Last month, Del Rey released Chemtrails Over the Country Club (you can read our review here) and the next day, announced plans for the June 1 release of its follow-up, Rock Candy Sweet. As if that wasnât enough, Del Rey announced on Tuesday night that she is going to drop a third album in 2021, this one titled Blue Banisters.
In a tweet, Del Rey revealed that the album will be out on the 4th of July.
Prior to this prolific output, Del Rey last released an album (Norman Fucking Rockwell)Â in 2019. You can read our review of that album here.
Late last year, Del Rey made her first TV performance in the U.S. in nearly a decade when she stopped by The Tonight Show. She was also lauded by Bruce Springsteen as one of the best current songwriters and made several other appearances as well.
Chef Blaine Wetzel, whose Washington State restaurant is the focus of an extensive new report. Photo: Tourism Victoria/Flickr
At 24, Noma alum Blaine Wetzel took over the kitchen at the Willows Inn on remote Lummi Island, tucked off the northwestern corner of Washington State, and began racking up accolades, turning the award-winning Willows into a destination for diners in search of multicourse feasts made exclusively from ingredients found, fished, and foraged on the island. But according to a series of allegations in a new report from Julia Moskin at the New York Times, the restaurantâs idyllic facade has been hiding an âugly reality that includes routine faking of âislandâ ingredients, physical intimidation and verbal abuse by Mr. Wetzel, including racist, sexist and homophobic slurs; and sexual harassment of female employees by male kitchen staff members.â
Thirty-five current and former Willows employees spoke to the Times about their experiences in Wetzelâs kitchen â another entry into what is now an all-too-familiar canon. While itâs absolutely worth a read in its entirety, here are the key points you need to know.
Ingredients Arenât Always Local Part of Wetzelâs claim to fame is that all the food at the Willows was said to be made using only ingredients from the island, but all 35 employees the Times spoke to said that most of the ingredients are ordered from distributors and farms on the mainland. They cited âPacific octopusâ that was allegedly from Spain and Portugal, âwildâ venison that allegedly came from a farm in Idaho, and âroasted chicken drippingsâ made in big batches from (organic) Costco chickens. Supermarket beets and broccoli were also allegedly passed off as products of the island. âOn my first day, I was cutting frozen Alaskan scallops down to the shape and size of pink singing scallops,â one former line cook told the Times.
The Work Environment Was âToxicâ Staffers â many of whom have since resigned â claim a âtoxicâ and ânightmarishâ workplace culture, alleging Wetzelâs behavior went beyond normal kitchen autocracy and âoften crossed the line into abuse,â according to the Times. âI could go farther than a boysâ club,â a former sommelier said of the atmosphere. âIt was âeat or be eaten.ââ Multiple employees report that, despite a growing awareness of racism, sexism, and discrimination in top kitchens, âmisogynistic languageâ and âhomophobic slursâ were standard at Willows. Wetzel reportedly âpublicly humiliated cooks whose work displeased him, often using a derogatory term for mentally disabled people to disparage them,â and allegedly âused racist language to describe Latino employees and Asian customers.â
ďťżFemale Chefs Were Passed Over for Promotions While more than 30 women have worked in the kitchen as interns and line cooks, Wetzel told the Times, none of them were ever promoted to sous-chef or chef de cuisine, and two women Wetzel identified as former sous-chefs told the Times theyâd ânever held that job.â One female chef says she was told she was in line for a sous-chef position, âafter two years of watching younger men steadily being promoted ahead of her, and seeing other women chefs ignored, she resigned.â On this and other issues, upper management, they say, was unresponsive.
Furthermore, according to the report, âFemale employees from the island said Mr. Wetzel and other managers ordered them to lose weight and get manicures and eyelash extensions at their own expense, in order to polish the image the restaurant wanted to project.â (A charge that Wetzel denies.)
The Willows Has Faced Labor Issues In 2017, the U.S. Department of Labor found that the Willows had violated federal labor law by forcing employees to work 14-hour days for âas little as $50,â and using âstagiairesâ â unpaid interns â as free labor. As a result, the inn was fined $149,000 and âforcedâ to end the intern program.
Then, this past March, Wetzel agreed to pay $600,000 to settle a class-action lawsuit brought by 99 employees over allegations of âvarious forms of wage theft.â Those allegations include âmisappropriation of tips,â not paying overtime, and not providing adequate breaks to employees working 14-hour days. The settlement did not, however, require him to admit any wrongdoing.
Restaurant Staff âConstantly Harassedâ Teenage Employees A dozen female employees say that men from the Willowsâ kitchen crew âconstantly harassed teenage employees from the island with sexual overtures and innuendo, pressured them to stay after work hours to âparty,â and plied them with alcohol and drugs to make them compliant.â The report goes further: âLocal girls were assumed by male employees to be sexually mature, they said; âisland ageâ was a running joke,â a reference to the legal age of consent in Washington State, which is 16.
Wetzel Has Offered Broad Denials of These Allegations Wetzel denies that he ever misrepresented how his ingredients were sourced, though he did not deny that many (including the chickens) came from elsewhere. He assured the Times he has never used any racist language: âMy step mom and brother are Chinese, my wife is Mexican, and anyone that would claim I was racist is lying.â He disputes allegations of sexism on similar grounds. âI support female chefs with all my heart (so much so that I married one),â he wrote in an email to the Times. âAnyone that would claim that I donât support female chefs is lying.â
In 1933, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt launched the tradition of assessing the first 100 days of new leadership when during a speech he offered it up as a good point for reflecting on the status of the newly implemented New Deal. The series of laws, which were quickly passed under his new administration, aimed to end the Great Depression and get the country back on its feet. There is a parallel between the desperate mood of the country 88 years ago when Roosevelt took the reins and when President Joe Biden took leadership this past January in the midst of an ongoing pandemic, a worsening economy and rising racial tensions.Â
One major difference, however, is that there is now a long-overdue focus on the role of Black women in righting the ship.Â
RELATED:Â Biden-Harris Win As Voters Choose To End Trump Chaos
Black women voters and political activists were on the frontline of the effort to elect President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris â candidates who overcame long-held biases about age, gender and race to win their offices. As we assess the work of this historic leadership team at its 100 days mark, itâs also a good time to take a look at how â in light of their growing political influence and visibility–Black women are faring in our efforts to break glass ceilings, increase their presence among the ranks of political and civic leadership, and effect policy.
If recent political history has reminded us of any truth, itâs that progress towards equity and justice doesnât travel in a straight line. Black womenâs efforts to diversify elected leadership have encountered significant resistance, and their achievements in one legislative branch have sometimes resulted in giving up ground in another. For example, Stacey Abramâs nearly successful bid for Georgia governor and Black womenâs increased representation in Congress during the 2018 election triggered a rash of voter suppression bills.
This year â following Black womenâs historic gains as mayors, in the U.S. House and on the presidential ticket â legislative bodies in 47 states have introduced 361 bills aimed at curtailing the voter access measures that are frequently used by Black communities to cast their ballot. And while Black women crashed through a glass ceiling when Harris was sworn in as vice president this January, they are consequently now devoid of representation in the U.S. Senate.Â
Despite these challenges, Black women have made unprecedented gains in occupying elected positions and governmental appointments during the first 100 day of the new leadership that their votes helped to usher in. In addition to Harrisâ historic breakthrough, Black women have again increased their numbers in the U.S. House of Representatives; eight Black women are currently serving as mayors of large cities, including Atlanta, Boston, St. Louis, San Francisco and Washington, DC; the most Black women ever are serving as cabinet and senior staff members in the presidential/vice-presidential administration, and Biden has nominated three Black women to serve on the Federal Court of Appeals.Â
RELATED:Â Why Kamala Harris Becoming Vice President Is Such A Historical Landmark
Assessing how Black women have fared in the first 100 days isnât simply a matter of determining whether theyâve had increased opportunity to step into leadership roles. Itâs also about whether theyâve been able to steady the ship during critical moments as well as advance policies and solutions that are reflective of what voters and communities want and need.Â
For years, Black women and their allies have argued that greater diversity in government brings not only representational parity but also more effective solutions. Today, we can see multiple ways that Black womenâs increased political power is allowing them to show up in important ways. As vice president, Harris has advanced her quest to end disparities in Black womenâs maternal health outcomes. She also has cast more early-term tie-breaking votes in the Senate than any other vice president, facilitating the passage of bills to support the countryâs recovery from the coronavirus pandemic and the confirmation of a defense-policy cabinet member. Now, she has been tasked with finding solutions to the nationâs border crisis, an issue that she previously took on as California Attorney General.Â
Black womenâs leadership is showing up in other areas of government as well. In the wake of former police officer Derek Chauvinâs murder of another unarmed Black person, Rep. Karen Bass is leading the national effort to end police brutality through her sponsorship of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Bill or H.R.7120 – 116th Congress (2019-2020): George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020. New York Attorney General Leticia James and Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney Fani Willis are pursuing their investigations into the Trump administrationâs likely financial and election abuses despite a waning interest in the difficult work of holding the former president accountable. In New York City, newly appointed School Chancellor Meisha Porteris taking on the challenging job of dismantling intractable desegregation of the cityâs public school system.
These recent gains are the result of years of work to make space for Black womenâs voices and leadership. Still, some areas of leadership have remained elusive. No Black woman has served on the U.S. Supreme Court and their absence in the Senate means Black women and the issues they champion lack deeply informed representation in two of the federal governmentâs three branches.
Additionally, no Black woman has ever served as governor. There are opportunities on the horizon to close these gaps, however, including a gubernatorial race in Virginia in 2021 and a possible run in 2022 by Stacey Abrams for Georgia governor. Black women are also eyeing possible Senate runs in Florida, North Carolina and Ohio, and Biden has committed to nominating a Black woman to the Supreme Court should the opportunity present itself.Â
While the first 100 days have offered a promising hint of how Black womenâs increased participation at all levels of government can benefit the country, the push to finally and permanently remove barriers to their leadership in all areas of government must continue far beyond these early days. Â
Glynda Carr is President and CEO of Higher Heights is the only national organization providing Black women with a political home exclusively dedicated to harnessing their power to expand Black womenâs elected representation and voting participation and advance progressive policies. For additional information please visit https://www.higherheightsforamerica.org. Â
0:12 how to make caramel for desserts
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Can the fourth season of The Handmaidâs Tale TV show get any darker? As we all know, the Nielsen ratings typically play a big role in determining whether a TV show like The Handmaidâs Tale is cancelled or renewed for season five. Hulu and other streaming platforms, however, collect their own data. If youâve been watching this TV series, weâd love to know how you feel about the fourth season episodes of The Handmaidâs Tale here.
A Hulu drama based on the Margaret Atwood novel, The Handmaidâs Tale stars Elisabeth Moss, Joseph Fiennes, Yvonne Strahovski, Samira Wiley, Alexis Bledel, Ann Dowd, Max Minghella, Madeline Brewer, O-T Fagbenle, Amanda Brugel, Bradley Whitford, and Sam Jaeger. The dystopian tale tells the story of life under the totalitarian government of Gilead, a totalitarian society in what was formerly the United States. Offred (Moss), one of the few fertile women known as Handmaids in the oppressive Republic of Gilead, struggles to survive as a reproductive surrogate for a powerful Commander and his resentful wife. In season four, Offred strikes back against Gilead as a fierce rebel leader, but the risks she takes bring unexpected and dangerous new challenges. Her quest for justice and revenge threatens to consume her and destroy her most cherished relationships.
What do you think? Which season four episodes of the The Handmaidâs Tale TV series do you rate as wonderful, terrible, or somewhere between? Are you glad that The Handmaidâs Tale on Hulu has been renewed for a fifth season? Donât forget to vote, and share your thoughts, below.
“Call My Name” from ‘Musicology’ (2004)
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Along with James Corden reprising his Peter Rabbit duties, there are plenty of other familiar faces back for Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway, including, on the voice acting front, Margot Robbie, Elizabeth Debicki, Sia and Colin Moody. Oh, and letâs not forget Domhnall Gleeson and Rose Byrne, who, in addition to voicing Mr. Jeremy Fisher and Jemima Puddle-Duck, respectively, will also return as Thomas and Bea McGregor. Itâs also worth mentioning that while we wonât see Sam Neill back as Mr. McGregor in The Runaway, he will vocally reprise Tommy Brock in the Sony Pictures feature.