on a daily basis — especially when an executive was so publicly bullish about its prospects.

When American cuts Miami to Tel Aviv, it’ll cede all nonstop traffic to Israeli flag carrier El Al, which operates between three and four weekly frequencies in the market using Boeing 787 Dreamliners, Cirium schedules show.

That said, American isn’t exiting the Tel Aviv station entirely. As mentioned above, the carrier will continue to fly there on a daily basis from the John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in New York.

ZACH GRIFF/THE POINTS GUY

Before the JFK flight launched, American hadn’t flown to Tel Aviv since January 2016 when it last flew there from Philadelphia. In addition to the JFK service, the airline was planning to connect Dallas/Fort Worth and Miami with Israel.

Going from no flights to service from three hubs might seem extreme, but Brian Znotins, American’s vice president of network planning, explained the rationale behind each one to TPG back in February 2021.

While there was lots of talk, American never moved forward to launching the Dallas/Fort Worth flight, canceling it in May 2022 before it even launched.

And now, with the elimination of the Miami service, American will be left with just one flight from the U.S. to Israel.

That contrasts pretty starkly against the recent moves from American’s big domestic competitors. Delta plans to relaunch flights from Atlanta to Tel Aviv earlier than planned on March 26, 2023, and it launched new service from Boston last summer. Delta continues to fly to Tel Aviv from New York, too.

Meanwhile, United continues to boost service to Israel, with expanded connectivity from Chicago (four weekly flights) and San Francisco (upgraded to a Boeing 777-300ER) filed in last weekend’s schedule update.

United also flies to Tel Aviv from Newark and Washington, D.C.

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A Rowing Coach Shares the ‘Big 3’ Mistakes He Sees Beginners Make on Rowing Machines

Well+Good 

Indoor rowers used to be some of the loneliest machines at the gym. The treadmills and ellipticals might quickly fill up, while the rowing ergometers would sit empty, gathering dust. But over the past decade, indoor rowing has grown far more popular, with gym-goers hopping into classes at boutique studios like Row House, and homebodies enjoying gamified rows on smart machines in their living rooms.

It’s no surprise: Rowing is a great total-body workout, engaging 86 percent of your muscles, and challenging your heart to an intense cardio session without putting much impact on your joints.

The only problem? The rowing machine can be super intimidating for beginners—and all too easy to use incorrectly. Many people don’t have much familiarity with rowing, so it’s easier to hop on a treadmill or exercise bike, and do a more intuitive movement. But if you’re intrigued by the machine and want to see what all the buzz is about, Liam Power, a six-time New York state champion rowing coach whose rowers have broken over 10 world records, shares his top tips for beginner rowers here.

3 common rowing machine mistakes

“The majority of mistakes I see have to do with improper form, whether it be from poor posture or a lack of understanding in regards to the biomechanics of taking a rowing stroke,” says Power. Fortunately, it doesn’t take much time or money to learn proper rowing technique. Most of the resources you need are already at your fingertips (well, that is, if your fingers are holding a smartphone).

Mistake 1: Improper form

Before you hop on an ergometer, it’s essential to learn the fundamentals of proper rowing technique. For starters, slouching or hunching over on the rowing machine won’t properly engage your core muscles. This not only makes your stroke less efficient, but it can also injure your back and shoulder muscles.

Another common form issue Power sees among beginners is not pushing hard enough on the drive portion (when you’re pressing back away from the machine). Many people think of rowing as an upper-body exercise, so they place too much emphasis on pulling on the handlebar, but most of your power will really come from pushing with your legs.

Even if you can’t afford coaching, Power says there are lots of great resources for beginner rowers online, such as videos on YouTube that can help you learn the basics, as well as advanced techniques once you get the hang of the machine. “Watch some videos that detail the intricacies of the rowing technique and try to commit as much of it to memory as possible,” he says.

The next thing to watch? Videos of yourself. “I would encourage beginners to film themselves rowing so they can go back and compare their form to the correct form. This is something even elite rowers do quite regularly,” says Power. “Even after you have mastered the stroke, it’s still possible to form bad habits.” Ask a friend to capture some footage for a minute, or prop your phone up nearby and hit record.

Mistake 2: Rowing at the wrong pace for you

Many beginners hop on an indoor rowing machine and simply go for it, only to tire out in just a few minutes. Instead, Power recommends reading up on pacing so you can get a feel for what would be a standard pace for someone your height, age, weight, and experience level.

“It would also be good to read up on the different cardio training zones and to get an understanding of how to train within each on a weekly basis, and why it’s important to do so,” he suggests.

Mistake 3: Not going in with a game plan

Power says another common mistake he sees beginners make is starting their session without a clear workout plan or goal in mind. “As a result, they don’t pace themselves correctly, which leads to poor technique and quitting early,” he says.

If you’re not sure where to start, look into some of the many free online training plans. “There are a ton of free plans that can be used by anyone in their own training,” says Power.

“The best coaches spend a lot more time coaching mindset rather than technique; again that’s something that can be found online for free,” he says. “Many of the popular rowing machine suppliers have whole sections of their websites dedicated to education—take advantage of it.”

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With China, America faces a preparedness crisis

Just In | The Hill 

The continuing erosion of America’s manufacturing capacity and its deepening dependence on China pose unacceptable risks to our nation’s health, prosperity, capacity for self-defense, and ability to support friends and allies. Although these dangers are more widely acknowledged today than they were only a few years ago, the steps taken to address them thus far have been insufficient. A more comprehensive and coordinated approach is urgently required. 

At the height of the COVID pandemic, many Americans learned for the first time that the manufacture of personal protective equipment and the active pharmaceutical ingredients used in many life-saving medications largely has been outsourced to China. Factory shutdowns, snarled supply chains, and hoarding by Chinese companies also contributed to a global semiconductor shortage that forced cutbacks in U.S. auto manufacturing. China today dominates the production of many of the rare earth minerals needed to make the products that will power a global energy transition. Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officials have threatened repeatedly to weaponize the supply chains they control, warning that they could suspend critical exports to countries that refuse to do their bidding. If nothing changes and Beijing someday follows through on these threats, the effects on our society and economy could be catastrophic.

The war in Ukraine has revealed a further vulnerability: U.S. defense contractors lack the capacity to rapidly ramp up production of everything from missiles to radios. To make matters worse, some of the components and materials needed to manufacture this equipment are imported from China. A suspension of key exports during a period of rising tensions would make it even more difficult to mobilize industry and expand our military capabilities. If war breaks out, it likely will be far more intense and destructive than the fighting in Ukraine, rapidly burning through existing weapons stockpiles. Without adequate manufacturing capacity, in just a few weeks our forces could run out of the arms and ammunition they need to stay in the fight.

What once might have seemed a distant prospect is now a very distinct possibility. According to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Xi Jinping has moved up the timeline for annexing Taiwan and the chief of the U.S. Navy recently warned that war could come as early as this year.

The United States must greatly accelerate its efforts to reduce dependence on critical imports from China and enhance our capacity for defense mobilization. Doing this will require better information and more comprehensive and realistic planning. In its annual report, the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission therefore recommends that Congress direct the Biden administration to create a White House-level Economic and Security Preparedness and Resilience Office. This new office would have two tasks:

Recent reports by Commerce, Energy and other departments have produced useful snapshots of import dependence in a few key sectors, including semiconductors, drugs and minerals. But the U.S. government still lacks broad, deep and sustained visibility into the nation’s rapidly evolving critical supply chains. A dedicated Mapping Unit would address this shortcoming, working with other agencies and the private sector on an ongoing basis to collect data and refine analytic tools, monitor select supply chains, identify vulnerabilities and propose remedies, as needed.

A future war with China would pose unprecedented challenges, not only to America’s armed forces but to the nation’s defense industrial base and, indeed, to our entire economy. Despite recent talk of possible imminent conflict, Congress and the executive branch have only just begun to come to grips with the full magnitude of the problems that would ensue. A Defense Mobilization Unit in the Executive Office of the President would help to speed and steer this process across all relevant agencies. 

Such a unit would assess requirements for weapons, munitions and other supplies and equipment needed to sustain U.S. and partner forces in a range of plausible scenarios, including those in which trade with China is effectively cut off and fighting drags on for many months. These requirements would provide the basis for assessing the adequacy of existing stockpiles and productive capacity and identifying investments that are needed now to prevent devastating future shortfalls.

The trends that created our present vulnerabilities have been many years in the making; they have been ignored for far too long and will not be reversed cheaply or overnight. We need to act, but we must do so in ways that are informed if they are to be effective. There is no time to waste.

Aaron Friedberg and Michael Wessel are members of the bipartisan U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. The views expressed are their own and not intended to reflect those of other commissioners.

​National Security, Opinion Read More 

Tesla Stock Stages Huge Reversal After Hitting 52-Week Low

TheStreet 

Tesla stock hit a 52-week low on Friday but is staging a huge reversal. Here’s how the charts look now.

Tesla  (TSLA) – Get Free Report stock hit a 52-week low early on Friday and it was hard to imagine that investor sentiment could get much worse.

The stock market was mixed on Jan. 6 following a jobs report that was stronger than expected but also had lower-than-expected wage growth.

For Tesla, none of it mattered. The electric-vehicle leader’s shares were trading significantly lower in the premarket, then fell as much as 7.7% after the open. The stock is now up almost 2% on Friday.

This morning’s early hit came as the company cut prices in Asia, signaling further demand concern.

Those original concerns were made worse by the fourth-quarter delivery report, which missed analysts’ expectations amid record overall results.

The Asia-price-cut news was enough to weigh on Chinese EV stocks, too. Nio  (NIO) – Get Free Report, Xpeng  (XPEV) – Get Free Report and Li Auto  (LI) – Get Free Report are all still down notably on the day.

Trading Tesla Stock

Daily chart of Tesla stock.

Chart courtesy of TrendSpider.com

The trade in Tesla stock has not been good at all — unless one is short the stock. The shares have not even had the strength to rally back to active resistance, which is the declining 10-day moving average.

It has been one big sell program after the next.

The stock is now lingering near the 78.6% retracement and the psychologically key level of $100. If it can rally from here, look to see how it handles the 10-day moving average on the upside.

For there to be a rally that’s sustainable in any sense, Tesla stock must reclaim the 10-day moving average, around $120, and rotate over at least the prior week’s high.

On the downside, I would think the low-$100s would draw in the buyers. So far it is, but that may not be enough to offset those who are stopping out and screaming “uncle!”

Today’s reversal is impressive. Aggressive bulls who want to be long against today’s low are justified in their reasoning. A move over $120 could really get a short-term burst to the upside going.

Trading Nio Stock

Daily chart of Nio stock.

Chart courtesy of TrendSpider.com

Nio was trading well earlier this week as Chinese stocks had some bullish momentum and as its monthly delivery results for December were strong.

But it couldn’t break out over the 50-day moving average and now it’s below all its major daily moving averages. That suggests caution for the bulls.

From here, $9.50 is vital. If the stock loses that area, then the low-$9s could be back in play, followed by the 52-week low at $8.38. Below that and the gap-fill at $7.99 is on the table.

On the upside, the bulls want to see a move above $11.

Trading Xpeng Stock

Daily chart of Xpeng stock.

Chart courtesy of TrendSpider.com

I will keep it short and sweet for Xpeng. The shares need to hold the $9 to $9.25 range and the 50-day moving average.

To lose all these marks puts the stock below last month’s low and opens the door down to $8.53, then the gap-fill at $7.62.

On the upside, the shares need to regain $10.50, then fill the gap up at $11.06. From there, $12-plus is the objective.

A final note: All EV stocks are trading poorly right now. 

Traders need to keep that in mind as the trend is not their friend at the moment. Until that changes, nimble trading or no trading is paramount. 

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Incoming Texas Republican returning to Texas after son born prematurely

Just In | The Hill 

Republican Rep.-elect Wesley Hunt announced Friday that he will return to Texas after his son was born prematurely and needed to spend time in the neonatal intensive care unit.

Hunt and his wife Emily announced the birth of their son Monday, saying that he was born four weeks earlier than expected. Hunt, who has voted for Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on each of the 11 ballots in the ongoing Speaker election, said he is returning to Texas on Friday to support his wife and son.

“Our baby boy is otherwise healthy, but there have been some medical concerns that need to be resolved,” Hunt said in a tweet. “Emily had to return to the hospital due to complications, but it’s not life threatening.”

“Willie needs his father and Emily needs her husband,” he added. “Today, I’ll be returning home to hold my son and be at my wife’s side. It’s my intention to get back into the fight as soon as possible.”

With Hunt headed back home, McCarthy is down another vote as he struggles to win the support of 20 GOP members who have voted for other Republicans instead of him. McCarthy has lost 11 consecutive rounds of voting for Speaker, with a faction of Republicans refusing to support his bid for the top spot as the House enters its fourth day of voting Friday.

Rep. Kevin Hern (R-Okla.) is also expected to be absent this weekend to attend his mother’s funeral Saturday.

​House, News, House Speaker vote, Kevin Hern, Kevin McCarthy, Wesley Hunt Read More 

The new buildings set to shape the world in 2023

Written by Oscar Holland, CNN

The last year in architecture will be remembered as one of firsts, from the world’s first “upcycled” skyscraper winning World Building of the Year to Burkina Faso-born Francis Kéré becoming the first African architect to win the coveted Pritzker Prize.
It was also a year in which we lost industry giants like Ricardo Bofill and Meinhard von Gerkan, while gaining long-awaited new landmarks like the Taipei Performing Arts Center and New York’s Steinway Tower.

With construction projects often taking years to complete, delays caused by Covid-19 are still being felt. But 2023 nonetheless promises to be a year of remarkable new openings, whether it’s the world’s second-tallest tower or an interfaith religious complex in Abu Dhabi.

Here are 9 of the architectural projects set to shape the world in 2023:

National Library of Israel, Jerusalem, Israel

National Library of Israel

National Library of Israel Credit: Herzog & de Meuron

Having outgrown its longtime home, the National Library of Israel — and its vast archive of books, manuscripts and photographs — is relocating to a brand new building next to the country’s parliament, the Knesset.

The building’s distinctive upper volume resembles a huge block of carved rock, with local limestone mixed into the cement as a nod to Jerusalem’s historic color palette. Inside, facilities including an auditorium, a youth center and various exhibition spaces, are configured around the 50,500-square-foot reading hall.

Swiss architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron’s design is intended to reflect the institution’s values of openness and accessibility, from a soaring circular skylight to the ground-level display cases that make items from the library’s collection visible to passersby.

Nordø, Copenhagen, Denmark

Nordø

Nordø Credit: Rasmus Hjortshøj

Copenhagen has been designated UNESCO’s World Capital of Architecture for 2023, and the Danish capital is brimming with examples of sustainable design.

Chief among them is the ongoing redevelopment of the once-industrial Nordhavn (or Northern Harbor) into a pedestrian-friendly “smart” district complete with green energy supplies and a “super bikeway” link to the city center. Recent years have seen abandoned grain and cement silos converted into offices and apartment blocks, while a sprawling United Nations campus, UN City, opened there in 2013.

Danish architecture firm Henning Larsen’s latest addition to the neighborhood, Nordø, is emblematic of the transformation taking place. With a redbrick facade that honors to the site’s industrial past, sizable public gardens and a rooftop terrace, the 115-home development promises residents an “island oasis” with easy access to the district’s growing collection of restaurants and public spaces.

Lola Mora Cultural Center, San Salvador de Jujuy, Argentina

Lola Mora Cultural Center

Lola Mora Cultural Center Credit: Pelli Clarke & Partners

The late Argentine architect César Pelli may be best known for landmark skyscrapers like the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur and New York’s World Financial Center, but his firm’s first new project in South America since 2018 is an altogether humbler pursuit.

Nestled in a forest overlooking the city of San Salvador de Jujuy, northwest Argentina, the Lola Mora Cultural Center is dedicated to its namesake sculptor, one of the early 20th century’s pioneering female artists. In addition to a selection of her works, the institution will house an interpretation center, restaurant, library and atelier for visiting artists.

The building, whose form was inspired by a sculptor’s chisel, is described by architects Pelli Clarke & Partners as being “net-zero energy,” though it may go further still: With the help of on-site wind turbines and solar energy production, the center is expected to generate 20% more energy than it consumes.

Abrahamic Family House, Abu Dhabi, UAE (pictured top)

Abrahamic Family House

Abrahamic Family House Credit: Adjaye Associates

Almost 80% of the United Arab Emirates’ population is Muslim, but at Abu Dhabi’s new interfaith complex the three Abrahamic religions (Islam, Christianity and Judaism) are of equal stature. Occupying three identically-sized cubic forms on a “secular” visitor pavilion, the project’s mosque, synagogue and church stand in aesthetic harmony.

Ghanaian-British architect David Adjaye’s firm, Adjaye Associates, said it looked to the faiths’ commonalities in its designs, though each of the three main buildings has a different orientation on the site.

As well as offering places of worship, the complex is intended to encourage dialogue and cultural exchange. To that end, a fourth space — an educational center — will be somewhere “for all people of goodwill to come together as one,” the architects said.

Merdeka 118, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Merdeka 118

Merdeka 118 Credit: PNB Merdeka Ventures Sdn. Bhd.

Standing over 2,227 feet above Malaysia’s capital, Kuala Lumpur, Merdeka 118 is now the world’s second-tallest building behind Dubai’s Burj Khalifa. It is also one of just four so-called “mega tall” skyscrapers — a term used to describe towers measuring over 600 meters, or 1,969 feet — in the world.
When the building topped out in 2021, then-prime minister Ismail Sabri compared the design to the image of former leader Tunku Abdul Rahman raising a hand in the air upon announcing the country’s independence at the neighboring Stadium Merdeka in 1957. The Australian architecture firm behind the project, Fender Katsalidis, meanwhile says the triangular glass planes on the building’s facade were inspired by patterns found in Malaysian arts and crafts.

Set to complete in the second half of 2023, the building (and the sprawling mall at its base) promises around 1 million square feet of retail space, as well an 1,000-seat theater, offices, a hotel and Southeast Asia’s highest observation deck.

Destination Crenshaw, LA, USA

Destination Crenshaw

Destination Crenshaw Credit: Perkins&Will

When a new portion of the LA Metro’s K Line threatened to cut Crenshaw Boulevard in two, locals in the historically Black neighborhood saw an opportunity to push for new infrastructure in an area that has long suffered from under-investment. The resulting $100 million public-private initiative, Destination Crenshaw, hopes to do precisely what its name suggests: to make the Crenshaw district a destination in its own right, not just a thoroughfare.

Designed by architecture firm Perkins&Will, the 1.3-mile cultural corridor will feature pedestrian walkways, ten new public parks, street furniture and over 100 artworks spotlighting Black art and culture. Among the murals, statues and permanent installations will stand African American artist Kehinde Wiley’s reimagining of a confederate statue.

It won’t all be completed by the end of 2023, but several major components — including the largest of the landscaped areas, Sankofa Park, and four “pocket” parks — are expected to be open by the fall.

AMRF First Building, Sydney, Australia

AMRF First Building

AMRF First Building Credit: Hassell

A major urban transformation is underway in Sydney, where a huge precinct is being built to service — and benefit from — the city’s new international airport. Officials hope the district, dubbed the Western Sydney Aerotropolis, can become an economic center for the science, technology and creative industries, creating over 100,000 new jobs over the next three decades.

With the airport not due to open until 2026, there is a long way to go. But every new city begins with a single building.

The Aerotropolis’ first structure — appropriately named the Advanced Manufacturing Research Facility (AMRF) First Building — is scheduled to complete in late 2023, acting as a visitor center and hub for the wider development. Built from prefabricated timber modules and inspired by the movement of water, the light-filled design was led by architecture firm Hassell in collaboration the Indigenous designer Danièle Hromek of Djinjama, a First Nations cultural research and design practice.

Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru, India

Kempegowda International Airport

Kempegowda International Airport Credit: SOM/ATCHAIN

India’s third most populous city, Bengaluru, is set to welcome its long overdue airport expansion, with Kempegowda International’s 2.7-million-square-foot Terminal 2 entering operation early 2023. The project will increase the airport’s annual visitor capacity by an estimated 25 million, eventually rising to 40 million after the completion of its second phase.

Verdant airports like Singapore’s Changi have raised expectations of how terminal buildings can look and feel. And architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill has taken a similarly nature-inspired approach it has dubbed a “terminal in a garden” — a series of interconnected buildings joined by landscaped spaces and populated with plants, bamboo-clad pavilions, indoor waterfalls and rattan furnishings.

Grand Egyptian Museum, Giza, Egypt

Grand Egyptian Museum

Grand Egyptian Museum Credit: Mohamed El-Shahed/AFP/Getty Images

Costing over $1 billion and housing some of human history’s most precious objects, the long-awaited Grand Egyptian Museum has been beset by delays since a design competition was announced in 2002. It was even — optimistically, perhaps — included in this very list some five years ago.
Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities did not respond to CNN’s repeated requested for confirmation that 2023 will, finally, be the year museum opens its doors, though there are plenty of promising signs (not least the announcement of a major concert there in January).

Designed by Dublin-based Heneghan Peng Architects, the 5.2-million-square-foot structure features exhibition spaces, a conservation center and an atrium tall enough to house an enormous statue of Ramses II (with headroom to spare). Triangular forms dominate the glass-fronted facade and flow throughout the building, a motif that nods to the neighboring Pyramids of Giza.

Top image: Abrahamic Family House, Abu Dhabi.

This article was updated to clarify Hassell’s role and to name the firm that designed Destination Crenshaw

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A volunteer medic in Ukraine posted a ‘skincare routine’ video from the front lines after TikTok kept deleting his war posts

Business Insider 

Stills of a TikTok by medical volunteer Brandon Mitchell on January 2, 2023.

A frontline medic in Ukraine posted a “skincare” video to TikTok after his other posts were taken down.
Brandon Mitchell made the skincare post in part to ridicule TikTok’s moderation.
TikTok put some posts back up after Insider contacted them but said rules are applied consistently.

A Canadian volunteer medic in Ukraine posted a sarcastic “skincare routine” video from the front line, poking fun at TikTok for taking down much of his serious war-related content.

Brandon Mitchell, 36, has been posting videos from Ukraine, most recently from Bakhmut, on various platforms since early in Russia’s invasion.

They show his work in the war zone as a member of the Hospitallers Medical Batallion, evacuating stranded families and trying to get injured people medical care.

But after TikTok took much of that material down, Mitchell made a post on Monday simply labeled: “Skincare routine.”

Standing in his military gear with artillery fire ringing out in the background, Mitchell says to camera: “So, could you ladies recommend some sort of … I’m thinking an exfoliator, because my skin’s not what it used it be.

“I’m quite concerned. Ukraine has adverse effects,” he says, popping a cigarette in his mouth.

Adding to the air of absurdity the post features the soundtrack to “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” 

@ukraine_tbic 🇺🇦Skin Care Tips #1 All my videos get banned on TikTok. Head on over to ukraine_tbic on YouTube or Instagram. Surely TikTok won’t ban a simple skin care video. 🤷‍♂️ #skincare #skincareroutine #skincaretips #skincare101 #бахмут #бабушка #донбасс ♬ Frolic (Theme from “Curb Your Enthusiasm” TV Show) – Luciano Michelini

In the video description, Mitchell wrote: “All my videos get banned on TikTok … Surely TikTok won’t ban a simple skincare video.”

Though he has no love for social media, Mitchell told Insider that he turned to platforms like TikTok as a means of fundraising for his humanitarian work — and said he could see “no rhyme or reason” for the takedowns.

The same posts on Instagram stayed online, he said.

(Mitchell said that the skincare post was also meant to poke fun at social media’s focus on vapid content, and that he chose TikTok for it because it had the audio he wanted.)

After Insider contacted TikTok, the platform reinstated four posts. It added that they were taken down over Mitchell’s inclusion of personal contact details, which it said violates the platform’s policy on personal information.

But the platform relented on this on the basis that Mitchell was using this to further a humanitarian cause, it said.

Two further videos remain banned for violation of the platform’s “violent and graphic content” policy, though Mitchell questions that characterization. 

“Puzzling moderation”

The episode highlighted an ongoing frustration with what researcher Abbie Richards called TikTok’s “puzzling” moderation methods.

In 2019, TikToker Feroza Aziz was suspended after she made a makeup tutorial during which she highlighted China’s oppression of Uyghur Muslims, as Insider reported. (TikTok said the ban was unrelated to Aziz’ China content.)

Videos like Mitchell’s — where there is an attempt, ironic or otherwise, to disguise serious content with “fluffy” material – are among several evasive tactics used by TikTokers, Richards, a research fellow at the Accelerationism Research Consortium, told Insider.

She pointed to posts by TikToker @alluringskull, who has made dance posts overlaid with commentary on issues like anti-Black racism and the crisis in Yemen, commenting on the latter: “This is just a totally normal dance video.”

The platform is now awash with people pre-emptively labeling their content as “fake,” as a way to get around moderation, Richards said — despite the intention for it to be read as real.

The hashtag #fakewar is often added to Ukraine content, while sexually suggestive content might be posted with the hashtag #fakebody.

There’s no evidence that these tactics fool the platform’s moderators, Richards said, but how TikTok implements its moderation is so scattergun that it users, confused, try these methods anyway.

As for Mitchell, he says he’s not planning to continue to take on the social media giant over his Ukraine war posts. “We’ve got a big enough enemy to deal with,” he says.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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[World] Jerusalem Christian cemetery attack: Two teenagers arrested

BBC News world 

Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

Anglican Archbishop Hosam Naoum said “hatred speech and hatred crimes” were on the rise

Two teenagers have been arrested by Israeli police investigating an attack on a Christian cemetery in Jerusalem.

Police said the pair were aged 14 and 18 and came from central Israel.

They said gravestones at the historic Protestant Mount Zion Cemetery had suffered extensive damage from an “act of intentional vandalism”.

Israel’s Anglican Church, Jewish leaders and faith leaders from the UK all condemned Sunday’s attack.

Security camera footage shows two young men pushing over a gravestone in the shape of a cross and smashing others. They are wearing kippahs, or skullcaps, and knotted fringes known as tzitzit on their clothes, indicating they are religious Jews. More than 30 graves were damaged at the site close to Jerusalem’s Old City.

Figure caption,

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Other than giving their ages and a rough location of where they were from, Israeli police did not say any more about the suspects.

Anglican Archbishop Hosam Naoum said he was dismayed and saddened by the attack, which he said seemed to be part of a trend. “We have noticed that hatred speech and hatred crimes are on the rise,” he said on a visit to the cemetery on Wednesday.

The British Consulate in Jerusalem called it “the latest in a string of attacks against Christians and their property in and around the Old City”.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, the most senior cleric in the Church of England, called the desecration of the graves “a blasphemous act”, while the UK’s Orthodox Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis said: “This shameful vandalism is a disgraceful desecration for which I hope the perpetrators will be found and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Israel’s foreign ministry also condemned what it said was an “immoral act” and “an affront to religion”.

The cemetery was set up in 1848 and is looked after by the Lutheran and Anglican communities.

Among those buried there are scientists, politicians, members of the armed forces and clergy, many of whom were prominent figures in the holy city.

 

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