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The NBA All-Star Carmelo Anthony’s New Memoir Is Brought to You by Wine and Cigars

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This is Rough Draft, in which our favorite writers get to the bottom of their own craft. From preferred writing drinks to whether or not you really need to carry a notebook, we find out all the ways they beat writer’s block and get it done.

Over his two decades-long career, Carmelo Anthony has broken almost every record made on the basketball court: he’s a ten-time NBA All-Star, four-time Olympian, and six-time All-NBA Team member. Just last month, Anthony signed with the Los Angeles Lakers, reuniting with his friend and fellow basketball legend LeBron James. But, what was it like to be Carmelo Anthony before the success and the excess? The athlete—and author— explores that question in his new memoir, Where Tomorrows Aren’t Promised: A Memoir of Survival and Hope, out today. The book, co-written with D. Watkins, follows Anthony’s rise from the Red Hook housing projects where he grew up to the fateful 2003 NBA draft where he joined the Denver Nuggets. Anthony fills the intervening years with an array of heartwarming anecdotes, from his JV basketball years, to his childhood friendship with the “high school phenom” LeBron James. To mark the book’s release, Anthony broke down his writing process for us—which includes a lot of wine and a few cigars.

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JULIANA UKIOMOGBE: Describe your ideal writing atmosphere. What gets you in the mood?

CARMELO ANTHONY: It has to be nighttime. I found myself writing my memoir at night. While lying in bed, I’d really be able to think through these stories I wanted to tell and the truth that I wanted to share.

UKIOMOGBE: What are your go-to writing snacks?

ANTHONY: Wine.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you ever smoke or drink alcohol while you write?

ANTHONY: Oh, absolutely! Wine and cigars were my go-tos throughout this process. They get the creative juices flowing.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you keep a notebook or journal?

ANTHONY: No. If I have an idea, or a sentence comes to me, I just type it into the notes app on my phone.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you prefer handwriting or typing?

ANTHONY: I actually do like handwriting to be honest with you. Call me old-fashioned, but I still prefer it when I have the time to.

UKIOMOGBE: Whose writing do you always return to?

ANTHONY: I’m a big fan of Ta-Nehisi Coates. I love Nikki Giovanni, Maya Angelou, and the list goes on.

UKIOMOGBE: What’s your favorite book to reread?

ANTHONY: I would say The 48 Laws of Power. I’ve probably read it seven times at this point.

UKIOMOGBE: What books did you read as a kid/teen? Have your thoughts about the writers changed?

ANTHONY: I didn’t really read books as a teen like that. We didn’t have time growing up. It’s a theme that’s present in my memoir, but I just wasn’t exposed to that. I had to stay locked in and focused on other things to make it out of my circumstances growing up.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you read while you’re in the process of writing?

ANTHONY: I love to read when I’m in the process of writing, it helps jumpstart my creativity.

UKIOMOGBE: Which writers inform your current work the most?

ANTHONY: This was such a different process of telling my personal story in my memoir. This was really about my life and I had to look inward, and around at the important people that influenced me throughout my life.

UKIOMOGBE: Do you consider writing to be a spiritual practice?

ANTHONY: It can be. I haven’t gotten to that point of spirituality through writing yet, but I’m big on meditation and can definitely see how it can become a spiritual process.

UKIOMOGBE: What advice do you have for people who want to be better writers?

ANTHONY: You have to have a story to tell first, then you have to be authentic in your storytelling. When you’re telling a true story and a real story, you have to be as honest with yourself as possible.

UKIOMOGBE: What are some unconventional techniques you stand by?

ANTHONY: A second glass of wine. Everything gets better on the second glass.

UKIOMOGBE: Can great writing save the world?

ANTHONY: I don’t know about saving. Who’s to say? But I do know that great writing can shape the world into a better place.



Patrick Duffy Confirms He's Dating This Happy Days Star

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For 43 years, actor Patrick Duffy was married to ballerina Carlyn Rosser, until her death from cancer in 2017. The Dallas star admits he didn’t expect to find love again and was content spending time with his kids and grandkids. However, love sometimes happens at the most unexpected times, and in 2020, Duffy found himself in love once again.

Duffy and actress Linda Purl, who had first met each other years ago, ended up in the same group chat online and quickly struck up a relationship. Here are all the details of Patrick Duffy dating Happy Days star Linda Purl, and the adventures they’ve gone on during quarantine.

#PatrickDuffy #Actor #Relationship

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Amy WineHouse – I Love u more than you‘ll ever know ( live ) • lyrics | MeAndMrJoe

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I love u more than you’ll ever know – A Donny Hathaway coVer bY Amy WineHouse • lyrics / live 2007

Could bE in France!

A support would bE great 😋
EnjOy this song! 🤗

– – – – –

‼️ 432hz version: ‼️

Amy Playlist:

InstaGram:

• • • • •
eNjoy!

Pan Rico Is an Instagram Bakery Specializing in Pan Dulce

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Eva Ramirez launched Pan Rico earlier this year.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

In April, Eva Ramirez and her boyfriend Javiar Hernández each got a call from Cosme, Enrique Olvera’s high-caliber Manhattan restaurant. They’d worked there as line cooks until being laid off over a year earlier, with Ramirez taking on the added role of pastry cook, as well. The restaurant was set to reopen for indoor dining at the end of the month, and the calls were to see if they would like to come back. “It was hard to accept the fact that we were going to have to do it again, go back to the line cook position,” Ramirez remembers. “It’s like, where do we stand? What do we want?”

A year ago, when it seemed like everyone in the entire restaurant industry had lost their jobs, Ramirez and Hernández were among the countless other hospitality workers who were granted an unexpected chance to reevaluate their relationships with a career in cooking. “I feel like the pandemic was something where a lot of people realized what they didn’t want and what they did want,” Ramirez says, “and that’s when they started pushing themselves.”

The couple worked through the questions that bothered others, too: the industry’s expectations of a difficult work-life balance, agency in the workplace, and ownership over your own creativity in a world where — in the public eye — ideas and dishes belong to chefs or restaurants, and not necessarily the people who first came up with them, like Hernández, who saw one of his dishes hit Cosme’s menu. “We’ve been working for this company for so long and we love them, but it’s always going to be theirs,” Ramirez says. “It has nothing to do with us.”

From left to right: danish with vanilla pastry cream, peach jam, and nectarines; hibiscus-glazed Bundt cake; and spelt-raspberry concha.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

The two liked their work (Hernández went back to Cosme right away; Ramirez held off because of health issues relating to anemia), but they wondered where it would ultimately lead them. “There’s something about them that they’re going to do something, they’re going to make their mark, whatever that means,” says Fany Gerson, who hired Ramirez to work for a bit at her shop, Fan-Fan Doughnuts, last fall.

And in fact, when the Cosme calls came in April, Ramirez had already spent three months testing pastries at home — at the urging of Hernández — perfecting recipes like hibiscus-flavored conchas, the buttery streusel-topped roll. Eventually, Ramirez did go back to Cosme, but only after she and Hernández had launched a project of their own, too: Pan Rico, a pop-up bakery devoted to Mexican sweet breads with orders taken on Instagram. Now, the couple is doing something unlikely: Balancing full-time restaurant work with a passion project that offers creative fulfillment.

Hernández and Ramirez, testing their pastries.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

When they launched from their apartment in Queens, they debuted a trio of pastries: a cheerful-looking spelt-lemon concha with a Pac-Man yellow streusel, a croissant filled with horchata pastry cream and topped with sliced strawberries, and a vanilla-glazed poppy-seed-coconut Bundt cake. Their second set included a spelt-raspberry concha, a peach danish with vanilla pastry cream and nectarines, and a hibiscus-glazed Bundt cake filled with pockets of strawberry jam. (The pastry boxes, which are sold every other week via Instagram, cost $15 and are available for either pickup or — for an additional fee — delivery.)

While enthusiastic about Pan Rico, Ramirez is also honest about the difficulties of starting the pop-up. It cost roughly $1,000 to get it off the ground — a tough amount to swallow on a restaurant salary, living paycheck to paycheck — and they’re still investing in equipment. Working out of their own apartment, Ramirez initially hand-mixed all the dough, but has since borrowed a friend’s KitchenAid until she can afford to buy one. She’s had to eighty-six croissants until she can get a sheeter, and the couple had to figure out how to bake consistently in their unreliable home oven.

Conchas cooling on the table.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

There’s also the matter of whether Pan Rico’s early success means devoting more time to the project (and less time at Cosme). “Trust me, if we could, we would,” Ramirez explains, “but we need that paycheck, we need to pay our bills, and this is something that’s not stable because we don’t know how much we’re going to sell.”

Nevertheless, the end goal is to build the pop-up into something more sustainable and, eventually, into a proper bakery and restaurant, possibly in Ramirez’s hometown of Chicago. For now, though, Ramirez has her mind on everything she’ll get to bake this fall and winter, and the variety of breads and pastries they can tap into. She talks about the pan dulce called besos — “two circles that are together, but it’s full of sugar” — and another called elotes, which have a butter-and-sugar filling. Also, a chocolate doughnut with sprinkles on top that is, Ramirez says, “a lot of chocolate,” before repeating herself for emphasis: “A lot of chocolate.” In October, they’ll do a pan de muertos for the Day of the Dead, and come Christmas they’ll have a Nativity bread. She’s pulling a couple things from Gerson’s My Sweet Mexico, too, and wants to draw on flavors from other cuisines. Starting the pop-up has allowed her to figure out her potential.

“Starting it off, there are no rules — you don’t go by whatever other people are doing,” Ramirez explains. She pulls inspiration from different places, and wants to bake the foods that remind her of home. Ultimately, she says it all comes down to one question that she asks herself again and again: “What else are you capable of doing?”

Eva Ramirez and her pastries. DeSean McClinton-Holland.

Eva Ramirez and her pastries. DeSean McClinton-Holland.



Mindy Kaling Responds to Backlash Over Velma’s Race Being Changed For New Spinoff I THR News

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Mindy Kaling Responds to Backlash Over Velma’s Race Being Changed For New Spinoff I THR News

Mindy Kaling has responded to criticisms of Velma’s race being changed for the upcoming HBO Max animated Scooby-Doo spinoff, ‘Velma.’

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Mindy Kaling Responds to Backlash Over Velma’s Race Being Changed For New Spinoff I THR News

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These Best Dressed Stars at the Emmy Awards Will Leave You in Awe

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Lights, camera, action!

Award season has officially kicked into high gear this September. From the 2021 MTV VMAs to the Met Gala, it’s safe to say there’s been no shortage of spectacular red carpet moments. And come Sunday, Sept. 19, the 2021 Emmy Awards will most certainly be a night full of glitz and glamour.

Ahead of the star-studded ceremony, we’re taking a look back at all of the swoon-worthy designs to hit the red carpet. 

Case in point? Angelina Jolie shut down the red carpet back in 1998 when she sizzled in a curve-hugging gown. A decade earlier, Joan Collins made a fiery entrance to the 1987 ceremony when she wore crimson-colored creation.

Plus, it was just three years ago that Tracee Ellis Ross left everyone’s jaws on the floor after she slipped into a hot pink Valentino gown that filled the entire room with its voluminous material.

But don’t just take our word for it.

Funimation’s Sonny Boy English Dub Cast Announced

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Funimation announced on Tuesday that the Sonny Boy English dub is officially headed to the platform later this week, along with the full details on the cast for the dub.

RELATED: Fairy Tail: 100 Years Quest Anime Adaptation Announced

The English dub will arrive on Funimation on September 16, 2021, so fans won’t have to wait very long to experience the latest rendition of the anime. Sonny Boy comes from director Shingo Natsume and features a star-studded cast, including:

  • Derick Snow as Nagara
  • Tia Ballard as Mizuho
  • Daman Mills as Asakaze
  • Luci Christian as Nozomi
  • Ry McKeand as Hoshi
  • Siddhartha Minhas as Rajdhani
  • Patrick Seitz as Cap
  • David Matranga as Hayato
  • Lauren Landa as Machi





Sonny Boy stems from an original story from Natsume and his team and tells the story of thirty-six students who find themselves and their school suddenly drifting in an alternate, void-like dimension.

RELATED: Sing a Bit of Harmony Trailer Teases 2022 Release for Anime Pic

“When supernatural powers awaken in some of them, a sense of detachment begins to divide the group. Despite the student council’s attempts to impose order, they clash with the students possessing special abilities, who rebel against their strict control,” reads a synopsis for the series. “This conflict leads them to discover that this world has its own set of rules—and following them is necessary for survival.”

LOWSH & Ghost in Real Life Create Deep House Magic with “Don’t Come Back” [LISTEN]

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LOWSH and Ghost in Real Life have teamed up for a powerful, deep house delicacy, “Don’t Come Back.”

Seattle-based talent LOWSH builds the production with dreamy synths and atmospheres that glide seemingly effortlessly as LA’s trap goddess Ghost in Real Life lends her vocal prowess to this dynamic collaboration.

Demonstrating the softer side of both projects, “Don’t Come Back” takes hold with beautiful intention. The collab sounds instinctual and meant to be — down to the details, with even the softest melodics and organic breaths making their presence known in the mix.

Enjoy the unexpected and refreshing nature of this LOWSH and Ghost in Real Life creation…

Listen and link up with both rising producers below!

LOWSH – Don’t Come Back (ft. Ghost in Real Life)

Connect with LOWSH

SoundCloud | Spotify | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

Connect with Ghost in Real Life

SoundCloud | Spotify | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram





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Funky Disco House #789 Oldschool TOP 50 Best Of The Best Funky Disco House #JAYC

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Michael Olivera & The Cuban Jazz Syndicate / Live at Azuqueca de Henares feat Pepe Rivero

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El Syndicate cubano, la nueva banda de Michael Olivera, cuenta con la participación de algunos de los más destacados artistas cubanos de la actualidad.

Line up:

Pepe Rivero/ piano
Ariel Bringuez / saxo
Carlitos Sarduy / trompeta
Miryam Latrece / voz
Yarel Hernandez / bajo
Michael Olivera / bateria

Grabado en el mes de Febrero de 2020 en directo en Azuqueca de Henares, Festival de Jazz.

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