Lexus Insists On Showing Sport Concept In Its Electrified Ads

Carscoops 

Lexus has launched a new marketing campaign highlighting its line-up of electrified vehicles.

The campaign has launched with the release of ‘Like Attracts Like,’ a commercial that showcases individuals using electricity “in different ways to fuel their interests.” For example, it opens by showing a band jamming in a room and then cuts to a tennis player practicing their hits with an electric ball machine.

This new commercial also showcases a dancer wearing a light-up suit while cables can be seen trailing down each stage “as a metaphor for human electricity generating the power behind Lexus innovation,” or so the company says in its press release.

Read: Lexus Is Developing A Manual Gearbox For EVs

Four important electrified models from Lexus are featured in the commercial, namely the new RZ 450e, RX 500h, NX 450h+, and the Electrified Sport Concept.

Lexus is also partnering with The Atlantic to sponsor a reporting project and live event series covering modern progress and the forces shaping the future, dubbed ‘Progress.’ The new ‘Like Attracts Like’ commercial will air on primetime, cable, and sports and be supported through digital, audio streaming, social media, print, and out-of-home media.

Of the four vehicles featured in the commercial, the Lexus Electrified Sport Concept is perhaps the most intriguing. While it is a concept, it previews an all-electric successor to the iconic LFA supercar. While it is unclear just when the production model will hit the market, it could apparently do so with advanced solid state batteries, ensuring that it offers excellent range and rapid charging speeds. Lexus is also working on a simulated manual transmission for the EV, aiming to replicate the feeling of a traditional stick shift in a car that has just a single gear.

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Gen. Mark Milley said he had calls with up to 60 different countries during the chaotic 2020 election period, assuring them the US was ‘not going to do something crazy’

Business Insider 

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testifies before the House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense on May 11, 2022.

Gen. Mark Milley said he spoke with his counterparts in up to 60 countries after the 2020 election.
Milley told the January 6 committee there was “great concern” overseas on the stability of the US.
The theme of the calls was “steady in the saddle, safe landing, peaceful transfer of power,” he said.

Gen. Mark Milley said he had calls with counterparts in up to 60 countries during the months after the 2020 election to assure them the US was stable, according to testimony released by the January 6 committee.

Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has served as the top military adviser to the president since 2019. The House Select committee investigating the Capitol riot released his testimony, taken on November 17, 2021, on Sunday among a trove of documents.

Milley told the committee his calls with White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo increased after the election. He said he used the calls to promote a peaceful transfer of power and to report to them what he was seeing overseas, as then-President Donald Trump refused to concede the election and spread false claims about widespread fraud. 

“Because internationally, post-election, there was great concern on the stability of the United States Government,” Milley said, according to the transcript, adding, “I was consistently talking with my foreign counterparts.”

Milley noted that his calls to his counterpart in China made during the final months of former President Donald Trump’s presidency have been widely known. But he said he also made “50 or 60 phone calls to other counterparts” during that time.

“There was a lot of effort to calm waters, to make sure that people overseas understood that, you know, the normal puts and takes of democracy, and this is a stable government, we’re not going to do something crazy and all that,” he said. “That took a degree of effort.”

Milley added that the theme of the calls was “steady in the saddle, safe landing, peaceful transfer of power, all of that.”

Milley’s testimony also included other revelations, including that there were talks during the Trump administration about retaliating against retired military officers who were publicly critical of the president. He noted there had been several op-eds written by retired officers that were “very critical of then President Trump.” 

“And there was actually discussions with me: Bring him back on Active Duty, court-martial him, you know, make him walk the plank sort of thing, right? I advised them not to do that, because that would further politicize, in my personal view,” Milley said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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[Entertainment] All The Beauty and the Bloodshed film explores Sackler scandal

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Nan Goldin has protested around the world at various art galleries.

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, directed by Laura Poitras, caused a stir earlier this year when it became only the second documentary to win the prestigious Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival.

It’s a film that combines art and politics, explaining how a campaign led by photographer Nan Goldin prompted the world’s leading museums and galleries to drop financial ties with the Sackler family, because of their link with the opioid drug OxyContin.

Poitras, who won a best documentary Oscar in 2014 for Citizenfour, about ex-CIA contractor Edward Snowden, thanked the Venice Film Festival jury at the time for “recognising that documentary is cinema”.

Speaking more generally about her work, Poitras has said: “I do make films about political issues that I care about, but I want them to work as films. I’m passionate about cinema and every time a documentary is successful, it’s successful for all of us who make them.”

Image source, Venice Film Festival

Image caption,

Laura Poitras celebrates winning the Golden Lion in Venice

The movie is now on the longlist for best documentary at the Oscars and it’s also being tipped to possibly become the first ever non-fiction film to get an Academy Award best picture nomination.

It tells the story of how New York-based Goldin and the advocacy organisation Pain (Prescription Addiction Intervention Now) took direct action at the world’s most famous art galleries in protest at their ties with the Sacklers. Museums including the V&A, the Tate in London and the Louvre in Paris have dropped their connections.

The Sackler-owned company, Purdue Pharma, which manufactures OxyContin, reached a settlement this year with several US states for its role in the US opioid crisis. Millions of people in the US have become addicted to opiate-based painkillers such as fentanyl and OxyContin, while nearly half a million deaths there were attributed to painkiller overdoses between 1999 and 2019.

The story was also made into an Emmy award-winning drama series, Dopesick, starring Michael Keaton.

But what has led publications including The Hollywood Reporter and Variety, to call the Poitras film both “exquisite” and “lacerating,” is the director’s weaving of Goldin’s own history through the narrative.

The 68-year-old photographer was addicted to OxyContin herself at one point, but she is best known for her ground-breaking artistic career, including being the first to curate a group exhibition about the Aids epidemic, called Witnesses: Against Our Vanishing in 1989.

Image source, Altitude

Image caption,

Goldin (left), pictured in the 1970s, has always put politics at the forefront of her work

“I started doing these interviews with Nan for the documentary and I was so moved by them, her work and her life that I knew it had to be the heart of the film,” Poitras explains.

“I knew I wanted to interweave these portraits and also show some parallels between what drives her as an artist and the relationship between art and politics. Her work is so close to the heart, but also so political.

“She created a national controversy in the US with that exhibition in 1989, she was losing her community and generation to the Aids crisis. There’s something about Nan, that she ends up being on the right side of history again and again. She stands up for truth and rejects this notion of the status quo.”

While documentaries such as Asif Kapadia’s portrait of musician Amy Winehouse, Amy, and Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11, an investigation into the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, have done well at the box office, it’s still very rare for a non-fiction film to beat a feature movie in awards categories.

Figure caption,

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In 2004, Fahrenheit 9/11 was only the second documentary ever to win the Cannes Palme D’Or prize – but it didn’t go on to be nominated in the Oscar best picture or even documentary categories.

“To me though, it makes sense that All the Beauty and the Bloodshed won the Golden Lion at Venice and is being mentioned as a potential best picture nominee,” says film critic and festival programmer Kaleem Aftab.

“It felt like an American story, there’s an important message as well as an exploration of who Nan Goldin is, and in the US, this news story is big, so I can see why it might strike a chord with Julianne Moore, who led the Venice Film Festival jury this year, and just resonate with audiences in the US generally. I agree having an American subject matter helps push you into the awards conversation – but then the Oscars are the American Academy Awards.”

Aftab adds, however, that even in the documentary category, the film could face stiff competition from other non-fiction films including Navalny by Daniel Roher, another politically-charged documentary about Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and All That Breathes by Shaunak Sen, a cinematic exploration of two brothers’ attempts to protect black kites dropping from the sky in Delhi’s polluted air. Both are also on the Oscar longlist for best documentary.

“This year has been incredibly strong for documentaries, and their winning speaks to me of how they’re becoming increasingly validated and watched in exactly the same ways feature films are being watched,” Aftab explains.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

A woman grieving for her daughter at an event calling for the prosecution of the Sacklers in 2021

Poitras says that her job as a filmmaker is to “hold people to account – we need to celebrate independent adversarial reporting, and documentary-making is one of those ways of doing it”.

Reflecting on the story of All the Beauty and the Bloodshed though, Poitras thinks the success of Nan Goldin and Pain’s campaign against the Sackler family name was “limited.”

“In some ways the film is about impunity – no-one is facing jail time, or being indicted, or had to file for bankruptcy, but the family name has been shamed in cultural spaces, and that’s some kind of success, but it’s limited.

“The Sackler name does remain publicly in some spaces, but in fewer and fewer of them every day. The Louvre was the first to take the Sackler name down, the V&A did too, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and they’re successes Nan should celebrate. It was a long overdue debate and only brought to the fore by people who were willing to take risks.”

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed will be released in UK and Irish cinemas on 27 January 2023.

 

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GM reclaims title as America's top automaker after a 2.5% jump in sales last year

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DETROIT – General Motors reclaimed its U.S. sales crown from Toyota Motor last year as the Detroit automaker eked out a slight gain in annual U.S. vehicle sales despite supply chain problems.

GM said Wednesday it sold 2.27 million vehicles in the U.S. in 2022, up by 2.5% over 2021, including a 41.4% increase during the fourth quarter. Analysts expect overall U.S. auto industry sales to have declined by 7% and 10% last year compared to 2021.

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Toyota said it sold 2.1 million vehicles in the U.S. last year, down 9.6% from 2021. The company was able to manage supply chain problems, specifically with semiconductor chips, better than others.

Toyota edged out GM in sales by 114,034 vehicles in 2021 – dethroning the Detroit automaker for the first time since 1931 when it surpassed Ford Motor. Toyota executives previously said the top sales spot was unattainable, but CEO Akio Toyoda last year told dealers he did a “happy dance” when he heard the news.

Jack Hollis, executive vice president of Toyota Motor North America, on Wednesday said the Japanese automaker remains focused on retail sales, which are traditionally more profitable than commercial or fleet sales. Toyota has led those sales for several years.

EVs

Despite recent criticism of its all-electric vehicle strategy, Toyota on Wednesday touted that it leads the country in electrified vehicle sales. Those include hybrid, plug-in and all-electric cars and trucks.

GM, in contrast, largely ditched hybrids for an all-electric vehicle strategy but has been slow to ramp up production. GM’s U.S. EV sales represented less than 2% of its sales in 2022.

Comparison of GM and Toyota stocks.

In a release Wednesday, GM called EVs “growth opportunities.” It’s expected to release more mainstream models such as the Chevrolet Blazer and Chevrolet Equinox EV crossovers.

GM was able to achieve record U.S. sales of 38,120 Chevrolet Bolt EV and EUV models in 2022. However, it sold fewer than 1,000 units of its luxury GMC Hummer EV and Cadillac Lyriq, combined.

GM said production of the Bolt models is expected to increase to more than 70,000 units this year to meet strong global demand. The company last year pushed back plans to produce 400,000 EVs in North America through 2023 to mid-2024.

Pickups

While GM’s future may be EVs, its present is large, gas-guzzling pickup trucks and SUVs. The Detroit automaker sold more than 1.1 million mid-size pickups and full-size trucks, including SUVs, in 2022. Those sales represented nearly 50% of their total annual sales.

Such vehicles are highly profitable and crucial to GM’s bottom line as it invests in capital-intensive electric and autonomous vehicles.

GM has been the top seller of pickups for nine years, including topping crosstown rival Ford in full-size pickups for three consecutive years. However, Ford’s F-Series has been America’s bestselling truck for 46 consecutive years and bestselling vehicle for 41 years.

The accolades come despite declining sales of full-size pickups for both automakers due to supply chain issues. GM sold 754,876 Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups in 2022, down by roughly 2%. Sales of Ford’s F-Series were off by nearly 13% through November compared with a year earlier, however Ford said Tuesday that last month’s sales were anticipated to be the best of 2022 for the F-Series.

First impressions of the Ford F-150 Lightning

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Ukraine war live updates: Russia blames use of cellphones for deadly Makiivka attack; Putin sends new hypersonic cruise missiles to Atlantic

Serbian president rejects calls for sanctions against Russia

Serbia’s president said that the European Union’s calls for his country to join sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine represent “a brutal” interference in the internal affairs of the Balkan state, which has asked to join the EU.

In his wide-ranging year-end address to the nation, Aleksandar Vucic praised his and his country’s economic and political achievements, comparing himself to a wolf who cannot be tamed under international pressure.

“Thank you very much for meddling in our internal affairs in such a brutal way,” he said, referring to the Western appeals.

Although formally seeking EU membership, Serbia has repeatedly ignored calls to align its foreign policies with the 27-nation bloc, including joining international sanctions against Moscow over the war in Ukraine.

There are increasing suggestions from EU-member states that Serbia’s membership bid should be suspended until it complies with the bloc’s foreign policies.

— Associated Press

Biden says Bradley Fighting Vehicles are on the table for Ukraine

U.S. President Joe Biden speaks prior to signing railroad legislation into law, providing a resoluton to avert a nationwide rail shutdown, during a signing ceremony in the Roosevelt Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., December 2, 2022. 

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

U.S. President Joe Biden said that sending Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine was being considered to help the Ukrainians in combating Russia’s invasion.

“Yes,” Biden said when asked if the option was on the table.

— Reuters

Claims that war pits Russia against NATO are ‘a bunch of BS,’ White House spokesman says

White House National Security Council Strategic Communications Coordinator John Kirby speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, November 28, 2022.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

Russian claims that Moscow’s war in Ukraine is really a fight against NATO and Western countries are “a bunch of BS,” a Biden administration spokesman said.

“This is about a Russian invasion of Ukraine,” said U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby. “And Russia is the one who started it. Russia is the one who’s visited violence on the Ukrainian people at a scale.”

Kirby added that the U.S. will “continue to provide [Ukraine] the kinds of systems and assistance they need to defend themselves,” including the coveted High Mobility Artillery Rocket System.

— Jacob Pramuk

Heavy fighting likely to persist in Ukrainian-held Bakhmut, U.S. official says

Ukrainian soldiers with the 43rd Heavy Artillery Brigade sit atop 2S7 Pion self propelled cannon on the battlefield, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, during intense shelling on the front line in Bakhmut, Ukraine, December 26, 2022.

Clodagh Kilcoyne | Reuters

Heavy fighting around the largely ruined, Ukrainian-held city of Bakhmut is likely to persist for the foreseeable future, with the outcome uncertain as Russians have made incremental progress, according to a senior U.S. administration official.

— Reuters

Russian torture chambers uncovered in Kherson, Ukraine

Kherson police said local residents were held in cells and rooms for days, tortured with electricity and batons and forced to write Russian patriotic texts. Kherson was the only regional capital captured by Russia since the invasion, and Ukraine liberated it late last year.

KHERSON, UKRAINE – JANUARY 04: Officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. According to the Kherson police, local residents were held in cells and rooms for days, tortured with electricity, batons and forced to write Russian patriotic texts. Kherson was the only regional capital captured by Russia since the invasion and it was liberated by Ukraine late last year. (Photo by Pierre Crom/Getty Images)

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

A burnt bed within a room as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. 

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

A general view of the basement and rooms as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. 

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

KHERSON, UKRAINE – JANUARY 04: Russian patriotic written letters as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. According to the Kherson police, local residents were held in cells and rooms for days, tortured with electricity, batons and forced to write Russian patriotic texts. Kherson was the only regional capital captured by Russia since the invasion and it was liberated by Ukraine late last year. (Photo by Pierre Crom/Getty Images)

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

Walls are marked with the Russian war symbol Z as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

A general view of the basement and rooms as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images News | Getty Images

A calendar marked on a wall in a cell as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

— Pierre Crom | Getty Images

Zelenskyy and Macron discussed aid to boost Ukraine’s air defenses

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shakes hands with French President Emmanuel Macron during a news briefing following their talks in Kyiv, Ukraine on February 8, 2022.

Gleb Garanich | Reuters

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and French President Emmanuel Macron had a “long and detailed conversation” about efforts to boost Ukraine’s defenses against Russian attacks.

“We agreed on further cooperation to significantly strengthen our air defense and other defense capabilities,” Zelenskyy said in a post on his Telegram channel.

France and other European nations have funneled aid to Ukraine since Russia invaded its neighbor last year. Zelenskyy has pleaded for air defenses in particular as Russia pummels his country with missile strikes.

— Jacob Pramuk

Russia-appointed official says 5 people died in Ukrainian strike on occupied city

The Russian-appointed governor of the Zaporizhzhia region in Ukraine said a Ukrainian strike on the Russian-occupied city of Vasilyevka left five people dead and 15 injured, according to an NBC News translation.

— Jacob Pramuk

Czech government OKs bill for 2% GDP spending on military

The Czech government approved a bill aimed at bringing defense spending at the required NATO goal of 2% of gross domestic product as Russia’s war in Ukraine continues.

Defense Minister Jana Cernochova said the move would “ensure a stable and transparent financing of big defense strategic projects in the future.”

Cernochova said the war in Ukraine “made it clear we have to be ready for the current and future conflicts and that’s why a fast modernization of the army is absolutely necessary.”

Although the Czechs will spend only 1.52% of GDP on defense this year, the 2% target should be reached in 2024 once the bill is approved in parliament where the governing coalition has a majority in both chambers.

NATO members agreed in 2014 to commit to the 2% spending target by 2024. Currently, only nine of the Western military alliance’s 30 members meet or surpass that goal.

— Associated Press

Ukraine sees speeding up inspections as key to Black Sea grain deal

The Sierra Leone-flagged cargo ship Razoni, carrying Ukrainian grain, is seen in the Black Sea off Kilyos, near Istanbul, Turkey August 3, 2022.

Mehmet Caliskan | Reuters

Ukraine’s efforts to increase exports under the Black Sea grain deal with Russia are currently focused on securing faster inspections of ships rather than including more ports in the initiative, a senior Ukrainian official said.

Ukraine is a major global grain producer and exporter, but production and exports have fallen since Russia invaded the country last February and started blockading its seaports.

Three leading Ukrainian Black Sea ports in the Odesa region were unblocked in July under an initiative between Moscow and Kyiv brokered by the United Nations and Turkey. Under the deal, all ships are inspected by joint teams in the Bosphorus.

Kyiv accuses Russia of carrying out the inspections too slowly, causing weeks of delays for ships and reducing the supply of Ukrainian grain to foreign markets. Russia has denied slowing down the process.

— Reuters

Putin sends new hypersonic cruise missiles to Atlantic

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu attend a wreath-laying ceremony, which marks the anniversary of the beginning of the Great Patriotic War against Nazi Germany in 1941, at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by the Kremlin wall in Moscow, Russia June 22, 2022.

Mikhail Metzel | Sputnik | Reuters

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday sent off a frigate towards the Altantic and Indian oceans armed with new hypersonic Zircon cruise missiles which he said were unique in the world.

In a video conference with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and Igor Krokhmal, commander of the frigate named “Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union Gorshkov,” Putin said the ship was armed with Zircon hypersonic weapons.

“This time the ship is equipped with the latest hypersonic missile system — ‘Zircon’ — which has no analogues,” said Putin, who is engaged in a standoff with the West over his war in Ukraine.

“I would like to wish the crew of the ship success in their service for the good of the Motherland.”

Shoigu said the Gorshkov would sail to the Atlantic and Indian oceans and to the Mediterranean Sea.

“This ship, armed with ‘Zircons’, is capable of delivering pinpoint and powerful strikes against the enemy at sea and on land,” Shoigu said.

Shoigu said the hypersonic missiles, known as either Tsirkon or Zircon, could overcome any missile defense system. The missiles fly at nine times the speed of sound and have a range of over 1,000km, Shoigu said.

Russia, China and the United States are currently in a hypersonic weapons race. Because of their speeds — above five times the speed of sound — and manoeuvrability, such weapons are seen as a way to gain an edge over any adversary.

The target of a hypersonic weapon is much more difficult to calculate than for intercontinential ballistic missiles.

— Reuters

Mariupol sea port being turned into military base, advisor claims

A cargo ship is loaded with grain at the Port of Mariupol in Ukraine.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The port of Mariupol is gradually being turned into a military base, an advisor to the occupied city’s mayor claimed.

“The occupiers are gradually turning it into a military base,” Petro Andriushchenko said on Telegram.

“At the end of December, all residents of Mariupol were released from the port (with the exception of certain specialists-collaborators) and workers were brought in from Moscow. Work has begun on the division of berths into conventionally civilian and conventionally military ones,” he said.

Andriushchenko said the port had seen isolated, irregular arrivals of ships carrying building materials and containers of unknown content. He also noted that some port workers had been moved to Crimea in December and that contact with them had then been lost and their whereabouts were unknown to relatives. CNBC was unable to verify the claims.

Mariupol was fully occupied by Russian forces last May following a prolonged siege with Ukrainian fighters holed up in the city’s Azovstal steelworks. Russia’s relentless bombardment of the city up to its capture left much of it in ruins.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russian army trying to advance through its own corpses in Bakhmut, army chief says

The head of Ukraine’s armed forces said fighting in the Luhansk and Donetsk areas around Bakhmut remains intense and difficult.

“Heavy fighting” is taking place between Svatove and Kreminna in Luhansk, as well as toward Lysychansk, the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Valeriy Zaluzhny said on Telegram Tuesday.

He said the most difficult situation remains in the area of Soledar, Bakhmut and Mayorsk, where “the Russian army is actually trying to move forward through its corpses, but units of the Defense Forces are holding back the advance,” Zaluzhny said on Telegram, according to a Google translation of his comments.

Emergency service workers extinguish a fire after shelling on the Bakhmut front line in Ivanivske, Ukraine on Jan. 2, 2023.

Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Bakhmut has been the epicenter of attritional warfare for several months, with Russian forces gaining little ground in their bid to capture the town, which analysts say has little overall strategic value for Russia.

Despite that, Russia continues to expend weaponry and manpower on its offensive operation in the pocket of Donetsk that is part of the wider Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, which Moscow says it wants to “liberate.”

Zaluzhny said Ukraine continued to hold positions around Avdiivka in the Donetsk region and was continuing counteroffensive actions. 

“We are reliably holding defensive lines in the Zaporozhzhia direction and are making efforts to protect Kherson from enemy shelling,” he said. The situation on the border with Russia’s ally Belarus is fully under control, he added.

— Holly Ellyatt

Infrastructure, apartments and kindergarten damaged in Zaporizhzhia attack, officials say

A missile attack on the city of Zaporizhzhia in southern Ukraine has targeted an infrastructure facility, destroying nearby warehouses and damaging apartment buildings, according to Ukrainian officials.

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, said on Telegram Wednesday that one person had been injured in the rocket attack on the city. He said Russian forces had used S-300 missiles, according to a Google translation of his comments. Tymoshenko’s post contained images and video footage purportedly showing the destruction following the attack.

An Ukrainian soldier returns to the front line after taking a rest in an underground shelter in the Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine.

Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Anatoliy Kurtev, the acting mayor of Zaporizhzhia, urged residents of the city to take shelter, saying on Telegram earlier today that Russian forces were “on the defensive” in the Zaporizhzhia area. He said eight high-rise buildings had been damaged during the attack.

“According to preliminary information, 8 high-rise buildings were damaged in one of the districts of the city … Their windows were blown out and their balconies were destroyed. In addition, the kindergarten building was damaged. There, too, the windows were broken and the roof was partially damaged,” he said on Telegram.

Further information about the attack is still being established, the officials said. CNBC was unable to immediately verify the reports.

— Holly Ellyatt

Ammunition likely being stored near Makiivka troop accommodation, UK says

Britain’s Ministry of Defense said on Wednesday it’s likely that ammunition is being stored near a Russian military complex that was destroyed in a Ukrainian attack on New Year’s Eve, highlighting unsafe and unprofessional practices by the Russian army.

Russian emergency workers remove the rubble of vocational school 19 destroyed by shelling in Makeevka, Donetsk People’s Republic, Russia. The armed forces of Ukraine attacked the vocational school building in Makeyevka of the Donetsk People’s Republic from the HIMARS MLRS on December 31 to January 1.

RIA Novosti | Sputnik via AP

Russia’s Defense Ministry said 89 Russian servicemen had died in the attack on the building that was being used as a college and temporary accommodation for newly conscripted soldiers. It’s a rare admission of multiple losses by Russia, which blamed the attack on personnel using mobile phones, saying this had enabled Ukraine to target the location.

Britain’s Ministry of Defense remarked on Twitter that Ukraine had completely destroyed a school building in Makiivka in Donetsk “which Russia had almost certainly taken over for military use.”

“Given the extent of the damage, there is a realistic possibility that ammunition was being stored near to troop accommodation, which detonated during the strike creating secondary explosions.”

It noted that the building was only 7.7 miles from the Avdiivka section of front line, “one of the most intensely contested areas of the conflict.”

“The Russian military has a record of unsafe ammunition storage from well before the current war, but this incident highlights how unprofessional practices contribute to Russia’s high casualty rate,” U.K.’s defense ministry added.

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia ready to ‘throw everything they have left’ at the war, Zelenskyy says

President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits the Kharkiv region for the first time since Russia started attacks against his country, on May 29, 2022.

Ukrainian Presidency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Tuesday night that Kyiv is prepared for renewed offensives and mobilization by Russia.

Zelenskyy said on Telegram that he had spoken with his counterparts in Canada, the Netherlands, U.K. and Norway on Tuesday, with the conversation focusing on “what Ukraine immediately needs most right now — on the eve of those new mobilization processes being prepared by the terrorist state.”

A burned civilian vehicle allegedly shot by Russian occupying forces on Jan. 3, 2023 in Oleksandrivka, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images News | Getty Images

“Right now is the moment when, together with our partners, we should strengthen our defense. We have no doubt that the present masters of Russia will throw everything they have left, and all they can muster, into trying to turn the tide of the war, and at least delay their defeat. We have to disrupt this Russian scenario. We are preparing for it,” Zelenskyy said, adding that “any attempt at their new offensive must fail.”

— Holly Ellyatt

Russia blames use of mobile phones for deadly Makiivka attack

Russia has been left reeling as the death toll rises following a Ukrainian strike on newly conscripted soldiers in Makiivka, a town in the partially Russian-occupied eastern Donetsk region in east Ukraine.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said Tuesday night that the death toll from the attack, which took place on New Year’s Eve, had risen to 89, according to reports by Russian state news agencies.

It had previously said 63 soldiers had died in the attack, which struck a college for conscripts in Makiivka, in a rare admission of multiple losses.

It blamed the unauthorized use of cellphones for the strike, saying their use had allowed Ukraine to locate and strike its personnel.

“This factor allowed the enemy to locate and determine the coordinates of the location of military personnel for a missile strike,” the ministry said in a statement, reported by RIA Novosti.

Mourners gather to lay flowers in memory of Russian soldiers who were killed in a Ukrainian strike on a college for newly conscripted Russian soldiers in the occupied city of Makiivka in eastern Ukraine on New Year’s Eve.

Arden Arkman | Afp | Getty Images

The ministry said Ukraine had struck the building in Makiivka using missiles from a HIMARS rocket system and claimed that Russian forces had intercepted four of six rockets. It claimed it had destroyed the HIMARS rocket system from which the attack was carried out. CNBC was unable to verify the defense ministry’s claims.

The attack has caused consternation in Russia, with mourners gathering in Samara, the region where the majority of the mobilized soldiers reportedly came from.

— Holly Ellyatt

Moscow’s invasion is likely to inflict long-term economic decline on Russia

Ukraine war: Moscow's invasion likely to inflict long-term economic decline on Russia

Moscow thought it would emerge from the Ukraine invasion with a bigger role on the global stage. But it’s growing more isolated and looks likely to face a long-term economic decline. CNBC’s Ted Kemp reports.

Russians angry at commanders over Ukrainian strike that killed scores

Soldiers of the 59th brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces fire grad missiles on Russian positions in Russia-occupied Donbas region on December 30, 2022 in Donetsk, Ukraine. Russia has tried to expand its control there since it invaded Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Russian nationalists and some lawmakers have demanded punishment for commanders they accused of ignoring dangers as anger grew over the killing of dozens of Russian soldiers in one of the deadliest strikes of the Ukraine conflict.

In a rare disclosure, Russia’s defense ministry said 63 soldiers were killed in the Ukrainian strike on New Year’s Eve that destroyed a temporary barracks in a vocational college in Makiivka, twin city of the Russian-occupied regional capital of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.

Russian critics said the soldiers were being housed alongside an ammunition dump at the site, which the Russian defense ministry said was hit by four rockets fired from U.S.-made HIMARS launchers.

TV footage showed a huge building reduced to rubble as cranes and bulldozers picked through concrete debris lying several feet deep.

Ukraine and some Russian nationalist bloggers put the Makiivka death toll in the hundreds, though pro-Russian officials say those estimates are exaggerated.

Rallies to commemorate the dead were held in several Russian cities, including Samara, where some came from, RIA Novosti news agency reported. Mourners laid flowers in the center of Samara.

“I haven’t slept for three days, Samara hasn’t slept. We are constantly in touch with the wives of our guys. It’s very hard and scary. But we can’t be broken. Grief unites … We will not forgive, and, definitely, victory will be ours,” RIA quoted Yekaterina Kolotovkina, a representative of a women’s council at an army unit, as telling one of the rallies.

— Reuters

Russia, shaken by Ukrainian strike, could step up drone use

Russian emergency workers remove the rubble of vocational school 19 destroyed by shelling in Makeevka, Donetsk People’s Republic, Russia. The armed forces of Ukraine attacked the vocational school building in Makeyevka of the Donetsk People’s Republic from the HIMARS MLRS on December 31 to January 1.

Sputnik via AP

Emergency crews sifted through the rubble of a building struck by Ukrainian rockets, killing at least 63 Russian soldiers barracked there, in the latest blow to the Kremlin’s war strategy as Ukraine says Moscow’s tactics could be shifting.

An Associated Press video of the scene in Makiivka, a town in the partially Russian-occupied eastern Donetsk region, showed five cranes and emergency workers removing big chunks of concrete under a clear blue sky.

In the attack, which apparently happened last weekend, Ukrainian forces fired rockets from a U.S.-provided HIMARS multiple launch system, according to a Russian Defense Ministry statement.

It was one of the deadliest attacks on the Kremlin’s forces since the war began more than 10 months ago and an embarrassment that stirred renewed criticism inside Russia of the way the war is being conducted.

The Russian statement Monday about the attack provided few other details. Other, unconfirmed reports put the death toll much higher.

The Strategic Communications Directorate of Ukraine’s armed forces claimed Sunday that around 400 mobilized Russian soldiers were killed in a vocational school building in Makiivka and about 300 more were wounded. That claim couldn’t be independently verified. The Russian statement said the strike occurred “in the area of Makiivka” and didn’t mention the vocational school.

— Reuters

Russia aims to ‘exhaust’ Ukraine with continued attacks, Zelenskyy says

“The morning is difficult. We are dealing with terrorists. Dozens of missiles, Iranian ‘Shahids’,” Zelenskyy wrote on his Telegram official account, referencing the Iranian-made Shahid drones increasingly used by Russian forces.

Ukrinform | Future Publishing | Getty Images

Russia aims to “exhaust” Ukraine with a prolonged stream of attacks across the country, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address.

“We must ensure – and we will do everything for this – that this goal of terrorists fails like all the others,” he said. “Now is the time when everyone involved in the protection of the sky should be especially attentive.”

Russian strikes on Ukrainian cities and infrastructure have ramped up of late, marking three consecutive nights of bombardment in the latest stream of attacks that began on New Year’s Eve. The strikes target Ukraine’s energy facilities in particular, leaving millions of people without heating and power amid the bitter winter cold.

Russian forces are increasingly leaning on deadly Iranian-made Shahed drones, which have wrought havoc on Ukraine’s cities. Zelenskyy said that Ukrainian air defenses shot down more than 80 of such drones in the first days of January.

— Natasha Turak

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

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Video captures the moment Rep.-elect George Santos appeared to not hear his name multiple times before he responded during McCarthy’s 5th failed speaker vote

Business Insider 

Incoming GOP Rep. George Santos of New York at the Republican Jewish Coalition Annual Leadership Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada on November 19, 2022.

Rep.-elect George Santos momentarily held up the speaker vote by not responding to his name.
Santos is under scrutiny for being dishonest to voters during his campaign.
The video of him not responding prompted Twitter users to further question his identity.

During the fifth House Speaker vote, beleaguered New York Representative-elect George Santos seemed to briefly stall the process by not responding to his name being called.

“Santos. Santos,” a voice said over a microphone as Santos held his head down and the person next to him appeared to be talking quietly. He then raised his hand moments after his name was called for the second time, according to a video captured by CSPAN and also posted to Twitter by The Recount on Wednesday.

—The Recount (@therecount) January 4, 2023

The 34-year-old Republican is under intense scrutiny for running a campaign rooted in dishonesty, being investigated in the US. and by Brazilian authorities, and getting called out by an ex-boyfriend for not paying bills and stealing his phone.

The video posted by The Recount prompted Twitter users to poke fun at Santos’ moment of absence. 

“Bueller… Bueller… Bueller,” one user quipped.

—Hamby aka Walt’s Dad (@HambySanDiego) January 4, 2023

 

On his first day at Congress, Santos largely avoided reporters and sat isolated throughout the day, Insider reported. A fellow congress member called Santos a liar in Portuguese on Tuesday after he cast his vote for Rep. Kevin McCarthy, Insider also reported.

The New York Post reported that Santos remained somewhat standoffish during the vote on Wednesday, appearing to only look at his phone and be unengaged overall.

Santos voted in favor of McCarthy becoming House Speaker. After six votes over two days, McCarthy still has not earned the spot.

—Acyn (@Acyn) January 3, 2023

 

Santos was not immediately reachable for comment.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Jill Biden to have lesion removed after skin cancer screening

Just In | The Hill 

First lady Jill Biden will undergo a procedure to remove a small lesion above her right eye next week, a spokesperson for the first lady said on Wednesday.

The lesion was discovered during a routine skin cancer screening, and doctors recommended that the first lady have it removed out of “an abundance of caution,” according to a memo from White House physician Kevin O’Connor.

Biden will head to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Jan. 11 for the “common outpatient procedure” called Mohs surgery, which will remove and examine the tissue, O’Connor added.

During Mohs surgery, surgeons cut away thin layers of skin, examining each for signs of cancer, until no signs are found. “Most people can go home after surgery and don’t need to stay in a hospital,” the Mayo Clinic says of the procedure.

President Biden also had non-melanoma skin cancers removed before taking office.

​Administration, First Lady, Jill Biden, Kevin O'Connor, skin cancer, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, white house physician Read More 

Biden to Make First Visit to US-Mexico Border as President 

USA – Voice of America 

President Joe Biden intends to visit the U.S.-Mexico border — his first visit there since taking office — in connection with his meeting next week in Mexico City with the leaders of Mexico and Canada. 

“That’s my intention. We’re working out the details now,” Biden told reporters Wednesday during a trip to Kentucky. 

Biden said upon his return to the White House that he hoped to see “what’s going on” at the border and also planned to make remarks about border security on Thursday. 

There have been large increases in the number of migrants at the border even as a U.S. public health law remains in place that allows American authorities to turn away many people seeking asylum in the United States. Republican leaders have criticized the president for policies that they say are ineffective on border security and they have questioned why he has not made a trip there yet. 

But there was some praise Wednesday after the news. 

“I’m pleased President Biden will finally visit our southern border — which has been completely surrendered to the cartels, smugglers and human traffickers,” tweeted Senator Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, who was among those most critical. 

Among the complaints on border security by Republicans is the amount of fentanyl coming into the U.S. via Mexico. A 2022 report from a bipartisan federal commission found that fentanyl and similar drugs are being made mostly in labs in Mexico from chemicals shipped primarily from China. 

And fentanyl and other lab-produced synthetic opioids now are driving an overdose crisis deadlier than any the U.S. has ever seen before. But drug control advocates and experts say an anti-drug policy that relies on tighter border security is dangerous and likely futile. It’s too easy to move in small, hard-to-detect quantities. 

Drug trafficking and immigration will be among the top talking points at the summit Monday and Tuesday when Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are hosted by Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. 

Early in his presidency, Biden put Vice President Kamala Harris in charge of the White House effort to tackle the migration challenge at the border and work with Central American nations to address central causes of the problem. She visited El Paso, Texas, in June 2021 and was criticized for choosing a location too far from the epicenter of border crossings that strain federal resources. The number of migrants crossing the border has only risen. 

For now, the Supreme Court has kept in place Trump-era restrictions, often known as Title 42 in reference to a 1944 public health law, after Biden acted to end them and Republicans sued in response. Title 42 was invoked to prevent the spread of COVID-19, but there always has been criticism that the restrictions were used as a pretext by then-President Donald Trump to seal off the border. 

Biden also has yet to lay out any systemic changes to manage an expected surge of migrants should the health restrictions end. And the president is limited in what he can do without immigration law changes. But in Congress, a bipartisan immigration bill was buried shortly before Republicans assumed control of the House. 

Biden made his comment about the upcoming visit during a stop in Kentucky at a highway bridge that is receiving federal dollars under the bipartisan infrastructure law. 

Trump visited the U.S. side of the border as president several times, including one trip to McAllen, Texas, where he claimed Mexico would pay for a border wall. 

American taxpayers ended up covering the costs. Mexican leaders had flatly rejected the idea when Trump pressed them early on. “NO,” Enrique Pena Nieto, then Mexico’s president, tweeted in May 2018. “Mexico will NEVER pay for a wall. Not now, not ever. Sincerely, Mexico (all of us).” 

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Paramount sued for $500 million over 1968 'Romeo & Juliet' nude scene

British actress Olivia Hussey and actor Leonard Whiting star in Franco Zeffirelli’s ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ circa 1967.

Keystone | Hulton Archive | Getty Images

Two stars of the 1968 film adaptation of “Romeo & Juliet” have sued Paramount Pictures for more than $500 million over a nude scene the actors shot when they were teenagers, according to a copy obtained by CNBC.

Leonard Whiting, 72, and Olivia Hussey, 71, claim director Franco Zeffirelli “secretly” filmed them nude or partially nude without their knowledge despite previous assurances that there would be no nudity exhibited in the Oscar-winning film. At the time of filming, Whiting, who portrayed Romeo, was 16, and Hussey, who portrayed Juliet, was 15.

The pair filed the suit in Los Angeles County Superior Court alleging sexual abuse, sexual harassment and fraud.

Paramount has not made any public statement about the suit and did not respond to a request for comment from CNBC.

According to the filing, Zeffirelli, who died in 2019, initially told the actors that they would wear flesh-colored undergarments in the bedroom scene in which Whiting’s bare buttocks and Hussey’s bare breasts are briefly shown. However, when the scene was shot in the final days of filming, the actors were told they would wear only body makeup and that the camera would be positioned in a way that would not show nudity, according to the suit.

The actors said they “believed they had no choice but to act in the nude in body makeup as demanded” and allege the scene was in violation of California and federal laws against indecency and the exploitation of children.

Solomon Gresen, the actors’ attorney, said they’re seeking punitive damages of $100 million, but are possibly entitled to damages of more than $500 million to match the amount the film has earned since 1968.

“Paramount continues to display and profit from these images of nude minor children,” said Gresen. “They surely know better. Time should be up.”

Upon its release, the film also proved a critical success, winning Academy Awards in the best cinematography and costume design categories and earning a nomination for best picture.

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Blackstone's Wien and Zidle see mild recession, market bottom by midyear in annual 'surprises' list

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