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  • There’s gentleness and food for thought in an often violent ’40 Acres’

    AILSA CHANG, HOST:

    When people talk about family farms being endangered, they usually mean that farmers are struggling with the economics of modern agribusiness. But the movie thriller “40 Acres” imagines a more physical danger. The film is set in a world of famine, violence and lots of guns. You will hear the guns in critic Bob Mondello’s review, but he says the film also provides food for thought.

    BOB MONDELLO, BYLINE: The first images are of heavily armed intruders penetrating the perimeter of the Freeman family farm. Words onscreen tell us that it’s 14 years since a fungal pandemic wiped out 98% of the world’s animals, 12 years since a war caused by food chain disruption. The world’s population has plummeted due to famine, but this little plot of land in rural Canada owned by a Black family that moved here after the American Civil War is an oasis of plenty, hence the intruders. A few approach the front of the house openly…

    (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “40 ACRES”)

    UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #1: (As character) Greetings. It’s a nice little farm you’ve got on this piece of land.

    MONDELLO: …While others sneak around the barn into the cornfield and discover the Freeman family, mostly women and children, is ready with knives…

    (SOUNDBITE OF STABBING)

    MONDELLO: …And hatchets…

    (SOUNDBITE OF AXE SPINNING)

    MONDELLO: …And finally gunfire.

    (SOUNDBITE OF GUNFIRE)

    MONDELLO: They were ready because Hailey Freeman, played with steely resolve by Danielle Deadwyler, and her partner Galen, played by Michael Greyeyes, have brought them up to be. Hailey’s a former soldier, still in radio contact with others.

    (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “40 ACRES”)

    DANIELLE DEADWYLER: (As Hailey Freeman) Freeman 1 to Augusta 24, do you copy?

    MONDELLO: But the news is rarely good.

    (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “40 ACRES”)

    UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #2: (As character) You’ve heard about the attacks by now?

    DEADWYLER: (As Hailey Freeman) Thought your Union Army was going to come and take care of that.

    UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #2: (As character) They’re not. They’re dead.

    MONDELLO: So Hailey runs the farm as if she were its commanding officer, her kids cadets.

    (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “40 ACRES”)

    DEADWYLER: (As Hailey Freeman) Everybody carries a sidearm and a radio at all times – in the fields, when you sleep, everywhere.

    UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #3: (As character) Some of these people are posing as Union soldiers and workers trying to get information. We can’t trust what anyone says.

    MONDELLO: It is no accident that first-time feature filmmaker R.T. Thorne framed this story around a family that is Black and Indigenous. The older generation doesn’t trust outsiders because they’ve learned from experience that they can’t.

    (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “40 ACRES”)

    DEADWYLER: (As Hailey Freeman) You see anybody, double back, do not engage. These folks’ll kill you for the boots on your feet.

    MONDELLO: But the youngsters who have never known anything but the farm are chafing at their isolation. Seventeen-year-old Manny wonders if the sacrifice they make by being so cut off from the world is worth the safety it ensures.

    (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “40 ACRES”)

    KATAEM O’CONNOR: (As Manny Freeman) If we brought in some help.

    UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #3: (As character) From where?

    KATAEM O’CONNOR: (As Manny Freeman) The network. Other farms. I don’t know.

    UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #3: (As character) Exactly, you don’t know. You got no idea what these people are like out there.

    KATAEM O’CONNOR: (As Manny Freeman) Have you even tried talking to them?

    DEADWYLER: (As Hailey Freeman) Boy, who the hell you think you’re talking to? You got a roof over your head, food in your belly while half the world’s starving, and you got the nerve to complain about that?

    MONDELLO: But Manny, played by Kataem O’Connor, has ventured outside the farm a few times to trade food for supplies, also to swim in the river. And one day, he sees a young woman there and starts to think, maybe there’s another way to live. The farm’s generational divide is designed to hark back to civil rights and other social movements – veterans deeply skeptical of engagement, a younger cohort convinced that isolation is ultimately limiting. Director Thorne has said in interviews he was putting a dystopian frame on current concerns like food insecurity, an age of Black Lives Matter, indigenous land rights disputes. Though his film is often violent, he’s had the good sense to use a gentler narrative framework to give “40 Acres” its punch – a mother and a son with different ideas on how best to face the end of the world. I’m Bob Mondello.

    (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “SLOW UP”)

    JACOB BANKS: (Singing) What I’ve learned from a soldier, every man is assigned to a daughter. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

    NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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  • Wimbledon relaxes strict dress code to allow Portuguese players to pay tribute to Diogo Jota

    Wimbledon relaxes strict dress code to allow Portuguese players to pay tribute to Diogo Jota


    London
    CNN
     — 

    Portuguese tennis players Francisco Cabral and Nuno Borges were given permission to stray from Wimbledon’s strict all-white dress code to honor the late Liverpool and Portugal soccer star Diogo Jota, they told reporters, including CNN, on Friday.

    Jota died in a car crash in Spain early Thursday morning. He was 28. His brother, André Silva – who was also a professional soccer player – also died in the accident at the age of 25.

    Cabral, who competed in men’s doubles, told CNN Friday that he initially wanted to wear a black armband, but he said he was told that would not be allowed. He was granted approval to wear a small black ribbon instead.

    The AELTC said to CNN in a statement: “We are always open to having conversations with players regarding such matters, and given the tragic circumstances, the Referee’s Office has approved the players wearing a black ribbon as a mark of respect and condolence.”

    Cabral, ranked 40th in the world in doubles, won his first-round match Thursday but fell in the second round Friday with his playing partner Lucas Miedler of Austria.

    “Yesterday, I came up with the idea of wearing a black strap, but that was not allowed,” Cabral said. “The players’ relations, they had a black ribbon, and I asked for permission.
    They let me play with it and I just did it this morning.

    “It was an honor. It’s not for the best reason. But yeah, he was not only an inspiration to me but for the country in general, he meant so much in the sport. He conquered so much in his life. So it was just an honor for me to try and help, if only 1% for the family and everybody.”

    Later Friday, in the men’s singles draw, Portugal’s Nuno Borges – with a black ribbon affixed on his white cap – lost to Russian and No. 17 seed Karen Khachanov in five sets.

    After the match, Borges said that he had initially hoped to walk out on court in a full red Portugal top, but his team was told that would not be allowed.

    Instead, he opted for the same small black ribbon worn by Cabral.

    “I think it was a nice gesture for him (Jota). He was a great footballer, it’s a tragedy,” Borges said.

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  • Critical Sudo bugs expose major Linux distros to local Root exploits

    Critical Sudo bugs expose major Linux distros to local Root exploits

    Critical Sudo bugs expose major Linux distros to local Root exploits

    Pierluigi Paganini
    July 04, 2025

    Critical Sudo flaws let local users gain root access on Linux systems, the vulnerabilities affect major Linux distributions.

    Cybersecurity researchers disclosed two vulnerabilities in the Sudo command-line utility for Linux and Unix-like operating systems. Local attackers can exploit the vulnerabilities to escalate privileges to root on affected systems.

    Sudo (short for “superuser do”) is a command-line utility found in Unix and Linux systems. It lets a permitted user run commands with the security privileges of another user, most commonly the root user (the system’s most powerful administrative account).

    Below is the description of the two vulnerabilities:

    • CVE-2025-32462 (CVSS score: 2.8) – Sudo before 1.9.17p1, when used with a sudoers file that specifies a host that is neither the current host nor ALL, allows listed users to execute commands on unintended machines.
    • CVE-2025-32463 (CVSS score: 9.3) – Sudo before 1.9.17p1 allows local users to obtain root access because /etc/nsswitch.conf from a user-controlled directory is used with the –chroot option.

    The Stratascale Cyber Research Unit (CRU) team discovered both local privilege vulnerabilities.

    CVE-2025-32462 is a critical flaw in the Sudo utility, stemming from the --host option introduced in version 1.8.8 in 2013. Though originally meant only for listing rules (sudo -l), it also worked with other commands like sudoedit. In specific enterprise configurations using Host or Host_Alias directives, this oversight lets users run commands with elevated privileges by referencing remote host rules.

    “The Stratascale CRU team discovered that since the introduction of the host option in 2013, executing a sudo or sudoedit command with the host option referencing an unrelated remote host rule causes Sudo to treat the rule as valid for the local system. As a result, any command allowed by the remote host rule can be executed on the local machine.” reads the report published by Stratascale.”Even though the production server is explicitly denied for the lowpriv user, root access is achieved by specifying the host option for the development server.”

    The issue was addressed with a patch that limits the --host option to listing only.

    “Sudo’s -R (–chroot) option is intended to allow the user to run a command with a user-selected root directory if the sudoers file allows it. A change was made in sudo 1.9.14 to resolve paths via chroot() using the user-specified root adirectory while the sudoers file was still being evaluated. It is possible for an attacker to trick sudo into loading an arbitrary shared library by creating an /etc/nsswitch.conf file under the user-specified root directory.” reads the advisory published by Sudo project maintainers. “The change from sudo 1.9.14 has been reverted in sudo 1.9.17p1 and the chroot feature has been marked as deprecated. It will be removed entirely in a future sudo release. Because of the way sudo resolves commands, supporting a user-specified chroot directory is error-prone and this feature does not appear to be widely used.”

    On April 1st, 2025, Rich Mirch from Stratascale Cyber Research Unit (CRU) reported the vulnerability to Sudo maintainer Todd Miller. On June 23, 2025 a patch was sent to operating system distros list. Sudo advisory links confirmed.

    Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

    Pierluigi Paganini

    (SecurityAffairs – hacking, Sudo)




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  • Netball victory

    Netball victory

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    In a nation where sports infrastructure remains underfunded and many disciplines struggle to find mainstream recognition, Pakistan’s youth continue to carve out remarkable stories of triumph on the global stage.

    The latest testament to this tenacity came from South Korea, where Pakistan’s U-16 girls’ netball team clinched the Asian Youth Netball Championship title with a resounding 60-35 win over the Maldives in the final. Staying undefeated throughout the tournament, the team has brought home the trophy in triumph.

    Netball, like many other sports in Pakistan, exists in the shadows of cricket. Government support is negligible, sponsorships are rare, and media coverage is minimal. Athletes often pay out of pocket for training or rely on passionate coaches working in difficult conditions.

    Yet, results like these show that the raw talent and commitment of Pakistan’s youth is not in question. What is in question is whether the country is willing to invest in its sporting future. A national sports policy that focuses on development at the school and grassroots levels is urgently needed. Support for women’s sports must also move beyond tokenism to structured programs and facilities.

    The fact that the Prime Minister and the Pakistan Embassy in Seoul publicly congratulated the team is encouraging, but mere praise must translate into policy. These victories should serve as a wake-up call for the country’s sports authorities to expand their focus beyond a few marquee sports.

    We must invest in grassroots development and offer platforms for youth to compete, both locally and internationally. The talent is clearly there. What is now needed is a system that catches up to the ambition of these budding athletes to realise their true potential and have them perform at the global stage.

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  • New Zealand standing tall in first ever U19WC Semis

    New Zealand standing tall in first ever U19WC Semis

    LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – New Zealand wrote another chapter in their recent youth basketball history by reaching the Semi-Finals of the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 – their first-ever top four finish in the competition.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be crowned U19 World Cup 2025 champions?

    The Junior Tall Blacks spoiled the party in Lausanne as they beat hosts Switzerland 84-70 to set up a date with United States in the Semi-Finals.

    “It means a lot”, said Oscar Goodman, one of the players tonight for New Zealand. “Basketball has been on the rise for the last five years. It keeps getting bigger every day, and this just shows we can compete with the best teams in the world.”

    “It’s amazing. I am so proud of the group. We all stuck together, got it done and are now moving it.”

    New Zealand gained control of the game with 24-9 run spanning the second and third quarters. And the Oceanians led 67-56 after 30 minutes. New Zealand were ahead 77-64 with under 3 minutes when the Swiss crowd tried to give them one more push – similiar to the 18-0 run late in the Round of 16. But New Zealand would not be denied.

    Hayden Jones was exceptionnal in the second half and scored 23 points with 9 rebounds and 5 assists. Julius Halaifonua scored 17 points and Oscar Goodman had 13 points and 13 rebounds for an efficiency rating of 26.

    Switzerland’s Cinderella run ends here. The Hosts left it all on the floor.

    Jones and Goodman were part of more New Zealand magic last summer in reaching the Semi-Finals of the FIBA U17 Basketball World Cup 2024 – tying for the best-ever result for the country along with the Tall Blacks finishing fourth at the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2002.

    New Zealand also played against USA last summer – with many players from the 2024 teams playing in Lausanne as well.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be named FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 TISSOT MVP?

    FIBA

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  • iOS 26: What’s Changed With the iPhone’s Home Screen

    iOS 26: What’s Changed With the iPhone’s Home Screen

    Apple’s new Liquid Glass design is noticeable on the Home Screen right when you unlock your iPhone, though the degree of change is customizable. We’ve rounded up everything that’s changed with the ‌iPhone‌’s main interface.

    Liquid Glass Design

    By default, app icons have a layered look with subtle depth, essentially appearing as multiple sheets of glass stacked on one another to create a glass-like translucent look.

    ios 26 home screenios 26 home screen
    Apple created Liquid Glass app icons for apps like Safari, Maps, Photos, the App Store, Mail and more. Third-party app icons are adopting the same aesthetic, and for apps with a simple design on a solid background, no update is needed. Icons like this already have a Liquid Glass look.

    The dock is transparent and blends into the background behind it, and the same goes for the search button. App folders have a frosted glass design that also changes tint based on your wallpaper. When you edit your ‌Home Screen‌, the buttons that you interact with are also transparent.

    Interface elements like the dock, folders, and the search button have a lighting effect that changes when you move your ‌iPhone‌, making them look like real glass.

    Light, Dark and Tinted Modes

    The Liquid Glass effect is apparent in both Light Mode and Dark Mode, with icons continuing to feature the same stacked glass look, just with a lighter or darker background.

    ios 26 home screen standardios 26 home screen standard
    Apple technically changed Light Mode to “Default Mode” in the customization settings where you can adjust color (long press on the display and tap on customize).

    There are new “Always” and “Auto” toggles for enabling permanent Light or Dark styles or adjusting them based on time, and the Small and Large buttons for changing icon size have been relocated to the upper right of the customization interface.

    Tinted mode looks different in iOS 26 than it did in iOS 18. Rather than icons featuring a black background with colored graphics, icons adopt the full color that you select with white graphics in Light Mode. In ‌Dark Mode‌, backgrounds are a much darker shade of the color you choose, but aren’t entirely black.

    ios 26 home screen icon tintios 26 home screen icon tint
    With Tinted icons, the layered glass look isn’t as obvious, but it’s still present.

    Clear Icons

    Apple added a “Clear” icon option in ‌iOS 26‌ that’s available alongside Default, Dark, and Tinted. As the name suggests, Clear has a dramatic Liquid Glass look with icons that are entirely transparent. The icons adopt the color of your wallpaper, with white text and designs.

    ios 26 home screen clear iconsios 26 home screen clear icons
    There are Light and Dark options for the Clear setting. Light looks like frosted glass, while Dark looks like tinted glass. If you want to go all-in on Liquid Glass and have your ‌iPhone‌ look notably different, Clear is the option to choose.

    Widgets

    Widgets have some of the same aesthetic as icons, but on the whole, they don’t look too much different from how they looked in ‌iOS 18‌ in the Default mode.

    ios 26 widgetsios 26 widgets
    With the Clear option turned on, widgets are transparent and have a more cohesive design that matches with your wallpaper.

    Wallpaper

    You can edit your wallpaper directly from the ‌Home Screen‌ in ‌iOS 26‌. Long press on the display and then tap on the new “Edit Wallpaper” option.

    ios 26 wallpaper home screenios 26 wallpaper home screen
    The wallpaper interface lets you change the image that you’re using on the ‌Home Screen‌, but it doesn’t affect the Lock Screen. If you have a photo set as a wallpaper, for example, you can change the color, select a gradient, or choose a photo, plus you can turn blurring for images off or on.

    Wallpaper takes a starring role in ‌iOS 26‌ because it affects the color of the dock, folders, and icons, depending on your settings.

    Control Center

    Control Center adopts Liquid Glass, so while the functionality is the same, the general look is different. Compared to the ‌iOS 18‌ Control Center, the ‌iOS 26‌ version has depth for the icons with the Liquid Glass shifting light effect.

    ios 26 control centerios 26 control center
    The icons are tinted to look like frosted glass, and some of the underlying buttons for adjusting Control Center have been tweaked with the updated look. Icons are a little larger, and some of the bar-shaped icons for volume, brightness, and other settings are rounder.

    Other Home Screen Elements

    The Dynamic Island, Notification Center, long press gestures, and App Library have not changed beyond aesthetics. App Library folders are translucent and the search bar is rounded, and for widgets, there is a glass look of varying intensity depending on your icon color choice.

    ios 26 home screen featuresios 26 home screen features
    App Library icons are also slightly larger, with less padding between them.

    Web Apps

    When you add a website to your ‌Home Screen‌ in ‌iOS 26‌, it always opens as a web app. Web apps were available on the ‌Home Screen‌ in ‌iOS 18‌, but web developers needed to configure them to operate as web apps.

    ios 26 web appsios 26 web apps
    If websites weren’t configured properly, they would open in Safari when added to the ‌Home Screen‌. Now a website will open as a dedicated web app, even if it hasn’t been explicitly set up to work that way.

    There is an Open as Web App option that can be toggled off when adding a website to a ‌Home Screen‌ if you prefer that websites open up in Safari.

    Read More

    We have a dedicated iOS 26 roundup that goes into detail on all of the new features that are available in the update.

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  • Govt holds deportation of Afghan refugees with POR cards

    Govt holds deportation of Afghan refugees with POR cards

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    The federal government on Friday directed authorities not to take any action against Afghan refugees holding Proof of Registration (PoR) cards, while considering extending the validity of the document, according to an official notification.

    “The matter regarding the extension in validity of Proof of Registration (PoR) is under consideration by the federal government,” the notification said, instructing all departments and agencies to refrain from “harassment or adverse action” against registered Afghan refugees until a final decision is made.

    Pakistan is home to over 2.8 million Afghan refugees who fled decades of conflict in Afghanistan. Of these, around 1.3 million possess PoR cards while some 813,000 hold Afghan Citizen Cards (ACC), issued in 2017 to grant temporary legal status.

    Earlier this year, the interior ministry ordered all “illegal foreigners” and ACC holders to leave the country by March 31, warning of deportations starting from April 1. Authorities have since repatriated approximately 1.3 million Afghans under the ongoing deportation drive launched in November 2023.

    However, the new government directive offers temporary reprieve to PoR cardholders, amid growing international concern over the treatment of Afghan refugees.

    “Of the nearly three million Afghan nationals in Pakistan, only a fraction have valid documentation,” Parliamentary Secretary Mukhtar Ahmad Malik told the parliamentary session. He said the government was reviewing documentation policies as part of a broader reassessment of refugee management.

    Pakistan has hosted Afghan refugees for over four decades, but recent security and economic pressures have prompted tighter border and immigration controls.

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  • The way you drink coffee could determine how long you live, study finds

    The way you drink coffee could determine how long you live, study finds

    If your daily routine involves an energizing cup of coffee, you may want to rethink what you choose to put in it.

    Drinking coffee has been linked to a lower risk of death. The catch is, mortality risk based on coffee consumption changes with the amount of sweeteners and saturated fat added, according to a study from the Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University.

    “Coffee is among the most-consumed beverages in the world, and with nearly half of American adults reporting drinking at least one cup per day, it’s important for us to know what it might mean for health,” Fang Fang Zhang, senior author of the study, said.

    “The health benefits of coffee might be attributable to its bioactive compounds, but our results suggest that the addition of sugar and saturated fat may reduce the mortality benefits.”

    The study found that drinking black coffee and coffee with low levels of added sugar and saturated fat were associated with a 14% lower risk of all-cause mortality as compared to no coffee consumption.

    But for coffee with high amounts of added sugar and saturated fat, results varied.

    The study analyzed data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2018 and National Death Index Mortality Data.

    Among the studied 46,332 U.S. adults aged 20 or over, 7,074 people have died. Those deaths were then cross-referenced against coffee consumption, according to reports.

    The researchers found that people who drink coffee showed a lower risk of all-cause mortality, but when more than a little sugar and saturated fat was added, the risks were heightened.

    While limited in scope, the study suggests that drinking caffeinated coffee could help you live longer, while decaffeinated coffee drinkers saw no difference in mortality rates. And taking sugar, milk and cream in your coffee could increase mortality.

    “Few studies have examined how coffee additives could impact the link between coffee consumption and mortality risk, and our study is among the first to quantify how much sweetener and saturated fat are being added,” researcher Bingjie Zhou said.

    “Our results align with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans which recommend limiting added sugar and saturated fat.”

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  • Pure joy: the Australian pub choirmaster who flipped the script on America’s Got Talent | Brisbane

    Pure joy: the Australian pub choirmaster who flipped the script on America’s Got Talent | Brisbane

    Viewed from the outside, at least, far from united, the states of America appear irreconcilably divided.

    Which may explain why Astrid Jorgensen, a 35-year-old choir director from Brisbane who honed her skills at the pub, has just toured the States to sold out shows and seen her US reality TV appearance go viral.

    “When I stand on the stage, I would like to prove to you that, in 90 minutes, we can agree on something,” Jorgensen says.

    “And I think that that’s a really important message anywhere but, for sure, I’m drawing the conclusion [that] in America … it feels like an antidote to whatever’s happening in their own communities.”

    While it might take an hour and a half in her travelling Pub Choir shows – in which she coaches the audience to sing along to pop and rock classics in harmony – Jorgensen made her point in a matter of minutes when she flipped the script of America’s Got Talent in her televised appearance last month.

    Instead of seeking their adulation for her own vocal prowess, the former high school music teacher got her audience to stand up and sing themselves. Yes, the cameras follow Jorgensen’s dynamic conduction on stage. But, for the two-minute rendition of Toto’s Africa, they mainly focus on the faces of the crowd. People of all ages, genders and colours, singing their little hearts out. Bemused, at first, before exuding the kind of pure and silly joy one only experiences belting out an 80s yacht rock anthem with a bunch of mates.

    “If you bring some, like, cerebral, I dunno, indie thing, people are going to feel afraid and that they’re going to do a bad job,” Jorgensen says of her song selection. “I just want people to feel like they’re winning – because it’s just singing. It’s not that big a deal. We’ve been overthinking it. Just give them a win and let them feel good.”

    The people must have done. Cajoled by judge Simon Cowell and by an adoring crowd, Jorgensen was voted through to the show’s next round. Tens of millions of people have watched, shared and commented on the clip online.

    Astrid Jorgensen: ‘I tell people to put their phones away.’ Photograph: Kristina Wild

    Jorgensen is Zooming in from her bedroom in Brisbane, trying to keep an angry chihuahua called Penny quiet. Penny is never angry with Jorgensen – only with those who seek to steal Jorgensen away from her dog. Penny is frequently angry.

    Jorgensen’s not long back from a hectic tour of the US. Yesterday, the ABC’s Australian Story team was filming hers. Pub Choir will tour Singapore, Tokyo, the UK and Ireland in August. Jorgensen is launching her memoir, Average At Best, in September. She will tour Australia and News Zealand in October and November. Her computer pings with Slack messages from her media team.

    Unsure how to mute the notifications, Jorgensen takes a moment to message her handlers and kindly asks them to shush. The quiet brings oxygen back into the conversation.

    Jorgensen takes a similar approach to her Pub Choir shows.

    “I try to play into, and really appeal to, an analogue experience,” she says. “I tell people to put their phones away. And that is really hard for a lot of people.”

    But choir, she says, is a unique act of communion in which the audience is transformed into artists. It is a sensation she experienced growing up Catholic, something that almost convinced Jorgensen to become a nun – until she realised that the “beautiful, hopeful, optimistic, spiritual feeling” that its services gave her came not from the word of God, but from the music of the church.

    Running Up That Hill: Watch Brisbane choir’s rendition of Kate Bush classic – video

    This is an experience Jorgensen wants for her audience, but she wants them to decide for themselves how they feel about it, with their own brain, ears and eyes – not through a screen. Even after the show she asks that they keep phones in pockets.

    “And I think that’s really freeing for people,” Jorgensen says. “It’s really a lovely invitation for people to just experience, just to feel anything, to feel something at the show with others and to look around, to look eyes up, look at the board, look at each other, hold someone’s hand.

    “I feel like it’s such a nice, rare opportunity to agree with other people just in such a low-key way.”

    Jorgensen describes singing together as a “beautiful fast track to community” – something that, ironically, she alone is not part of at her own shows, standing as she does on stage. So after the final show of her US tour, at a nightclub in Honolulu, Jorgensen invited everyone in the audience to come and say hello.

    “People were relaying to me that this felt like the opposite of the way they’d been feeling for … years even. And that it felt important for them to remind that humanity and, like, connecting on a level outside of politics is possible,” she says.

    “That’s a special thing to be able to facilitate.”

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  • FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 Semi-Finals pairings, schedule set

    FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 Semi-Finals pairings, schedule set

    LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – The pairings and schedule for the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 Semi-Finals have been confirmed following the Quarter-Finals games in Lausanne, Switzerland.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be crowned U19 World Cup 2025 champions?

    Semi-Finals

    The Semi-Finals will take place on Saturday July 5 at Lausanne Arena.

    July 5

    This all-European showdown is even more fascinating considering Slovenia and Germany faced off a week ago when the Germans rallied from 13 points down to win 75-68. Germany defeated Slovenia in the Semi-Finals of the FIBA U18 EuroBasket 2024 as well.

    Neither team has reached the FIBA U19 World Cup Final.

    Who will play the U19 World Cup Final?

    You may also want to read this:

    Smart Power Rankings Vol 2: Massive shake-up

    New Zealand’s magic ride keeps going as the Junior Tall Blacks will play in the Semi-Finals of the U19 World Cup for the first time. But the task will be very difficult as they face record eight-time champions United States.

    Curiously, these two countries played in the Semi-Finals of the FIBA U17 Basketball World Cup 2024 as well – with USA winning 145-65.

    Who will play the U19 World Cup Final?

    The complete FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 Final Phrase bracket can be found here.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be named FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 TISSOT MVP?

    FIBA

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