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Tough As Nails TV Show on CBS: Season Two Viewer Votes – canceled + renewed TV shows

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Tough As Nails TV show on CBS: canceled or renewed for season 3?

(CBS)

Who will take home a new truck filled with cash in the second season of the Tough As Nails TV show on CBS? As we all know, the Nielsen ratings typically play a big role in determining whether a TV show like Tough As Nails is cancelled or renewed for season three. Unfortunately, most of us do not live in Nielsen households. Because many viewers feel frustration when their viewing habits and opinions aren’t considered, we invite you to rate all of the second season episodes of Tough As Nails here.

A CBS competition series, the Tough As Nails TV show is hosted by Phil Keoghan. The series celebrates everyday Americans who roll up their sleeves and don’t think twice about working long hard hours and getting their hands dirty, in order to keep their country running. In the show, competitors consider the calluses on their hands a badge of honor and are tested for their strength, endurance, life skills and, most importantly, mental toughness in challenges that take place at real-world job sites. Even after they “punch out” of the individual competition, they will have the opportunity to win additional prizes in the team competitions that continue throughout the season. At the end of the season, the winning individual contestant will be crowned as the Tough as Nails champion and will win a $200,000 cash prize and a new 2021 Ford F150 truck.

What do you think? Which season two episodes of the Tough As Nails TV series do you rate as wonderful, terrible, or somewhere between? Do you think that Tough As Nails should be cancelled or renewed for a third season on CBS? Don’t forget to vote, and share your thoughts, below.

Annie Lennox – I Put A Spell On You

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Nostalgia – the new album from Annie Lennox is OUT NOW! Order exclusive print bundles here:
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Music video by Annie Lennox performing I Put A Spell On You. (C) 2014 La Lennoxa Limited, under exclusive licence to Island Records, a division of Island Records
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#AnnieLennox #IPutASpellOnYou #Vevo #Pop #VevoOfficial

Nikka Costa – Out Here On My Own (Official Music Video)

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Nikka Costa’s career as a recording artist under her own name started in 1981, when she recorded the song “(Out Here) On My Own” (from the musical Fame). The single, recorded in Milan with the conductor Victor Bach and produced by Besquet and Renis, spent fourteen weeks at number 1 in Italy, nine weeks at number 1 in Spain, and five weeks at number 1 in France. The song also reached number 7 in Switzerland and number 32 in the Netherlands.

Brad Pitt-Led Bullet Train Adds Sandra Bullock to Ensemble Roster

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Brad Pitt-Led Bullet Train Adds Sandra Bullock to Ensemble Roster

Brad Pitt-led Bullet Train adds Sandra Bullock to ensemble roster

Just when it seemed like David Leitch’s Bullet Train had finished rounding out its ensemble roster, Deadline has brought word that the Brad Pitt-led cast has continued to expand with the addition of Oscar winner Sandra Bullock (Ocean’s 8), marking the first time the two actors have worked together.

RELATED: Latin Grammy Winner Bad Bunny Joins David Leitch’s Bullet Train

Bullet Train will mark the eighth collaboration between Leitch and Pitt, who first worked together in 1999 on Fight Club on which Leitch worked as an uncredited stunt double for Pitt, followed by 2001’s The Mexican, Ocean’s Eleven and Spy Game, the latter two in which he doubled again for Pitt and helped coordinate the martial arts stunts on the Tony Scott-helmed film. Leitch would once again double for Pitt in 2004’s Troy and 2005’s Mr. & Mrs. Smith and would later reunite with the star in 2018’s Deadpool 2, in which Pitt cameoed as Vanisher and Leitch directed.

Plot details for the film are currently being kept under wraps, but it is based on the Japanese novel Maria Beetle by Isaka Kotaro. The cast for the film, led by Pitt, already includes Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Kick-Ass), Andrew Koji (Warrior), Joey King (The Lie), Brian Tyree Henry (Atlanta), Zazie Beetz (Deadpool 2), Michael Shannon (The Shape of Water), Logan Lerman (Hunters), Hiroyuki Sanada (The Wolverine), Masi Oka (Spies in Disguise) and Bad Bunny (American Sole).

On top of directing, Leitch will supervise the script written by Zak Olkewicz (Fear Street). Leitch and Kelly McCormick will produce the project via their company 87North along with Antoine Fuqua (The Magnificent Seven, Training Day, The Equalizer) and Kat Samick (The Equalizer, Southpaw, Infinite). Ryosuke Saegusa and Yuma Terada are executive producing in behalf of Kotaro. Brittany Morrissey is the executive overseeing the film for Sony Pictures.

RELATED: David Leitch-Helmed Bullet Train Adds Lady Gaga to Cast

Leitch and McCormick recently signed a first-look deal at Universal and produced the action film Nobody, starring Better Call Saul’s Bob Odenkirk, which is slated for a February 26, 2021 release. The duo is also developing a biopic of Jutta Kleinschmidt, the first and only woman to win the brutal off-road endurance race known as The Dakar Rally, as well as the rights to her book My Victory at Dakar.

(Photo Credit: Annette Riedl/picture alliance via Getty Images)



Bishu & Dani King Drop Bubbly New Bass Track, “Worst Behavior,” On Monstercat

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Bishu returns to Monstercat following his last single, “City” feat. Sophie Strauss, this time teaming up with Dani King for the bubbly new track, “Worst Behavior.” Still within the pop realm, this new track adds an extra layer of fun atop the production and emotive vocals.

Dani King, in particular, has had an incredible past year, putting out collaborations left and right and appearing on labels like Subsidia, Killabyte, NCS, Elysian, and more.

Bishu shares, “’Worst Behaviour’ is probably one of my most unique songs and favourite musically. Haven’t heard anything like it. Went through multiple versions to arrive at the current, super stoked on it.”

Dani King adds, “’Worst Behaviour’ is equal parts cheeky and self realizing. This song will make you want to dance while you contemplate your life choices.”

Check it out below!



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Teena Marie Tribute show

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Interview with music industry professional and long time fan of R and B groundbreaker Teena Marie.

Thirty minute tribute to the life music and legacy of rhythm and blues pioneer Teena Marie.
Show features interviews and rememberances of the gifted performer composer arranger entertainer.
Originally broadcast on www.mixmastertlc.com on December 31st 2010.
Produced by Jon Champion

Manuel Valera JAZZ HOUSE KiDS teaching artist and Cuban Jazz Pianist

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Join Manuel Valera for JAZZ HOUSE KiDS Latin Jazz class. Students will learn core rhythms from the rich heritage of Afro-Caribbean and South American styles. This fun and challenging class explores a variety of styles that enable you to play with players and ensembles from different backgrounds.

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The Lucas Brothers Discuss the Philosophy Behind Their Film, Judas and the Black Messiah

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The Lucas Brothers. Photo by Brian Friedman.

Together, the twin brothers Kenny and Keith Lucas have come a long way. Born in Newark, New Jersey, the 35-year-old Lucas Brothers, as they are affectionately known, studied philosophy in college before enrolling in law school (Keith at Duke, Kenny at NYU). Before graduating, though, they both dropped out of their degree programs and took up stand-up comedy, often performing side-by-side, finishing each other’s sentences with dry wit.

Since those early days, the Lucas Brothers have earned spots at top comedy festivals, created a cartoon for FX (Lucas Bros. Moving Co.), acted in shows like Lady Dynamite, and, most recently, written the screenplay for the much-anticipated Fred Hampton biopic, Judas and the Black Messiah, starring LaKeith Stanfield and Daniel Kaluuya. We caught up with the Lucas Brothers to ask them about the film, what philosophical dilemmas they may have had to unpack while doing so, what it’s like to work with your twin.

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KEITH: Shall we start at the beginning and talk about our roles on the film and what it was like to work with stars like Ryan Coogler, Dominique Fishback, LaKeith Stanfield and Daniel Kaluuya? 

KENNY: That’s a great idea, Keith! We’d been toying with the idea of trying to get a Fred Hampton movie made. We just kept kicking around the idea. We knew we didn’t want it to be in the traditional biopic formula. So, we dug deep and we found out about William O’Neal who was an informant for the FBI, a part of the “Ghetto Informant Program” that was started by Hoover and the FBI in the ’60s to help, you know, neutralize radical movements. We were overwhelmed by his story and so we put together the initial treatment of the movie based on William O’Neal’s perspective. We pitched it around town to see if there would be any suitors and we didn’t really land anything. So, we hooked up with Shaka [King], who is the director and also co-writer of the film, and we just hammered out a more detailed story treatment for the film. We also acted as producers on the film. The whole experience was one of those things that, like, you see films one way and then you go through this process and you come through it seeing film in an entirely different perspective and I think it’s fundamentally altered my relationship to film and writing and production tremendously. 

KEITH: Can you elaborate on that?

KENNY: Our relationship with film prior to this process was one of interest. We had acted in films so we understood it from that perspective to some degree, but we always had a fascination with, “What is it like to be a part of the entire process of filmmaking?” From conception of the idea to the development of the idea to pre-production to production to editing to release. Before this process, if I knew of a film that, say, got poor reviews, I’d probably shit on the film. But now I’m like, “Well, what went into the process? How much did they sacrifice before it came out?” I’m just a little bit more respectful to the process than I was prior to it. 

KEITH: Me too. 

KENNY: How do you think us being twins helped us to understand the story of Fred Hampton and William O’Neal?

KEITH: Even from the conception of the idea, that duality was baked in. We had an opportunity to study philosophy in college and one philosopher that really played a huge role in shaping how we approach comedy and drama and everything that we write was Hegel. He speaks a lot about the Hegelian Dilemma. And what was the
?

KENNY: The dialectic.

KEITH: Yes, the dialectic and the synthesis. You know, antithesis and the thesis and bringing those two things together to make a synthesis. I think that’s what we were trying to do with the film itself. Fred represents idealism. He represents a certain aspect of freedom and wishes for a more idealistic viewpoint. And Bill represents—

KENNY: Nihilism.

KEITH: Yeah, almost. Just a complete lack of feeling toward a cause. So, we thought if you smash those two things together, you get a better understanding of how folks were living. I think with a lot of films, sometimes they take it from the perspective of the idealistic person. You hardly ever get the viewpoint of the Bill O’Neals.

KENNY: The cynic.

KEITH: Especially with Black films. And we felt like this would be an opportunity to show that viewpoint because it was just as—I don’t want to say just as important, but it was certainly there. I would argue that the idealistic radical is way more, as far as being from an inner-city—

KENNY: It’s less common. 

KEITH: Yeah, idealism is less common. You definitely get, especially where we come from, there’s a lot of cynicism. There’s a lot of nihilism. There’s a lot of apathy. Again, I don’t think that’s often portrayed in cinema, especially from the Black experience. I get it, you want to be more hopeful with the movies that you make. But if you want to depict in a realistic fashion what that viewpoint is, you have to show the other side. I think that us being twins and being philosophy majors and arguing back and forth and always having multiple viewpoints when we approach things certainly helped shape the story. 

KENNY: It did. 

KEITH: Kenny, how do you think growing up in Newark influenced your understanding of the story and even of the Black Panther Party itself?

KENNY: Growing up in Newark, right from birth, you’re inundated with Black radicalism at every level.

KEITH: Yeah, I mean, it’s the home of Amiri Baraka. He was the founder of the Black Arts Movement. His ethos shapes the city. 

KENNY: That certainly played a huge factor. I remember when I was maybe seven, we spoke in school about King’s assassination and we were shown pictures of the funeral and you’re taught about the difficulties of being an African-American in America in Newark from an early age. Then you look around your city and you see that it’s dilapidated and you see crime and  all these things. So that also reinforces your perspective of that relationship between being a Black man and being an American. Are we full citizens? Because if we are full citizens, then why are we living in such squalor? Why are our basic rights not respected like others? So, it’s either you’re not a full citizen or you’re some sort of other. You feel it instantly when you’re in Newark. There’s a lot of hope in Newark but there is also a ton of cynicism.

KEITH: Right.

KENNY: Being in Newark, that’s how our philosophy developed. You have that hopeful exuberance but always creeping underneath you is a level of apathy. Again, I think if we weren’t from Newark, we wouldn’t have been able to come up with this story. Because I don’t think we would have understood someone like Bill O’Neal. But being from Newark allowed us to both understand Fred and Bill, which then helped shape the story. 

KEITH: Kenny, did your view of the world change in any way as a result of writing the film?

KENNY: That’s a great question, Keith! My thesis in college was about liberty. In particular, I studied John Stuart Mill’s conception of liberty and I analyzed it in the sense of whether or not he commits himself to a positive interpretation of liberty or is it a negative interpretation of liberty, as articulated by Isaiah Berlin. So, in the film, that’s a central conflict. Hampton’s conception of liberty is almost certainly positive. You have to enrich people to get to a point where they understand that they’re not slaves and that they can


KEITH: I mean, he says it. Once you have free healthcare, once you have free education, you free yourself. 

KENNY: Right. That’s a more positive version of liberty, whereas I would say Bill is more in the grain of the negative conception of liberty. If you have money, if you’re free of your indictments, if you’re free of criminal charges, you’ve attained a level of freedom. It’s all about money for Bill. And I think that’s indicative of America’s struggle with liberty. Is it more of a positive conception of liberty or is it a negative conception of liberty? 

KEITH: Yes. 

KENNY: You see that battle playing out right now. You have someone like Trump who is squarely committed to a more negative version of liberty. Trying to avoid arrest, over-valuing money. Then you have someone like AOC, who believes in free healthcare, free medicine, free education. These are the things that are going to make people whole. That’s a battle that is inextricable to the American way. I think it plays out profoundly between Bill and Fred. If you watched our cartoon, it’s certainly a little bit more nihilistic. I mean, we speak a lot about death and we talk a lot about just giving up. We couch it in terms of comedy but that was pretty much our philosophy. 

KEITH: Right. 

KENNY: “Happy nihilism,” as someone said. We were committed to it. But after going through this process and learning more about Fred and his commitment to the people and his willingness to sacrifice his life for the betterment of others, it changed me profoundly. And then being on set and seeing all of these people commit to this project in a way I’d never seen people commit to a project, it was very spiritual. I certainly, after going through the filmmaking process, have rejected nihilism. I just have more faith in people. People committing themselves to something bigger than themselves. And especially after Trump—that’s what nihilism gets you.

KEITH: Right. 

KENNY: The end result is the Trump administration. And I don’t want my philosophy to be associated with something that led to Trump. It’s better for humans to just be more hopeful, to reach out to others, to try to help people and be committed to uplifting all. 

KEITH: That’s what Fred was all about.

KENNY: I never appreciated our Democratic ideals as much as I do now after seeing the assault on Capitol Hill. I’m like, “Oh, now I get why we care so much about these ideals. Because they can be taken.” They’re not guaranteed. There’s no guarantee for them to be bestowed upon us. We have the cherish them. Yeah, nihilism is a simplistic worldview, in my opinion.

KEITH: I think it is very simplistic. 

KENNY: What did you think about the movie’s ending? With the use of that documentary footage of Bill talking about Fred years later? 

KEITH: Once we discovered that interview, we were doing a lot of research. We didn’t have video footage of it. We just had the transcript. You know, he outlined the story, and we were like, “Oh man, this is fascinating! He says a lot of things, but you just don’t know how he really feels about it.”

KENNY: Yes, we found an article in the Chicago Tribune from 1990, I believe, and it was Bill’s uncle speaking about the accident. He says something that I thought was pretty, not fascinating, but it stuck with me. He said Bill could no longer deal with the weight of what he did to Fred. On Martin Luther King Day, he kills himself. I mean, that could not have happened in a vacuum. There’s no way he would decide to take his own life on that day after the interview drops after he cleared his conscience and revealed that he was the informant that got Fred killed. I think he was deeply overwhelmed by it. 

KEITH: So, Shaka was able to find the actual interview, the full thing. When we’re watching this interview, we’re just floored because we’re just looking at his eyes and how shifty he is and how he’s just like saying all these things, but once you find out he kills himself, you’re like, oh, this is his plea. This is his final call, essentially. We were like, “We have to put that in the movie.” People need to see the actual man. You’ve seen this picture of him but you need to see the actual man and hear his actual words. The last frame and the last thing that he says, it’s just like, this guy has lost his fucking mind. He believes he’s committed himself to a cause, but then you’re like, what cause did he commit himself to? When you find out he killed himself, it’s like, oh yeah, he was fucked up. He didn’t know what he believed in. We just thought that would be a powerful way to conclude. 

KENNY: We called it Judas and the Black Messiah, and the title was a direct nod to the Judas of the Jesus story, who kills himself. We were borrowing from that. 

KEITH: It felt very biblical. 

KENNY: He’s a character that’s going to be hard for people to sympathize with, but knowing that he did kill himself at the end
 well, maybe he felt some sort of guilt for what he did. 

KEITH: Yeah.

KENNY: Do you think Bill’s hand was forced, in the end?

KEITH: I used to think about it like that, but now I always think that Fred was also young. He was also given a prison sentence and instead of betraying his crew, he was willing to take his time. So, I don’t want to take all of Bill’s agency away from him. I don’t want to make it seem like it was just a patsy or a pawn. He made some shitty choices and his hand was forced. But there comes a time when you have to make the right choice or make the wrong choice. Clearly, his decision-making led him to eventually kill himself. 

KENNY: It did.

KEITH: Kenny, there’s some Oscar talk about this movie these days. What do you think about that?

KENNY: You know, I’m torn. Because on the one hand, I want the film to reach the highest level of artistic achievement possible in order to not only spread the message of Fred, but also to lend some validation to the process that we undertook in order to get the film made. So, I can see why people want the award. Also, for pragmatic reasons, you get more money and you get more prestige. But then on the other hand, well, Fred wouldn’t care. It seems so weird to tell a story about Fred Hampton and then to also care about being validated in a capitalistic way with metal. 

KEITH: Right. And with that said, we have a profound respect for the Academy and we are students of the Academy. We watched the Oscars with our mom growing up. It’s just something that’s part of our identity. We’re super honored that folks are even talking about this movie. And Fred was a committed socialist. He didn’t care about awards and money and material. So, you don’t want to get caught in that trap. But on the same level, I think his story and this movie warrants that sort of recognition. And if it was to happen, we would be deeply, deeply honored. 

KENNY: Absolutely. We get asked this question a lot, so let me just ask you and end it here: What is it like to work together and share in the work with me, as your twin brother? 

KEITH: It’s sacred. I mean, I hate to sound so clichĂ© or like a greeting card, but it’s the reason why we do it. When we began this process, we dropped out of law school and we didn’t know where this journey was going to take us. We had no idea that we’d be here at this very moment. But the beauty of it all is that I get to work with my brother.

KENNY: Me, too!

KEITH: That was the underlying reason why I was so committed to the journey. We could still just be doing standup, and I think I would be thankful that I get to work with my brother in so many different arenas. We get to do so much together and I think that the journey would have been a lonely one with just me. Having you with me allows for me to appreciate this process even more.

KENNY: I look back at the journey and I look at where we are now and I look at the film coming out and I see people interpreting the film, and they talk about certain reference points. They talk about The Assassination of Jesse James, I’ve seen references to Sydney Lumet. Then I think about all the times we just sat down and watched those movies years ago together. It’s so weird to be able to interpret a piece of our art while talking about things that we did just as brothers before we were even in the business. It becomes surreal and full-circle. It’s just crazy how it all works. Having someone like you to share the journey with makes it even more unreal. To be able to just talk to you about these things from childbirth until now, it’s incredible. 

KEITH: It’s one of those things that hardly ever happens, and the fact that we get to share in this moment is just remarkable to me. We’re twins, we’re close, we do everything together. But to be able to reflect on our work and to collaborate with others, too, together, I think is just a beautiful thing. 



How COVID Accelerated a Fight Against Food Deserts in NYC

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Photo: Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket via Getty Images

When Anna Rodríguez woke up one morning in December 2019, she saw a black cloud over her right eye. Until then, the 54-year-old had ignored a diagnosis of prediabetes that she’d received a decade earlier; she had not taken medicine on a regular basis, she had not exercised, and she had not paid attention to her doctor’s warning about the importance of healthy food. But that morning, Rodríguez began experiencing one of the first symptoms of diabetic retinopathy, a complication of diabetes and one of the leading causes of blindness.

Rodríguez’s diet was heavy on fast food, easy to grab after her job as a technical designer at a clothing cooperative. “I was tired after 13 hours of work,” she says. “It was the easiest and fastest thing there was. I ate to go to bed.” She recalls the distressing words of the retina expert who examined her: “You are dripping blood from the retina. This must be your diabetes. If you don’t change your food habits you are going to go blind.”

Certainly, diabetes was not unexpected among the women in her Dominican family; all of her aunts had it. “But none of them was losing an eye to the disease,” she says.

Rodríguez heard about a talk that a physician named Diego Ponieman gave in East Harlem. Ponieman — an Argentinian physician who was part of SOMOS Community Care, a network of local Latino primary physicians — treated Medicaid patients like her. Ponieman was well known among Latinos diagnosed with obesity, diabetes, and hypertension. He offered something rare: attention in Spanish, cultural competence, and treatment with an emphasis on prevention rather than disease intervention. He promoted a lifestyle based on less processed food and more plant-based nutrition. “And I wanted to learn to eat well,” says Rodríguez.

Ponieman explains that Rodríguez’s circumstances are not unique, and that the struggle to combat the effects of food deserts — neighborhoods in which residents have a difficult time finding healthy and affordable food, including vegetables and fruit — is ongoing. He also says that the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the problem. In fact, New York City’s Latino community has been disproportionately affected by COVID-19 due in part to social inequality: Almost half live in poverty and suffer from higher rates of obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and low immunity — preexisting conditions that are likely the result of chronic poor nutrition.

Ponieman has seen the urgency to combat the virus creating more interest in better diets, too. “People are afraid 
 terrified,” he says. “It is an opportunity for transformation. Never before has there been so much momentum — but it’s fighting a monster.”

That fight can be not only about battling harsh economic circumstances, but also about breaking long-held approaches to eating, which were sometimes learned while growing up. Rodríguez says that she remembers her mother, Marina, loving to cook — though without factoring in the food’s potential nutritional value. “In my house there were no vegetables,” Rodríguez says, “although there was a lot of rice, a lot of potatoes.” Marina, who raised Rodríguez as a single mother, emigrated to the United States from the Dominican Republic in the 1960s. Like many Dominicans who have arrived in New York City without knowing the language, she went through periods of great scarcity and economic difficulty. Today, Rodríguez realizes that these experiences could perhaps explain her mother’s tendency to overfeed her: “My mother forced me to eat: ‘Eat, eat, eat!’ In her own childhood, she was so hungry that she didn’t want me to go ever through the same thing.”

While SOMOS handles medical interventions, a group called Plant Powered Metro New York works to actually help people eat better. Lianna Levine Reisner, the founder of PPMNY, says that in recent months the group has focused its efforts on the Latino community, precisely due to the dire number of individuals affected by the pandemic. “We want them to know that there is more that they can do than just washing their hands or wearing a mask or staying away from people,” she explains. “They can also eat differently to change how their bodies are able to meet and greet a new virus.”

In the past year, Latina volunteers have taken an increasingly active role in the group. Aifra Ruiz, a Dominican from Harlem; and Marta Gomez-Bolaños, a Salvadoran from the Bronx, organize Zoom talks every Thursday at 7 p.m. Attendees can watch recipe workshops and food demos, with information about the health benefits of plant-based and whole foods, all led in Spanish by local doctors, nurses, dietitians, and chefs.

During one session, Lilian Correa, a registered dietitian from Peru, says she began to study nutrition after her grandfather developed diabetes upon his arrival in the United States. “As many of us may have noticed, we begin to adopt a diet that is not our usual one,” she said in her talk. “Many of us gain weight — it happened to me too and, I imagine, to many of you.” She says that she never wants to talk down to her patients, and that her aim is to get people excited about seeking out fresh ingredients. “It’s not like, ‘I’m going to take anything away from you,’” she explains. “It’s that I’m going to add more vegetables — the palate is going to get used to it, your body is going to adapt.”

MarĂ­a JosĂ© Hummel, a Chilean nutritionist who participated in a Zoom presentation for the organization a few months ago, says she wants to help people reduce their reliance on processed foods in order to rediscover the healthier staples of traditional diets —whole grains, legumes — and to integrate the kinds of dishes once enjoyed by her grandparents and other Latinos of their generation.

“It is not the virus that does the damage,” Ponieman says. “It is the body’s response to the virus. It’s inflammation and [immune system] that responds so wildly.” Even with the arrival of the vaccine, there is no time to waste. “These diseases are here to stay,” he continues. “It is time to work so that the next outbreak finds this population more prepared.”

Rodríguez, for one, is grateful. In recent months, she has tried to continue healthy eating routines, and has followed the talks and online events. “You also learn by listening to one another, asking questions,” she says. When she met with family members for the first time after several months of quarantine, they were shocked to see that she had lost more than 50 pounds. Her family asked her about her vision. “My eyes,” Rodríguez answered, “are seeing clearer again.”

Muriel AlarcĂłn Luco is a Pulitzer Center Reporting Fellow.



DONKMASTER & COUNTRY C VS GONE HOLLYWOOD GRUDGE RACE – Donk Racing 2019

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DONKMASTER & COUNTRY C VS GONE HOLLYWOOD GRUDGE RACE – Donk Racing 2019

For the first time ever , Gone Hollywood and Hollywood Kustoms brings the Undefeated ‘Pocahontas’ 73 Caprice outside of Florida to race the Carolina Cantaloupe, built by Donkmaster and In & Out Customs, at the Anybody Can Get It Grudge Fest in Darlington, South Carolina. This race really shook things up in the Donk Racing world !

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