Saturday, February 29, 2020

Your Monthly Horoscope: March 2020

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March is a packed with cosmic connections!

There's a full moon in Virgo and Mercury finally ends its retrograde, which means that plans and communications will finally move forward. Aries season begins, bringing the astrological new year and a fresh start—it's a great time to be fearless! One of the biggest shifts of the year occurs when Saturn enters Aquarius. Saturn is the planet of hard work, commitment, fear, and mortality, which means we'll be examining these serious themes with a detached and logical perspective. Read your monthly horoscope below to find out what this means for you:

Aries

You're starting a new cycle of ferocity, power, and strength. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Taurus

You’ve been mastering over the last few years, and now you’re ready to call yourself a leader. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Gemini

Your future is filled with travel, study, and possibly some exciting publishing opportunities. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Cancer

You're embarking on a new journey in your career and public life. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Leo

You're getting a big boost of glamour this month, Leo! Read your monthly horoscope here.

Virgo

You're setting yourself up to make some important innovations over the next few years. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Libra

You're famous for being fun and flirty, dear Libra, but you're feeling much more serious now! Read your monthly horoscope here.

Scorpio

You're considering how to set better boundaries and create more privacy and safety. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Sagittarius

The new moon in Aries brings a fresh start in your love life and creative endeavors! Read your monthly horoscope here.

Capricorn

You're facing your fears regarding money, responsibility, and security. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Aquarius

You're taking on more responsibilities, standing up for your standards and boundaries, and becoming the boss you're meant to be. Read your monthly horoscope here.

Pisces

This is a powerful moment to work through impostor syndrome. Read your monthly horoscope here.

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Joe Biden Just Crushed Bernie Sanders In South Carolina

COLUMBIA, S.C. — It only took him 32 years, but former Vice President Joe Biden has finally won a presidential primary state.

Over his last two presidential campaigns — in 1988 and 2008 — Biden did not carry a single state. This year, he’s counting on momentum after a big win in South Carolina’s primary to ensure his first ever win is not also his last.

Shortly after polls closed at 7 p.m., the Associated Press called the race for Biden. Though his margin of victory will tell the real story of the strength of his campaign, the fact that he was ahead enough to call the race almost immediately validated his boast during the last debate that, “I will win South Carolina.”

Biden’s win also opens up questions about the campaign of his nearest competitor, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. As of 8:30 p.m., the CNN projection had Biden at 51% of the vote, and Bernie Sanders just over 17%, just over the 15% threshold to win delegates.

Billionaire Tom Steyer, who spent millions of his own funds in South Carolina, was a distant third, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, former South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar barely made a ripple.

“You cannot win them all,” Sanders told a crowd at a rally in Minnesota. ”And tonight we did not win in South Carolina. I want to congratulate Joe Biden on his victory tonight, and now we move on to Super Tuesday.”

And it means that despite a lackluster February, Biden is still in this race.

Biden’s campaign was adamant his poor showings in Iowa and New Hampshire and his distant second place finish to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in Nevada would be old news when he silenced critics with a major win with South Carolina’s African-American voters.

READ: Here's Tom Steyer twerking with Juvenile because 2020 hasn't been weird enough

Those voters made up more than half of the Democratic primary electorate in the Palmetto State. Interviewed at events throughout the state and at polling places on Saturday, Biden supporters said they are sticking with the experienced hand and noted his relationship with former President Barack Obama as a factor influencing their votes.

Biden had said throughout the race that no campaign can win without the support of black voters. He delivered that victory, but now he faces a big and immediate test.

Voters in 14 states will head to the polls in just three days on Super Tuesday and Biden and his team will have to work overtime to convince them that Biden should still be their No. 1 choice.

That is an already daunting task with Sanders having pulled ahead of the pack in the delegate-rich states of California and Texas. It will be even harder to do with former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg on the ballot in the 14 Super Tuesday states for the first time and spending heavily to boost his own candidacy as the moderate alternative to Sanders.

Cover: Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign event at Saint Augustine's University in Raleigh, N.C., Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)



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Here's Tom Steyer Twerking With Juvenile Because 2020 Hasn't Been Weird Enough

COLUMBIA, S.C. — With Andrew Yang out of the presidential race, there’s been a dire shortage of chaotic energy on the campaign trail, but Friday night Tom Steyer might have backed that ass up right into that role — and into history.

I’ve seen Yang staff throw fake $1,000 bills to the crowd as the candidate joined Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo for a rendition of “Say It Ain’t So.” I’ve seen the Strokes’ Julian Casablancas sing “New York City cops, but they ain’t too smart,” directly into the face of a police officer at a rally for Sen. Bernie Sanders. But nothing could prepare me for this.

By now, you’ve probably seen the video of the billionaire businessman, who is polling third place in Saturday’s South Carolina primary, twerking next to his wife and daughter with rapper Juvenile on stage in front of a historically black university crowd. In case you haven’t: Thank me later.

What you don’t know is that this was just the cathartic climax of most bonkers political rally of the 2020 cycle, if not ever — outdone only by the fact that minutes later Steyer’s staff corralled the press to watch Juvenile deliver his first ever presidential endorsement.

“I just want to give a big shout-out to my dawg Tom Steyer.”

“I just want to give a big shout-out to my dawg Tom Steyer,” Juvenile told reporters after the event. “He’s been representing my people from day one. I’ve been watching him and his philanthropy.”

“I’m with you on your journey. Whatever you need from me, I’m there for you,” the “Back That Azz Up” rapper said. “Tom Steyer for president! Go out there and vote! Back that thing up and vote!"

Steyer’s rally was just one of several campaign events candidates have been holding across the Palmetto State with high profile African-American surrogates to bring visibility to their campaigns in a state where more than 60% of all Democratic voters are black.

John Legend performed two gigs for Sen. Elizabeth Warren, for instance. Actress Vivica A. Fox stumped for former Vice President Joe Biden. Sen. Bernie Sanders had rapper Killer Mike of Run the Jewels and actor Danny Glover at a rally that was opened by the Austin-based hip hop duo Blackillac. Miss Black America 2018 Ryann Richardson spoke on behalf of former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

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Rapper Juvenile performs at an election-eve rally for Democrat Tom Steyer the night before the South Carolina presidential primary on Friday, Feb. 28, 2020, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard)

The difference is, all of the above people have been long-time supporters of their candidate. Only Steyer pulled the unconventional move of hiring the hype.

Just to be clear: Yes, Steyer paid Juvenile to perform. But a campaign spokesman says the endorsement was unplanned — up until the moment before it happened when, as press crowded around, a woman whispered in Juvenile’s ear the points he should hit in endorsing Steyer: his philanthropy, his environmental work, etc.

“It’s time for a big old change,” Steyer responded. “Coming here, what I’ve found is there’s the heart and the spirit to change South Carolina and the entire United States.”

READ: Democrats are freaking out Bernie Sanders could cost them the House

In retrospect, it was probably a sign that things would be weird when two guys walking up to the rally were talking about how they could get 1,000 Twitter followers so they could get paid to promote former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s presidential campaign online.

If Bloomberg is buying clout with memes, Steyer is doing it the old fashioned way: Throwing music festivals. In Las Vegas ahead of the Nevada caucuses he had TLC and Iconapop. But the roughly 200 people who showed up to the rally at Columbia’s Allen University were really treated to something special.

The rally had everything: A twerking billionaire, a Cash Money Millionaires rapper, gospel singer Yolanda Adams, brisket, crippling technical problems, and America’s Next Top Model contestant, the Obama-era “Fired Up, Ready To Go” lady, DJ Jazzy Jeff, and a singing first lady hopeful.

Kicking off the night, Greenwood County, South Carolina, Councilwoman Edith S. Childs, better known as President Barack Obama’s “Fired Up, Ready To Go” lady, led the crowd in a minutes-long song/chant. She’s endorsed Steyer now, and reprised her famous 2008 chant that came to define the Obama campaign to, “Steyered Up, Trump’s Gotta Go.”

Then former America’s Next Top Model contestant Bianca Chardei, who was MCing the evening, introduced Juvenile. But the sound was way off so after plodding through a few songs and yelling at the increasingly frustrated sound guy a lot, Juvenile did an a cappella version of his 1998 hit “HA” and left the stage, promising to come back later when the sound issues were worked out.

Following him, gospel singer Yolanda Adams performed. The crowd was imploring her to play some of the hits, but she said she’d only sing the two songs she was asked to sing: “The Star Spangled Banner” & 2001’s “Never Give Up.” Gospel, a Steyer staffer relayed, is pretty much all the candidate listens to.

Next up, on a stage across the room, Steyer’s daughter Evi introduced her mother, Kat Taylor, who has moved to South Carolina to promote the campaign. Taylor regaled the crowd with what she called a “small act of bravery, vulnerability and joy:” a little ditty read from her iPhone about how, “oooh oooh, oooh oooh, you deserve a guy like this.”

Steyer spoke next, which was pretty uneventful except for the time the flustered sound guy cut him off by randomly playing his walk on music a few seconds into his speech. As Steyer finished up and took selfies with concert-goers on one side of the room, DJ Jazzy Jeff performed a scorching set, including everything from Cardi B’s “I Like It” to his own “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.”

Finally, Juvenile triumphantly returned and Steyer performed the twerk heard round the world.

“Was that fun or what?” Steyer yelled to the crowd before leaving the stage.

Yes, Tom Steyer. It was. It sure was.

Cover: Billionaire Tom Steyer confirming his bro status with rapper Juvenile before a paid performance (and endorsement!) in Columbia, South Carolina, Feb. 28, 2020. (Photo: Daniel Newhauser/VICE News)



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Friday, February 28, 2020

Elizabeth Warren Is Having an Awkward Fight With Her Own Super PAC

A super PAC supporting Elizabeth Warren is about to unleash a tidal wave of advertising to help keep her struggling campaign afloat through Super Tuesday.

But there’s a problem: the Senator from Massachusetts wants the PAC — called Persist PAC, naturally — to disclose its donors, and it refused.

Warren has made clearing dark money out of politics a signature issue, but last week decided to start accepting help from a super PAC to help keep the lights on for her campaign. “If all the candidates want to get rid of super PACs, count me in,” she told reporters earlier this month. “It can't be the case that a bunch of people keep them and only one or two don’t.”

But now Warren is experiencing the downside. When she asked her the PAC to disclose the donors behind the more than $12 million they’re planning to spend before Super Tuesday, the PAC, which operates independently of the Warren campaign, said nope.

“We are not putting out donors outside the mandatory deadlines,” Joshua Karp, Persist PAC’s spokesperson, told CNN.

READ: Elizabeth Warren is finally getting ruthless. But is it too late?

Per Federal Election Commission rules, the group doesn’t have to make its list of donors public until March 20, well after the super Tuesday races on March 3.

Warren has staked her campaign on getting rid of corruption and dark money interests in Washington. It remains to be seen how voters will react to her new stance on super PACs, announced in the 11th hour before Super Tuesday, and whether the more lenient stance might cost her at the polls.

After the group announced an enormous ad buy for Warren on Thursday — the largest in the Democratic race so far — the senator took some heat, largely from her left.

After all, Warren has presented herself as an anti-big-money candidate. On a debate stage in December, she blasted Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend Indiana, for agreeing to take money from rich folks.

“The mayor just recently had a fundraiser that was held in a wine cave full of crystals and filled with $900-a-bottle wine,” said Warren, the first candidate to bring up the phrase. “Think about who comes to that.”

Some people on Twitter took issue with Warren’s new stance.

But Warren, who’s falling behind, needs the cash. Her campaign fund had about $2.3 million on hand at the end of January, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, former Vice President Joe Biden, and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg are all leading her recent national polls.

Persist PAC is making ad buys in expensive markets on her behalf in places like San Francisco, Houston, and Boston. Warren’s campaign has only spent about $1 million on ads in Super Tuesday states, according to CNN.

The change is so stark and sudden, the campaign hasn’t even totally gotten everyone on the same page. Warren’s campaign website still says “she’s not taking a dime of PAC money in this campaign.”

Cover: Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) addresses a crowd during a canvassing kickoff event at The Rutherford February 28, 2020 in Greenville, South Carolina. South Carolinians will vote in the Democratic presidential primary Saturday. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)



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Game Developers Conference Cancelled Due to Coronavirus Fears

The Game Developers Conference (GDC) scheduled for next month in San Francisco has been cancelled, the organizers of GDC said in a shocking but anticipated announcement. The organizers blamed escalating concerns over the novel coronavirus, which has prompted a growing series of high-profile video game companies to announce they would not attend.

"After close consultation with our partners in the game development industry and community around the world, we’ve made the difficult decision to postpone the Game Developers Conference this March," the organizers said in a statement. "Having spent the past year preparing for the show with our advisory boards, speakers, exhibitors, and event partners, we're genuinely upset and disappointed not to be able to host you at this time."

A GDC event of some sort is being planned for the "summer." Some talks will apparently be distributed online in various formats, and the awards show will still happen and be streamed on Twitch.

An email to attendees said a refund will be issued for GDC attendees, despite the window for requesting refunds having closed earlier this week. Attending GDC is a pricey affair—$249 for a basic pass to $2,399 for all access—and refunding every attendee is likely to have a notable impact on GDC’s bottom line. The revenue GDC has earned from selling its infamously expensive passes was characterized as “significant,” according to a source familiar with GDC’s financial history.

It’s unclear what consequences and fallout the cancellation might have on the future of GDC, and the event’s organizers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The refund question was one causing stress for many, and prior to the event announcing it would offer full refunds, game developers were openly calling for clarification on the issue because of the unfair burden it puts on small developers and students who’d paid to attend.

A conference only works if people show up, and increasingly, people were decided to not show up to GDC, which specializes in presentations from developers, an awards show, socializing, and press seeing games. In the past few weeks, the list of dropouts included Epic Games, Kojima Productions, Electronic Arts, Sony, Unity, and Facebook. In the past 24 hours, even more have come to the same conclusion, including Activision Blizzard, Iron Galaxy Studios, Gearbox, Modus Games, and Amazon. Facebook already cancelled its F8 conference, which doesn’t happen until May.

For GDC, the momentum was heading in a single direction. Their hand was forced.

The leadup to this announcement has filled a number of people in the gaming industry with anxiety because so much had remained unknown. Publicists haven’t been sure what to do about blocks of hotels they’ve secured to show games because they can’t book press to show up. Kotaku, Polygon, The Verge, and other outlets all cancelled plans to attend.

One high-profile developer, who asked to remain anonymous because he was not authorized to speak on the subject, told VICE Games its employer was offering to cover the costs of anyone attending GDC out of pocket. That same developer was already fronting the cost to send some employees to give talks, and decided to let individuals make the choice on whether to attend. If they went to GDC, however, there was a chance they may be required to work from home for some period, rather than immediately returning to the office.

While some attendees might be saved by their employers, it’s unclear what happens to small developers, students, and others. Expensive travel accommodations might not be eligible for a refund, depending on where you booked, their cancellations policies, and whether or not you paid extra for travel insurance. Even though GDC has been cancelled, it’s likely many people are still going to show up in San Francisco. Smaller events may be organized in GDC’s absence, but they’re unlikely to replace the chance to brush shoulders and network with the powerful and influential who attend GDC. That’s a huge reason to attend GDC itself.

In its cancellation announcement, the organizers of GDC said it had worked out full hotel refunds for anyone who'd booked through the event's official block of hotels.

GDC has hardly been the only event impacted by ongoing coronavirus concerns. Dozens of esports events have been cancelled in the past few weeks, including IEM Katowice, a large event for Counter-Strike and StarCraft esports, which attracts nearly 200,000 attendees. The competition will still happen—but without an audience. Earlier today, Capcom announced it would be cancelling a series of events on its Capcom Pro Tour. Separately, EVE Online developer CCP said it would be cancelling its annual EVE Fanfest event held in Iceland.

GDC’s cancellation comes the same week a coronavirus case of “unknown origin” was reported in Northern California, according to The Washington Post, and days after San Francisco declared a state of emergency, despite no reported cases. A second case was discovered this afternoon. To date, there’s been 73,332 reported cases and 1,873 deaths, according to World Health Organization data.

With GDC no longer happening, it’s an open question about what happens to the next big event on the gaming calendar, E3. With Sony and Microsoft poised to launch the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X this year, kicking off a new generation of hardware, it was likely to be the most important E3 in years, even if Sony has said it’s not formally attending the event.

"Everyone is watching the situation very closely" said the Entertainment Software Association, who organizes E3, in a statement. "We will continue to be vigilant, as our first priority is the health, wellness and safety of all of our exhibitors and attendees. Given what we know at this time, we are moving ahead full speed with E3 2020 planning. Exhibit and registration sales are on track for an exciting show in June."

Follow Patrick on Twitter. His email is patrick.klepek@vice.com, and available privately on Signal (224-707-1561).



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It's Warnie Time!

It’s become clear that the prospect of a Bernie Sanders nomination is making the Democratic establishment break out in a queasy sweat. On Thursday, the New York Times interviewed 93 superdelegates and reported that these elected officials and party insiders are “not just worried about Mr. Sanders’ candidacy, but are also willing to risk intraparty damage to stop his nomination at the national convention in July if they get the chance.” Some are openly musing about putting forward people who aren’t even running for president, from Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown to Delaware Senator Chris Coons—a bizarre fantasy to have in your head, let alone tell a reporter.

As of now, Sanders is the frontrunner for the nomination, but at such an early stage in the primary process, anything could happen. His clearest path to winning is to get a majority of delegates by the time of the Democratic convention in July, which is still a possibility. If Sanders enters the convention with a mere plurality of delegates (i.e., more than any other candidate, but not a majority), the nomination process will become complicated as different Democratic factions attempt to broker a deal to get their favored candidate the nomination. According to the Times, some party officials are already gunning to make Sanders the loser in such a scenario, even if he's won more primary and caucus votes than his rivals.

As Eric Levitz argued at New York magazine, the threat of a contested convention might actually push voters to put Sanders over the top to avoid that situation. But that threat should also push progressive voters to work together.

For those on the left who believe that a progressive candidate—in other words, Sanders or Elizabeth Warren—is not only the best option to enact the agenda they want, but also the best chance to defeat Donald Trump, going into a contested convention with no clear nominee is one of the worst possible scenarios. When party officials are throwing names like Coons around and GOP-donating superdelegates are pushing for such a convention, it’s clear the left needs to avoid a shit-show like that at all costs. Not to mention that getting into messy, intra-party fights at the convention could also weaken the eventual nominee who will have to face off against Trump.

In other words: it’s Warnie time, baby!

As Sam Adler-Bell previously reported at the Intercept, grassroots groups have been pleading over the past few months for unity between Sanders’ and Warren’s camps. While the two are not the same and their supporters do not perfectly overlap, of all the candidates, they are the closest ideological allies with the most aligned interests. If progressives care about enacting a Sanders or a Warren agenda—and preventing someone like Joe Biden or Michael Bloomberg from winning the nomination—then they should push for the two camps to find a way to work together.

If Sanders is unable to win a majority of delegates before the convention, his most likely path to clinch the nomination is to convince Warren to make a deal and drop out. Here’s how Larry Cohen, chair of the Sanders-founded nonprofit Our Revolution, put it to the Intercept last month:

As Cohen sees it, they can’t wait for a second ballot at the convention. Even if every Sanders delegate moves to Warren or vice versa, the corporate wing will have a chance to consolidate around one candidate, now with the help of an additional 750 nonelected delegates (aka super delegates). In other words, progressives could enter the convention with a majority of elected delegates and leave with Joe Biden as the nominee. “It would be insane for Warren and Sanders supporters to allow that to happen,” said Cohen. Instead, consolidation has to come before the convention—the old fashioned way: “One of them drops out, and they make a deal.”

If Warren were doing better than Sanders and needed his delegates to put her over the top, there would be an argument that he should drop out and work with her. But the reality so far is that Warren hasn’t been able to drum up the necessary votes.

Warren has declared that she’s staying in the race until the convention, likely because so much is up in the air right now. In the meantime, the fractures between Sanders’ and Warren’s camps have only deepened over the past few months. Their non-aggression pact most notably frayed in January, when CNN reported that Sanders told Warren in a private meeting in 2018 that he didn’t think a woman couldn’t beat Trump, which Sanders denied; Sanders fans accused Warren of leaking the story to sabotage him, while Warren backers accused Sanders of lying.

But minds can change. Warren and her supporters don’t owe Sanders anything, they need to be convinced by him and his supporters that working together—and avoiding a brokered convention—is the best option for their agendas.

What Warnie time will look like in practice can mean many things, but it will certainly entail fewer online attacks and more in-person conversations and interactions. It will mean focusing on traditional organizing methods of reaching out and convincing others to be brought into your fold.

On the level of campaign strategy, it's not clear when consolidation should happen, although Super Tuesday will give progressives more concrete information. It might be better for Warren to stay in the race, turn out her base of voters to win more delegates, then organize to combine them with Sanders. But in the scenario that Warren continues to be a candidate on the margins, her dropping out earlier and acting as a surrogate for Sanders would be the most strategic move. Neither of those things will happen unless Warren and her supporters are convinced that they should—Sanders voters need to organize them and make the case. And if Warren does stay in, even if it's to the detriment of a progressive ticket, Sanders supporters will still need to work to win over her delegates come July.

People in both camps should push themselves—and their candidates—to think practically and find points of overlap, rather than emphasizing their differences. And they’ll need to do it before moderate Democrats do the same. In the end, it might feel nice to be right. But that’s not the same as winning.

Follow Clio Chang on Twitter.



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Woman Files Lawsuits After 'Diet' Noodles Put Her in the Hospital

Anyone who has scrolled through one of the many blogs dedicated to the keto diet has probably read at least one paragraph about konjac noodles, the high-fiber, low-carb, and low-calorie pasta replacement that is made from the stem of the konjac plant. Konjac noodles, which are also sold as shirataki noodles, or under assorted brand names, have become a staple for those on the keto diet, or for gluten-sensitive individuals who have probably considered murdering someone for one bite from a Never Ending Pasta Bowl.

Although konjac has been eaten in parts of Asia since the 6th century, its popularity elsewhere seems to be a result of its supposed role in weight loss: because it's mostly just water and fiber, eating it contributes to a feeling of fullness.

And because it's, uh, mostly just water and fiber, in Japan, konnyaku is known as "a broom for the stomach," because it has a tendency to clean your digestive system riiiiiiight out. Some konjac converts have learned that it can be dangerous to consume a significant amount of soluble fiber in one go. Carol Brodie, a jewelry designer and Home Shopping Network host, is one of those people.

Last summer, Brodie was eager to give the noodles a try, especially after learning that each package only contained around 25 calories. "If I ate three or four bags of this, I was still looking at around 100 calories, so how great is that?" she told NBC New York. "And I was going to get to fill up!”

So that's what she did: she placed an Amazon order for Better Than Pasta-brand konjac noodles, and she downed four packages of them. "All of a sudden, I started getting the most horrendous tightening and pulling cramps," she said. "I felt like I was dying. I felt like I was choking to death."

She went to the hospital, where doctors discovered that the undigested noodles had formed a solid, indigestible mass called a bezoar in her digestive tract; as a result, she says that she was forced to remain on a diet of nothing but "soup and Diet Coke" for more than a month.

Brodie has recently filed a lawsuit against Green Spot Foods, the Wisconsin company that produces the Better Than Pasta noodles, and she has also sued Amazon for selling a product that she believes is dangerous. ("I almost died from Better Than Pasta. It sounds unreal," Brodie wrote in her one-star Amazon review.)

"When you swallow it, it doesn’t dissolve in your stomach and that’s why it was able to keep you full for so long,” Brodie's attorney, Rosemarie Arnold, told the station. “This company knew that this product was not safe to consume but they put it on Amazon.”

As of this writing, Amazon still sells a six-pack of Better Than Noodles, which retails for $35.72. The product has a 3.5 star rating from 314 customers, but as NBC New York noted, some of those reviewers also noted "terrible nausea and GI distress," and "some unholy levels of gastric upset and rage." (One person who used her real name and photo wrote that the noodles "didn’t fully digest in my stomach so you can imagine the poop situation." Thanks Bailee, everyone is imagining that very thing right now.)

According to Better Than Noodles' nutrition label information, each package contains "about three" servings, and each serving contains four grams of fiber. If Brodie consumed four packages, that means she ate approximately 48 grams of fiber, which is almost twice the FDA's Recommended Daily Value of 25 grams of fiber.

The Amazon listing for Better Than Noodles also has a product note stating that it is "important to drink plenty of water" when eating konjac because of the amount of soluble fiber that it contains. (According to the FDA, soluble fiber is the type of dietary fiber that "dissolves in water to form a thick gel-like substance in the stomach" before being broken down by bacteria in the large intestine.)

Glucomannan, the soluble fiber present in konjac, has previously been studied for its natural laxative effects. A 2006 paper published in the journal Nutrition suggested that supplementation with just 4.5 grams of Konjac glucomannan a day "promoted the defecation frequency in healthy adults," and it also increased the bulk of each stool. (Your move, Bailee.)

VICE has reached out to Green Spot Foods for comment. In the meantime, if you're considering adding konjac noodles to your diet, take it slow. It's called "a broom for your stomach" for a reason.



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Democrats Are Using a Shady Voting Rights Group to Smear an AOC-Backed Progressive in Texas

When 26-year-old attorney Jessica Cisneros decided to take on longtime incumbent Congressman Rep. Henry Cuellar in Texas, she knew she’d be hit get hit — hard.

What she didn’t know is that she’d get smeared by a shady voting rights group with backing from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.

On Monday, Cisneros posted a picture on Twitter showing a mailer accusing her of being an “NYC candidate” who’s “bringing New York flavor to Texas,” with a picture of a bagel and slice of pizza. Cisneros was born and raised in Laredo, Texas, and says she doesn’t even like bagels. But she was endorsed as part of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's Courage to Change slate and her challenge, which will be decided March 3, has been likened to Ocasio-Cortez’s unseating of former Rep. Joe Crowley in 2018.

Cisneros supports a full slate of left-wing priorities, such as Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, and “creating a humane border and immigration policy.” Cuellar, on the other hand, is one of the most conservative members of the House, siding with GOP on right-to-work and other labor issues, the Trump administration’s assassination of a top Iranian general, and immigration. He’s also carried an ‘A” rating from the National Rifle Association for most of his career, and took $6,950 from the NRA Political Victory Fund in the 2018 cycle.

From the start, Cisneros knew Cuellar’s seat was going to be heavily defended by entrenched interests in the Democratic Party, but what’s strange is how the mailer came to be.

The 'Voter Protection Project'

The group that paid for it is called the Voter Protection Project, per a photo of the mailer reviewed by VICE News. On February 7, the group made an expenditure of $71,947.44 in direct mail attacking Cisneros, as well as a direct mail buy of $145,664.06 supporting Cuellar, according to FEC records.

On February 18, they made another $32,500 expenditure for digital advertising, bringing their total spending in the race so far to $250,138.50.

READ: This 26-year-old is poised to oust an anti-abortion, pro-gun Democrat

The initial direct mail buy came just two days after the influential Congressional Hispanic Caucus’s BOLD PAC contributed $250,000 to the group.

"BOLD is supportive of CHC Member Congressman Henry Cuellar,” BOLD PAC spokeswoman Jazmin Vargas said in a statement to VICE News. “As the campaign arm of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, our mission is to advance leadership diversity in Congress and ensure the Latino community has a voice in the People's House.”

“We’re grateful for all of the support we’ve received.”

Cuellar’s campaign was more blunt. Though campaign manager Colin Strother said he had never heard of the group, he told VICE News: “We’re grateful for all of the support we’ve received.”

Getting involved in Democratic primary battles between two candidates who support voting rights is not what the Voter Protection Project was set up to ostensibly do.

In 2018, Democrat Andrew Janz mounted a longshot bid to unseat GOP Rep. and close Trump ally Devin Nunes in his California House seat. Janz came much closer than expected, losing by a little more than 12,000 votes out of more than 222,000 cast.

Fresh off his defeat, Janz launched the Voter Protection Project as a political action committee to “raise money in support of voter rights across the country,” according to a Fresno Bee story when the PAC was started in January 2019. The group pledges to “fight back against President Trump’s and Republicans’ attacks on our right to vote, by leading the charge to make sure every American has the right to cast a ballot.”

“We want to play a role in expanding voter rights and making sure that all Americans have access to the same voting rights we have in California: same-day registration, convenient early voting and automatic registration at the Department of Motor Vehicles,” Janz told the Bee.

Since its founding, the group has raised nearly $1.1 million, FEC filings show, with 23% of that coming from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus’ BOLD PAC. But according to filings, the group has spent more money attempting to defeat Cisneros that it has spent on all other Democratic candidates.

Emails to both the Voter Protection Project and its treasurer, Jay Petterson, were not returned. Janz is currently running for mayor of Fresno, but is still listed as a member of the Voter Protection Project’s “team” and a member of its board of directors.

A Janz staffer told VICE News in a Facebook message that they would forward our request to the Voter Protection Project, but thus far, no one has contacted us.

Backing Cuellar

During his congressional career, Cuellar, a leading House moderate backed by the Koch-aligned Americans for Prosperity and Democratic House leadership, has never been particularly outspoken about the issue of voting rights, though last year he — along with every other Democrat — voted for Democrats’ voting and ethics reform bill, as well as another one to restore parts of the Voting Rights Act.

CIsneros said she’s a supporter of expanding voter rights and access. "I strongly support legislation that makes it easier for our communities to participate in the political process,” she told VICE News in a statement. “I support automatic voter registration and making Election Day a federal holiday. We must also establish independent redistricting committees to end the practice of gerrymandering and restore the Voting Rights Act."

It’s not unusual for national organizations to help their endorsed candidates via super PACs and independent expenditures, or even to funnel the money through PACs with more friendly, local-sounding names. The super PAC Texas Forward has spent $1.2 million in the race supporting Cisneros, for instance; a closer look at its fundraising shows that all of its money comes from EMILY’s List, the national organization dedicated to electing pro-choice Democratic women which endorsed Cisneros in October.

“It does seem weird for an organization that has a stated policy goal to be running ads against a candidate who shares that policy goal.”

But given the Voter Protection Project’s mission, the Texas race wouldn’t immediately jump out as one that should be on its radar. “It does seem weird for an organization that has a stated policy goal to be running ads against a candidate who shares that policy goal,” said Brendan Fischer, federal reform director at the Campaign Legal Center, a nonprofit which advocates for accountability in campaign finance.

Although Cuellar isn’t on the Voter Protection Project’s list of endorsed candidates, Fischer pointed out that their spending on him outpaces much of what they’ve given to the candidates they have endorsed.

“The PAC can give up to $5,000 per year to candidates, but has only given $1,000 each to endorsed candidates like Haley Stevens, Chris Bubsler, Elaine Luria, Dan Feehan, Nancy Goroff, or Gary Peters,” Fischer said in an email. “Meanwhile, Voter Protection Project has spent over 250 times the amount contributed to some of its endorsed candidates backing a candidate who the PAC has not endorsed.”

Strother, while denying that the campaign knew about the outside help, echoed the claim in the mailer, saying that Cuellar’s opponent “moved here from New York eight months ago.” Cisneros’ campaign says that she spent less than a year in New York on a fellowship working with the public defender organization Brooklyn Defender Services on immigration issues, on a fellowship funded by the University of Texas School of Law.

“It’s a tale of two campaigns,” Strother said. “Ours is on the ground, hers is on social media.”

“The strength of our grassroots movement has taken Congressman Cuellar and his allies by surprise,” Cisneros said in a statement. “While they’ve been taking his reelection for granted, we’ve been talking to voters who feel their needs have been overlooked by lawmakers in Washington for far too long. People in our district are ready for Trump’s favorite Democrat to be sent packing.”

Insurgent progressive

Outside of sketchy donations, the Cuellar and Cisneros race has been just one high-profile battle between progressives and moderates in this cycle.

In Illinois, Marie Newman, who has also been backed by Ocasio-Cortez’s group as well as Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, is making her second run for Congress against incumbent Rep. Dan Lipinski, an anti-choice Democrat who voted against Obamacare in 2010.

But the Cisneros and Cuellar race may be where the battle lines between establishment and the anti-establishment are most prominently drawn, and the most analogous to Ocasio-Cortez’s own race against former top Democrat Joe Crowley in 2018.

So far in the race, Cuellar has raised nearly $1.8 million to Cisneros’ $1.3 million, though Cuellar has over $2 million on hand compared to fewer than $300,000 for Cisneros, according to FEC reports. So far this year, however, Cisneros has out-raised Cuellar, the San Antonio Express-News reported this week.

Cisneros has the backing of high-profile progressives and liberal groups like MoveOn.org and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, labor groups such as the Texas AFL-CIO, AFSCME, and CWA, and pro-choice groups such as NARAL, EMILY’s List, and the Planned Parenthood Action Fund.

Cuellar, on the other hand, is backed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — which gave $200,000 to Cuellar’s campaign earlier this month — as well as police and firefighter unions and associations. He also received the first endorsement a Democrat has ever gotten in a federal election from the Koch political network, via the group’s LIBRE Initiative.

Cuellar “has been a champion of prosperity through regulatory reform, fighting to ensure that small businesses compete on a level playing field and their employees can live their American Dream,” LIBRE Initiative Action senior advisor Daniel Garza said in a memo earlier this month.

“Congressman Cuellar can turn to whichever corporate and conservative allies he wants for campaign contributions and outside support – ultimately, this election will be determined by the hardworking people of this district who are ready for new representation in Congress,” Cisneros told VICE News in a statement.

Perhaps more importantly, the incumbent also boasts support from Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Rep. Cheri Bustos, the head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and Rep. Nita Lowey, the chair of the House Appropriations Committee. Pelosi and Bustos especially have been skeptical of the Green New Deal and Medicare for All, and both have clashed with Ocasio-Cortez and other left-wing freshmen.

There’s been no public polling released in the race. Last week, Pelosi and Lowey made an appearance at Cuellar’s campaign office in Laredo to show their support.

"We assume that Henry will win, but we don't take anything for granted," Pelosi told reporters. "The word 'assume' — ass of you and me. Assume nothing."

Cover: Jessica Cisneros, candidate for Texas 28th congressional district, is interviewed by CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images at their D.C. office on October 22, 2019. (Photo: Thomas McKinless/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images).



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The Sprinting Javelina Is a Reminder that Running Can Be Awesome Sometimes

We can’t know for whom (or what) the javelina runs, but we can clearly see one thing: that it is running. And not just running, but running with grace and joy. Each hoof strike is an explosion of vitality; the muscles beneath its gray pelt ripple with every step. The javelina runs fast and free, untethered to pedestrian notions of “fitness goals” or “PRs.” Perhaps the javelina runs in a way you wish you could? With pure abandon? The way you imagine you might, every time you lace up the ol’ sneakers?

The javelina’s beautiful sprint reminds me of something I’ve been trying to incorporate more into my daily life, which is: To run places. I’m always leaving myself too little time to get where I need to be, and so one day I thought, why not just run? If the javelina can so easily break into a run, unconcerned with what others might think, why can’t

It is clear that everyone, including most runners, hates running. But “running,” to responsible, grown humans, strictly occupies the space of “health chore.” We are grownups, but we are animals, too. And it seems to me that, physical abilities willing, the only thing that stands between us and enjoyment of running is simply booking it when the mood strikes, as the javelina does.

At first it might feel strange, as a grownup in grownup clothes, to simply take off running. Other pedestrians might see you and think, Hey, man, where’s the fire? But what is the deal with the societal constraint that arbitrarily demands we “walk” everywhere we go? Who even made this rule? And why do we follow it? As the javelina clearly shows: Running is already fun, and thrilling. Why can’t we let ourselves have it? The javelina doesn’t care what it looks like, because it looks cool as hell; it’s essentially a pig, yet it, too, can move like a damn gazelle across the savanna.

Years of incorporating athleisure into acceptable, mainstream fashion has only primed us for a world in which anyone can break into a jog or trot anytime they please; whether for the utilitarian purpose of getting somewhere faster, or for the sheer joy of feeling the wind in your hair and the air beneath your feet.

This isn’t about “sneaking in some cardio.” That completely obscures the point. This is about “getting places” and “having a little fun.” Picture yourself back on the elementary school playground, running joyfully from a crush in a game of tag. Why would we be “adults,” schlumping slowly from location to destination, when we could be the mighty javelina, running with abandon down the Arizona street?

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'You're Scumbags': We Went to the GOP's Annual Confab and Had a Nice Chat With Seb Gorka

FORT WASHINGTON, Maryland — Scary myths of socialists parading around as living, breathing Democrats may be the focus of this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference (aka CPAC), but the real monster here is the mainstream media. That’s all thanks to President Trump, who’s spent years fanning the flames of conspiracy theories large and small..

The birtherism Trump peddled back when Barack Obama occupied the White House gave way to accusations of a “deep state” of unelected bureaucrats implanted inside the federal government. Conspiracies like that – and worse – are now commonplace within formerly traditional conservative circles.

But even conservatism itself seems to have been sacrificed at the altar of Trump.

“Go to hell,” Seb Gorka — a mere former deputy assistant to President Trump and alt-right provocateur — said, cutting me off as I approached. “You work for VICE? Go to hell.”

“Why?” I asked.

“Go to hell,” the former low-level White House official shot back from his podcast booth in the CPAC hall.

“Because we're bad?” I replied.

“Because you're scumbags,” Gorka yelled. “You’re not journalists, and you can quote me.”

While he doesn’t have a basic understanding of the First Amendment — which allows journalists to ask questions, just as it allows ex-White House workers with oversized egos to yell at reporters — he does have an audience for his “America First” podcast.

And he’s only one of thousands of fringe-right pundits who’ve made their way into the mainstream. At CPAC, has-beens like Gorka, along with the likes of James O'Keefe of dubious (at best) Project Veritas fame, Islamophilic British commentator Katie Hopkins, alt-right whisperer Andy Ngo, and even Diamond and Silk (I don’t know what they do, and they might not either), is a hero.

Far-right conservatism – from radical to insanely conspiratorial – now counts as the mainstream of GOP politics. That includes the president himself, along with some of the top advisers he’s poached from Fox News and even Breitbart, who have echoed and amplified Trump’s signature “fake news” soundbite. His meme-driven politics, though routinely mocked by comedians, pundits, and even journalists, are now mimicked by a fleet of conservatives who are more trusted by hundreds of thousands of Americans than the nation’s traditional journalists.

That’s why, to a lot of Republicans, the press is now the enemy, or at least not to be believed.

“I think everybody's seeing it now,” according to Ben Bergquam, whose social media posts go out under the banner of America’s Voice News (I had to look it up: They boast about making the internet interactive for their conservative hosts). He’s a self-described “social conservative” who says he believes “abortion is murder, homosexuality is sin, and transgenderism is insane.” And he says his viewership has gone up under Trump.

“You can't deny the fact that there is a paradigm shift, not just in media but also in culture in America,” Bergquam said. “Conservatives used to always accept the idea that we had to compromise. And now we say, ‘No, we can win.’”

But being king of the Hill isn’t easy. So now Trump’s even drawing criticism from some of those fringe-right pundits who enabled his stealthy rise.

“Trump knew on Day One the power of the grassroots – the power of populism,” Alex Jones of conspiracy theory-peddling InfoWars, told VICE News while surrounded by an entourage of seven. “They certainly know that grassroots media is where the real power is, but I think they knew the power of it four years ago.”

Jones is still fully in Trump’s corner, but he says the president has lost his bearings now that he’s in the White House. He says Trump owes his former political allies a lifeline that only the president of the United States can throw.

“Trump's biggest failing is that he told Julian Assange – or whoever had the WikiLeaks, to release it, and now he hasn't gotten Julian Assange out of prison,” Jones said. “I feel like that I've been gang-raped by the fact that he's not stood up for Julian Assange. He's not stood up yet for General Flynn. He better pardon Roger Stone. I mean, these are political prisoners.”

But even Alex Jones is fringe at CPAC — at least for now, because the gathering continues to move rightward, along with Trump and his party. Many of the nation’s lawmakers have sipped Trump’s Kool-Aid. To most Republicans, the media gave the Obama administration a pass — and it’s time for revenge.

“There was no middle ground, and then you had a candidate that understood the media, and he called it out. So he brought the attention to the media,” Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) - a member of the House Freedom Caucus known for extreme views — told VICE News of Trump. “That's the difference: Somebody had a spine to actually call it out.”

The congressman says he mostly won’t even do interviews with his largest local publication, the Arizona Republic.

“When they want a request, I don’t really honor it. I’ll do something for Cronkite News,” Gosar said of Arizona’s PBS station.

On Thursday at CPAC, Gosar also did interviews with Epoch News (a fringe-right rag read by millions), Town Hall (a conservative publication from the Heritage Foundation), and Daily Signal (the Heritage Foundation’s new “news” site).

While Gosar was mic hopping, other conservative lawmakers were bypassing much of the mainstream — or as they say, “lamestream” — media.

“Now we do our own media,” Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) told VICE News.

Traditional and formerly trusted journalists now feel useless to many Republicans.

“We've just tried to go around them because – and I hate to say this – but who's reading the newspaper anymore?” Perry said. “As long as, unfortunately, as news can't be relied upon to be factual, the spectrum is going to be wide open. Right? We're going to shop for our news either what we believe in or think or we're going to multi-source it and try and figure out where the truth is between the two or the 10, whatever.”

Cover: Former Trump aide Sebastian Gorka speaks at the 2018 Values Voter Summit in Washington, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2018. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)



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A Key Ingredient for Life Has Been Found on an ‘Extraterrestrial Source,’ Scientists Report

Scientists have reported the discovery of “the first protein from an extraterrestrial source,” making the only time that this important component of life has ever been found in a meteorite.

Tiny traces of a novel protein called “hemolithin” were detected inside the meteorite Acfer 086, according to a study recently published on the preprint archive arXiv and spotted by Futurism. The find could have big implications for understanding the origins of life on Earth or elsewhere in the universe, though it must be corroborated by other researchers first.

“At this point, we need other scientists to employ our careful methods to repeat our results,” said study co-author Julie McGeoch, a molecular biologist at Harvard University, in an email. McGeoch’s team has submitted the study to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, but it has not yet been peer-reviewed.

Though other teams will need to confirm the results, it’s worth noting that the new detection of a “meteoritic protein,” as it is described in the study, is the culmination of more than a decade of research.

In 2007, McGeoch and her frequent collaborator Malcolm McGeoch, who is CEO of a company called PLEX that supplies the semiconductor industry, were studying interactions between water and proteins. The experiments got McGeoch thinking about possible water-protein reactions that might have occurred inside the interstellar clouds that eventually coalesced into our solar system.

These early chemical reactions and presolar ingredients are essential clues about how Earth came to host life, and how common habitable conditions might be in other star systems. Meteorites, which are space rocks that land on Earth, are godsends for scientists studying these problems because they are time capsules that often date back to the infant solar system.

Meteorites have been known to contain amino acids, organic compounds that make up proteins, for decades. But to figure out whether meteorites can contain full proteins, as opposed to just amino acids, McGeoch’s team needed to isolate potential proteins from samples, analyze their chemical makeup, and characterize their molecular structure.

This required access to “the very best mass spectrometry,” McGeoch said, which was provided by the company Bruker. With that data, the team was able to characterize a protein they call hemolithin in the Acfer 086 meteorite, which was found in Algeria in 1990.

To make sure that the protein wasn’t simply contamination from an earthly source, the researchers calculated its deuterium/hydrogen (D/H) ratio, which is a value that contextualizes the origins of materials. The results revealed “very high extraterrestrial D/H ratios,” according to the study, suggesting that the protein was formed in the proto-solar disc or perhaps even earlier, in interstellar molecular clouds that existed long before the Sun’s birth.

Given that some meteorites contain stardust grains that are older than our solar system, it is not outlandish to imagine that they could also preserve proteins that date back billions of years. Hemolithin is a particularly intriguing example because it might be able to split water into its constituent oxygen and hydrogen parts, which is a process that played a major role in the development of life on Earth.

Hemolithin’s water-splitting behavior “is only speculation at this point,” McGeoch noted. “If true, this could be a chemical energy source, which is the most important ingredient for a biochemical process leading on to life.”

To that end, McGeoch and her colleagues plan to continue testing hemolithin’s properties, while also trying to pin down the protein’s exact crystal structure. Those lines of research, combined with any confirmed detections of meteoritic proteins by other teams, will shed light on the extraordinary conditions that led to life on Earth.



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A Chinese Citizen Journalist Covering Coronavirus Just Live-Streamed His Own Arrest

A citizen journalist who was exposing the reality of life inside the Wuhan lockdown zone at the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak was detained by China’s security forces at his apartment in Wuhan — and the whole thing was captured on camera.

Li Zehua is a former employee of state-run television station CCTV who quit and went rogue earlier this month to report on the situation in Wuhan, and has posted videos from crematoriums, virology labs, and funeral homes inside the lockdown zone.

Li is the third citizen journalist to be detained by authorities in Wuhan in recent weeks and was live streaming on YouTube from his apartment in the city when unnamed officials arrived at his door and stopped the recording.

Li was also secretly streaming the scene to a friend via Skype, and that footage, which was subsequently uploaded to YouTube, shows the people searching through Li’s flat before that video too goes dark.

READ: Here's how China is hunting down its coronavirus critics

Li’s friend, who refers to himself as “stone,” confirmed to VICE News that Li was taken away by unidentified officers and has not been heard from since Wednesday. He added that Li knew he was being followed but said no one knows who took him, where he was being held — or why.

In recent days, China has been hailing the success of its efforts to stop the spread of coronavirus as infection numbers and the death rate begins to decline. But China’s security officials are showing no signs of slowing down in their efforts to silence dissenting voices critical of the regime and its response to the coronavirus.

As the coronavirus outbreak escalated in February, Li, who was working as a presenter for the state-run television channel CCTV7, suddenly quit his job and moved to Wuhan to document what was happening on the ground.

“But why did I resign from CCTV? The reason is that I hope more young people, more people like me, can stand up,” Li said in his final video.

Li was also inspired by the work of other citizen journalists, such as Chen Quishi and Fang Bin, both of whom were detained over two weeks ago and have not been heard from since.

Since arriving in the city on Feb. 16, Li documented the situation in the Baibuting Community, an area hit particularly hard by the epidemic.

In total Li posted six videos from Wuhan before he disappeared, including one showing a man lying on the ground in the middle of the street, and one featuring interviews with migrant workers who were forced to set up camp in the underground parking garage at Wuchang Railway Station.

One of Li’s most shocking videos showed him talking to porters at a crematorium in the city who said they were being given high wages in order to transport corpses.

READ: China arrested a whistleblower who shot viral video of coronavirus corpses in Wuhan

On Wednesday, hours before he was detained, he posted another video from his car as he drove around Wuhan.

“I'm suddenly being chased down by the state security police,” Li told the camera. “The car they're driving isn't a police car. They're chasing me, so I can't live-stream any more. I will just have to leave you with this clip. I'm in Wuhan right now. I'm driving really fast because they're chasing me. I'm sure that they want to hold me in isolation. Please help me!”

Hours later, at his residence, Li began recording a video when there was a knock on the door. He addressed the men asking if it was OK if he said a few things before they came in.

He begins by saying he admires the people who have tracked him down:

READ: China Is erasing tributes to coronavirus whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang

“I admire the diverse methods you employed under the light of day to track down my position so accurately. The way too that you managed to pressure my friends to come over,” Li says, according to a translation from the is China Media Project, an independent research program at the University of Hong Kong.

Li says that throughout his time in Wuhan he abided by all the rules in relation to wearing protective gear and never broke the law.

But, he admitted, “it’s highly unlikely I won’t be taken away and won’t be quarantined. I just want to make it known, though, that I have a clear conscience toward myself, a clear conscience toward my parents, a clear conscience toward my family.”

READ: Here’s how China is silencing coronavirus critics in the U.S.

Since the outbreak began, China’s censors have been working overtime to silence critical voices. They have erased the grief and anger of hundreds of thousands of people in the wake of the death of the whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang. They have silenced social media accounts even if they are not located in China. And they have tracked down critics and knocked on their door seeking an apology.

But all this effort has failed to stop people from having their say.

“The Chinese government’s attempt to silence those who exposed the real situation of the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan and other parts of China has created opposite effects,” Patrick Poon, Amnesty International’s China researcher, told VICE News. “Instead of scaring off people from further exposé, Li Zehua’s example has shown how a former state media program host would even risk his own safety to release videos to expose the real situation on the ground.”

Cover: Citizen journalist Li Zehua narrating with Chinese agents outside his door. (Photo: YouTube)



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Corona Beer Continues to Suffer Because of Coronavirus Fears

Earlier this week, Corona posted an innocuous tweet to announce the launch of its new line of hard seltzer. "Four delicious flavors. One splashy entrance," it wrote, adding a six-second clip of the new cans sitting on a sun-drenched beach.

Like we said, innocuous—but it got brutal in the @CoronaExtraUSA mentions. "Unfortunate brand name moment," one person responded. "EXTREMELY POOR TASTE," another wrote. "Not your fsult [sic] but this? Seriously? [Because] btw, now you've ensured that I'll never buy it ever again." And one of the most-liked replies was a picture of 15 bottles of Heineken huddled behind a face mask, trying to avoid a single bottle of Corona Extra.

The coronavirus has continued its worldwide spread—as of this writing, there have been 82,000 confirmed cases and almost 3,000 deaths—which may not be the best news for completely non-communicable Corona beer, or for its parent company, Constellation Brands. Last month, Google results for "corona beer virus" started to spike, because a distressing number of people seemed to be making a connection between the booze and the virus, and things don't seem to have improved for either corona in the weeks since.

Market research company YouGov recently conducted a survey of 357 adults to ask them about Corona beer, and to calculate its Buzz Score, a number that represents whether "they have heard anything negative or positive about the brand." The last time it conducted a similar survey was in early January, and Corona had a score of 75. As of this week, that score had slipped to 51.

"YouGov data also shows purchase Intent for the brand is at the lowest it’s been in two years, though the summer-y beverage which is closely associated with beach holidays does see substantial seasonal fluctuation," the company explained on its website.

A second phone survey, conducted by 5W Public Relations, also asked 737 American beer drinkers for their thoughts about Corona beer. (At this point, if a strange number shows up on your phone, there's probably a good chance that it's a nameless marketing coordinator who wants to know if you can tell the difference between a light beer and a respiratory infection).

Assuming that the survey respondents weren't just trolling whoever dialed them up, 38% of them said that they would not buy Corona "under any circumstances now." Fourteen percent of those who said they "usually drink Corona" said they wouldn't order it in public, and 16% of those surveyed admitted they were "confused" about whether there was a connection between the coronavirus and Corona beer.

“There is no question that Corona beer is suffering because of the coronavirus. Could one imagine walking into a bar and saying 'Hey, can I have a Corona?' or 'Pass me a Corona,'" Ronn Torossian, the CEO of 5WPR said in a statement.

“While the brand has claimed that consumers understand there's no linkage between the virus and the beer company, this is a disaster for the Corona brand. After all, what brand wants to be linked to a virus which is killing people worldwide?”

Torossian is right: Constellation Brands doesn't seem to be worried about its customers—not even about those poor "confused" idiots.

"There’s a lot of misinformation being shared across the media that doesn’t match consumer behavior," Maggie Bowman, a Constellation Brands spokesperson, told VICE in an email. "Corona sales continue to be strong. By and large, our consumers understand there’s no linkage between the virus and our beer business."

But still... maybe the Corona account should stay off Twitter for a minute.



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Jeremy Cunningham Makes Cathartic Jazz About Grief and Gun Violence

In January 2008, jazz drummer Jeremy Cunningham's little brother Andrew was murdered in a home invasion robbery. Two men, armed with AK-47s, broke into the younger Cunningham's Cincinnati apartment and killed him after his roommate escaped. This tragic, violent loss was the catalyst for Cunningham's new album The Weather Up There, a raw document of grief that's one of the most affecting jazz albums in recent memory.

"I knew making this would be hard and would take me into places that maybe I didn't want to go. But ultimately I wanted this story to be out there because I want people to think about what gun trauma and violence does to a person and their family," says Cunningham over drinks at a beer bar on the north side of Chicago. He adds, "The thing that still blows my mind about it is the effects of this loss just travel on forever. I was thinking of those cheesy cosmetics commercials where a drop of water lands in a pool and just ripples out. That's grief. It goes out in all directions endlessly."

As a member of the city's adventurous jazz community, he's a journeyman who's played with trumpeter Marquis Hill, saxophonist Nick Mazzarella, and drummer Makaya McCraven and is currently in the rising International Anthem-signed group Resavoir as well as Lane Beckstrom and Knox Fortune's live bands.

The Weather Up There showcases Cunningham's collaborative and genre-fusing spirit, enlisting a marquee cast of local mainstays like McCraven, multi-instrumentalist Ben Lamar Gay, trumpeter Jaime Branch, drummer Mike Reid, multi-instrumentalist Mikel Patrick Avery, cellist Tomeka Reid, saxophonist Dustin Laurenzi, bassist Matt Ulery, and saxophonist Josh Johnson. Songs like "1985," which Cunningham says was inspired by memories of listening to his mother's Rolling Stones records with his brother as kids, feels alive with rollicking, rock'n'roll energy that flaunts jazz conventions.

Co-produced by Tortoise guitarist Jeff Parker and Paul Bryan, the LP also features a collage of interviews Cunningham conducted with his family and friends of his brother. It's a gut-wrenching portrait of loss as songs like the drum-centric "All I Know" highlight his father's recollection of finding out his brother had died, while"Elegy" stitches together these sad interviews across a tense, angry six-and-a-half minutes. Perhaps the most cathartic moment on the record comes in "Return These Tides," where Ben Lamar Gay sings an improvised melody over a poem Cunningham wrote reflecting on the loss: "I can't pretend that I'm whole anymore. I was split in two."

Cunningham spoke with VICE about his 12-year journey of reeling from his brother's death to finding catharsis in making this record. "I think I've been writing this record since the day he died," he says. He continues, "The only thing that I really have that I can do for him is the music that I make. I started to take little things from all of these experiences and the songs started to happen in a way that I felt like maybe I could write something that would be good enough to address this trauma that happened to me and my family." Read on for the full conversation.


The tragic events that inspired this record happen in 2008 when you were living in Cincinnati. What brought you to Chicago?
I graduated from the University of Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music's jazz program. I was touring around with these and playing in an avant-garde hip hop band. I was floating around during this time. It was the same year and my brother had died and it was just tough all around: brother died, I got testicular cancer, which I had thankfully caught early, and then my girlfriend at the time broke up. It was like one thing after another. I needed to be touring all the time so I could have an escape which was necessary. I started dating the person who'd become my wife and we decided to live in the same city so we moved to Chicago in 2009. I had friends here who were already playing here but I didn't know anything about Chicago music.

When I moved here, I started meeting other jazz players which is how I met [trumpet player] Marquis Hill and I ended up playing in his band for three and a half years. Besides just modern jazz, I kept meeting people who were doing different things like Jeff Parker and Nick Mazzarella. Same goes for drummer Mike Reid, who sort of became my mentor and drum buddy.

How were you holding up as a person during your first couple of years here?
I wasn't. I was just trying to push through. I was a bit of a mess, drinking too much and trying to cope. Playing music with people was definitely helping. I talked to my aunt about how I was feeling pretty numb and hopeless a lot. The aftermath of my brother's death really made me distrust human beings. We're really capable of doing terrible things. She then recommended a grief counselor near the city and it was really helpful. She did this technique called EMDR, which was originally used and really successful in helping Vietnam veterans who had serious trauma from the war. And she did that to me. It reprocesses your memories in a way and your perception of events that have happened to you. After that one session, I walked out of there feeling like I could see color in the world again. I felt a little bit lighter and that really helped me. I don't know where I would necessarily be without that because that's sort of like took me out of something that was really holding me down. A tune that I wrote on my album, "It's Nothing" is sort of about that feeling I had before that therapy.

The way you started conceptualizing this album also came from a conversation with drummer Mike Reid, who's also on the LP. What did he tell you?
I was hanging out with Mike at this bar called Hungry Brain and I was telling him about my plans to write a record about my brother's death and how I wanted to focus on what happens to a family and a community after the fact. He listened and said, "you're really just going to write a record about how your brother died? What are you going to tell your newborn daughter about your brother when she's old enough to know about him? It's not just going to be about the horrible way he died." That made me think of all the really fond memories of riding BMX bikes and skateboards, playing in the woods, and listening to records. He said, "shouldn't that also be in there too?"

That perspective shaped how I approached this record and changed the entire concept: it's not enough to just focus on the loss. You can't see a person's life just from the circumstances of their death. Like "1985," which focuses on the good memories, the song "Hike" was written when I was walking with my daughter and feeling lucky that I had some beautiful things in my life. That's what the album has become for me: a picture of his life in the best way that I could do it.

What was it like interviewing your family, your friends, and your ex about Andrew's death for the album?
I started interviewing family members and friends because I knew I needed a wider perspective for this to make sense. Cause it's just not, it's not just me, it's all of these people who were affected by this. It was tough. To hear people that you really care about and you love talk about how they're still affected, you feel some solidarity but you also want to take that pain away somehow. Losing someone is devastating and it takes a long time. Everyone is still processing it.

After 12 years, I knew it was necessary to get their voices because it's not just about my reflection, it needed to be about their reflection of what happened. Having all those voices on it would let the listener be able to actually feel some of that weight that they're carrying around and think about this issue. After Sandy Hook, I thought for sure we would make changes in this country but nothing has happened. There needs to be sweeping federal legislation.



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Drivers Feel Abandoned by Uber and Lyft as Coronavirus Pandemic Emerges

There have been countless warnings about how the continued spread of the coronavirus and the disease it causes, Covid-19, could dramatically affect daily life—shattering the stock market, changing our politics, and even disrupting typical patterns of employment. But what about gig workers, who are expected to always be on-call, and aren’t considered employees by their bosses?

Across popular Uber forums and subreddits, drivers are anticipating a driver shortage that will be profitable for them—if they’re willing to take on the risk. If they depend on their gig economy work to pay rent, they may not have another choice.

On UberPeople, the largest driver forum on the internet, dedicated drivers call themselves “ants.” One thread contains a photo of a driver encased by a sterile plastic cube, boasting that “real” ants won’t let the virus deter them from completing 430 trips each month. In response, another driver posted: "Coronavirus (one word) or COVID-19 also won't stop your landlords from evicting drivers for nonpayment. Ants will make bank after many entitled drivers hide under their beds."

Posters also expressed feeling left out in the cold by everyone, from city governments to Uber itself. “All kidding aside we (the drivers) will be in big trouble in a couple of weeks with this virus,” a user wrote in another thread. “NOBODY gives a crap about us [...] We have to work even when sick because we don't make enough to ride it out for weeks & months.”

Uber and Lyft drivers Motherboard spoke to emphasized a lack of communication from the ride-share companies, which left them doubtful about what support or resources are available to them as they cart strangers around during a possible outbreak.

“I have this old habit of always having hand sanitizer nearby me and I always try to use it after every trip, but that’s normal precaution when there’s no pandemic,” said one Uber and Lyft driver. “I have no idea. Is a mask going to be enough?”

“Most drivers I’ve spoken with are confused, don’t know what to do, and actually won’t think about it because, in a sense, it makes them feel safer,” the driver went on. “We’re just hoping it doesn’t get to that point. But if it does, we have no idea what we’re going to do.”

When Mexico City's Health Department reached out to Uber about a possible carrier of Covid-19, Uber responded by temporarily suspending 240 user accounts “out of an abundance of caution” and promised to provide updates about their account status. In London, Uber suspended another driver unlucky enough to drive a coronavirus patient to the hospital—again, “out of an abundance of caution.” This strategy may work in isolated scenarios where you are trying to prevent outbreaks, but it is not clear why it would work in the midst of a full-blown pandemic.

“We are always working to help ensure the safety of our employees and everyone who uses Uber, and we continue to be concerned by the ongoing spread of coronavirus,” an Uber spokesperson said in a statement. “We have formed a dedicated global team of Uber operations, security and safety executives, guided by the advice of a consulting public health expert, to respond as needed in each market where we operate around the world. We remain in close contact with local public health organizations and will continue to follow their recommendations.”

In China, Didi Chuxing—the ride-hail company that beat Uber out of the country—suspended its service in multiple cities, and deployed special fleets of drivers to try and fill the need for transportation even under quarantine. One fleet comes equipped with protectively uniformed drivers in regularly disinfected cars to transport medical workers in Wuhan for free. Another fleet is a volunteer "community service fleet" for local authorities to try and satisfy demand despite the suspension of transportation services across the country.

Drivers in the U.S. aren’t so sure similar measures will come for them.

“They don’t really care about us,” another driver told Motherboard in between chuckles. “We drive, not them. The best case scenario is they give us advice—wear a mask, don’t shake hands—but you think they’ll spend any money on helping us?”

“If they wanted to, they could stop business on the app, sure,” the second driver continued. “But they won’t even communicate with us, so what do you think is going to happen? I don’t want to speculate about a pandemic, but we will be alone. They don't care about us.”

Lyft did not respond to Motherboard’s request for comment on any plans for a possible pandemic.



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