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Friday May 14 2021

Plastic, Plastic Everywhere

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Sanity Break #1

Here’s the perfect cure for your lockdown blues: A site called that lets you pretend you are driving down city streets, playing music in your car! And you can pick among a decent list of cities, be it Dubai or Montreal or Pune. And the music selection includes old Hindi film songs from Vividh Bharathi, as well as latest Bollywood hits. Heads up: Not all music selections work right now so you might have to scroll through. Also: you can turn off the music and just listen to the street sounds. We loved, loved, loved this recommendation from founding member Kruthika Ravi Kumar. 

Sanity Break #1

Headlines that matter

A BIG REMINDER ABOUT THE SPLAINER AMA ICYMI, the guest speaker at our second edition will be the wonderful , Director, Centre for Studies in Gender & Sexuality, at Ashoka University—often referred to as the ‘historian of desire’. Get ready to ask questions about the history of sex and sexuality in India, be it in the Mahabarata or in the movies. Read: a review of her book , and a wide-ranging interview . Time/Date: 6 pm on Saturday, May 15, via Zoom. Sign up: for one of the limited slots ASAP since they are running out—and the deadline is 5 pm today! We will be sending a Zoom invite this evening to everyone who has signed up. So hurry!   ISRAEL INITIATES GROUND WAR The conflict between Israel and Palestine escalated as Israel its troops have entered the Gaza Strip. People are evacuating their homes in the northeastern part, while Hamas warned of a "heavy response" to any attempt to send ground troops. Israel has also greatly increased the number of air strikes, with one Palestinian journalist :   > “From our colleague on the ground in Gaza: ‘My children are completely panicked. It feels like more than 200 bombs are going off > at once. The houses are shaking. Buildings are collapsing on people. The sound of their screams is terrifying.’"   See a clip of in Gaza below:   Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu : “I said we would extract a very heavy price from Hamas...We are doing that, and we will continue to do that with heavy force.” Meanwhile, Egypt is trying to negotiate a truce between both sides.   The civil war: While the two countries have clashed before, what makes this battle exceptional are the accompanying riots within Israel. Mobs of Jews and Arabs have been engaged in violent clashes across the country—resulting in burning cars, destruction of property and businesses and violent attacks on individuals. And many worry that the civil war will be harder to stop than the conflict with Palestine. and have more on riots. Watch a clip of Arab businesses being attacked below. has more clips of the violence.   The politics of war: The confrontation with Hamas is well-timed for Netanyahu who is currently being tried for corruption—while having failed to achieve a majority in the recent election. The clash began just as Netanyahu was about to be ousted from power. And the opposition coalition—which includes both Arab and rightwing Jewish parties—is unlikely to reach a consensus while there’s rioting on the streets, and rockets in the air. has more on the bid to get rid of Bibi.    Meanwhile on social media: Instagram all images of the Al-Aqsa mosque because its content moderation system put the mosque in a category reserved for terrorist organisations. The error has since been corrected. Meanwhile, cricketers like Irfan Pathan and Rashid Khan have been against civilian deaths in Gaza on Twitter. Last but not least: Here’s this Indian genius—with an —expressing his support for Israel.    THE GREAT PANDEMIC: A LONGISH UPDATE * First, the numbers: We recorded and 3,700 deaths. Of those : 50 of Bharat Biotech’s employees. * The horror story of oxygen shortage continues in Goa. died in a single ward when oxygen pressure suddenly dropped. This is after at a hospital in recent days. The new peril in hospitals: constant fluctuations in oxygen pressure that can prove fatal if they happen in the middle of the night. * Maharashtra’s new limit the number of people in a truck to two—and both must carry Covid negative certificates if they cross state borders. All of which will create more red tape that will slow down supply chains.  * The government says that a staggering will become available in India between August and December.  * But vaccine shortages are expected to continue for . So it’s a first famine, then feast situation.  * New vaccine guidelines suggest a between Covishield jabs—following the UK’s cue. The previous recommended gap: 4-6 weeks. The good news: this latest move is actually backed by science. And that ensuring more people get at least one jab actually saves lives. * Also: People who have recovered from an infection have been asked to wait six months to get their vaccination. * New research shows that mixing two different vaccines leads to like fatigue and headaches. * Ohio is turning its vaccination campaign : five lucky residents who have received at least one jab will get $1 million each. * Related good read: reports on grief and despair among India’s gig workers. has a guide for those who want to adopt children who have lost their parents to Covid. offers five reasons why you shouldn’t panic about variants. has the story of a billionaire who donated $1 billion in Covid relief to India. The catch: it was all in cryptocurrency. * Going viral: This striking and taken at a crematorium. * Also going viral: of an interview with a very angry RSS supporter railing at the government:   THE $5 MILLION FUEL PRICE TAG As you may know, one of the largest pipelines delivering fuel to the East Coast was recently hacked—which affected its IT systems. The company that owns the pipeline shut it down, and that in turn triggered a mad rush to hoard petrol. Mercifully, Colonial Pipeline has restarted its operations, but has reportedly paid $5 million in ransom to the hacker group known as —and did so within hours of the attack. And apparently they got off cheap, according to experts:    > “Ransom is usually around $25 million to $35 million for such a company. I think the threat actor realized they stepped on the > wrong company and triggered a massive government response.”   Why this matters: It offers incentive for more such attacks in the future. ()   DISAPPOINTING NEWS ABOUT OVARIAN CANCER The world’s largest screening trial—with 200,000 participants—has failed. It aimed to use rising levels of a chemical CA125 released by ovarian tumours for early detection. Why this matters: ovarian cancer is extremely difficult to detect as it mimics symptoms—bloated stomach, frequent urination etc.—of far less serious diseases. ()   TWO BITS OF HEALTH NEWS One: New research shows that eating lots of carbs does not in fact lead to weight gain. Conventional wisdom holds that carbs in foods spike insulin levels, which in turn boost appetite and triggers the storage of fat. The study that put mice on high-carb diets found that they actually ate fewer calories, gained less fat and had lower body weight. And other human studies show similar results. What this likely means: People on low-carb diets lose weight simply because they eat fewer calories—which may be the key to any diet. ()   Two: A new study reaffirms the close two-way relationship between mental health and exercise. It found that people with a strong purpose in life tend to exercise more in their old age—which in turn gave more purpose to their lives in the later years. ()   THREE ODD BITS OF CELEB NEWS One: Madame Tussauds the wax figures of Harry and Meghan from the display of the royal family—and plonked them in the ‘Awards Party Zone’ next to George Clooney, David Beckham etc. Well, if you were looking for visual metaphors…   Two: Russia has entered into an odd kind of space race with the US. Tom Cruise is scheduled to film Mission Impossible with director Doug Liman on the International Space Station in October. Now, the Russians are planning to send actor Yulia Peresild and director Klim Shipenko in the very same month—perhaps in the very early days of October to beat Cruise. () Three: The former Miss Myanmar has taken up arms to fight the military. In a , she is seen in with a high-powered gun. The accompanying message said: “We all protested peacefully and were brutally shot. It’s time to take action, as the saying goes, to fight back.”  

Plastic, Plastic Everywhere

Sanity Break #2

Warning: This may not be to everyone's taste, but we found this other-worldly collaboration between Duran Duran’s Nick Rhodes and visual artist Wendy Bevan—called ‘’ from their new album ‘Fall of Saturn’—to be mesmerising and calming. —which describes the tracks as “moody, lush, soothing, almost cinematically dramatic at times”—has an interview with the two of them with more details. You can check out the other compositions .

Sanity Break #2

Weekend advisory

SO YOU WANNA WATCH SOMETHING... In this K-drama, a young man with Asperger’s syndrome works for a company that handles the homes and belongings of the recently departed, labeled as ‘trauma cleaning’—and then he loses his own father. This could be a potentially moving series about life, loss and grief. Available on Netflix.   In this Telugu film, an autorickshaw driver finds an expensive camera left behind by a passenger and uses it to make a movie with his fellow villagers. It promises to be a film that uses gentle humour to reveal the realities of rural life. has a piece on the filmmakers. It drops on Netflix today!   : This is a 10-part series based on the incredible novel of the same name by Colson Whitehead. Directed by Barry Jenkins—of Oscar-winning ‘’ fame—it tells the story of Cora, a young slave girl, who flees with her friend Caesar from a Georgia plantation—chased by a slave catcher named Ridgeway. says “the visible and the invisible, realism and fantasy, meet in this beautiful and searing series.” Streaming today on Prime Video.   Reminder: ‘’—which won the Oscar for best supporting actress—is currently streaming on Amazon Prime.   A LIST OF GOOD READS * explains why we’re all so excited about Bennifer 2.0—the great reunion of JLo and Ben Affleck. * has an astonishingly scathing and eloquent takedown of the PM by a former Modi supporter. offers incisive analysis of Modi’s declining popularity (h/t subscriber Anita Rao Kashi) * A very good read: on how the personal computer broke the human body—long before Zoom came along. * has a fun piece on the generational showdown over… jeans? * Speaking of fashion, asks a timely question: Why are Crocs a thing again? * Sonia Faleiro in looks at the rise of the Indian fact-checker—whose job is more important and perilous than ever. * dives into the ever uglier war between journalists and Silicon Valley. * looks at what a year of isolation during the pandemic does to the brain of a child. * Ganesh Vancheeswaran in has a lovely essay on the ‘other’ Bappi Lahiri—whose true talent has been overshadowed by all those flashy disco songs.  * looks at why we’ve been so much better at finding ways to prolong life—than ways to end it in a good way. * Joanna Greenberg in writes about her life as a personal assistant to one of America’s most eligible bachelors.

Weekend Advisory

Feel Good Place

Just two new moms bonding…   When the water is waaay too cold…   How to avoid disaster—with style!   A good kitty must always protect her flock… of chickens?  

Feel good place

archivetitle dog ic

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