NCAA Athletes And Money
The NCAA’s board of governors voted to permit student-athletes to benefit from the use of their name, image and likeness. Steve Inkseep talks to Kavitha Davidson of The Athletic.
The NCAA’s board of governors voted to permit student-athletes to benefit from the use of their name, image and likeness. Steve Inkseep talks to Kavitha Davidson of The Athletic.
An Army lieutenant colonel who listened in on the phone call between Trump and the president of Ukraine in July testified behind closed doors Tuesday. Also, an update on ISIS and the NCAA.
The Washington Nationals congratulate Anthony Rendon after his two-run home run during the seventh inning of Game 6 of the World Series against the Houston Astros on Tuesday.
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Matt Slocum/AP
Updated Wednesday at 2:05 a.m. ET
The Washington Nationals avoided elimination by beating the Houston Astros 7-2 in Game 6 of the 2019 World Series, forcing a Game 7 in Houston on Wednesday.
But even a Series-defining Game 7 could have a tough time matching the tension and drama of Game 6 which featured a controversial call that appeared to kill — at least temporarily — a Washington rally.
Nationals starter Stephen Strasburg was the winning pitcher, lasting eight and a third innings, striking out seven while allowing only two runs on five hits.
Astros ace starter Justin Verlander was the losing pitcher. He pitched five innings, surrendering three runs on five hits and three walks, with three strikeouts. It was Verlander’s second loss of this series and he is 0-6 as a starting pitcher in seven career World Series games.
The Nationals drew first blood to open the game on a run-scoring single by third baseman Anthony Rendon — who delivered five RBIs before the night was out — after lead-off batter Trea Turner hit an infield single and advanced to second base on a sacrifice bunt by right-fielder Adam Eaton.
But Houston struck back immediately in their half of the first inning with a sacrifice fly by second baseman José Altuve after a first-pitch double by center-fielder George Springer, who took third base on a wild pitch by the Nats’ Strasburg. One out later, third baseman Alex Bregman hit a solo homer that gave Houston a 2-1 lead.
But those would prove to be all the runs the Astros would score.
After cruising through the second inning, the Astros’ Verlander had to pitch out of jams in the third and fourth innings, stranding two Nationals runners in both frames.
Washington, which had scored only three runs in the previous three games they had lost at home, finally capitalized in the fifth inning. Eaton and left fielder Juan Soto each hit solo homers to take the lead 3-2.
Houston threatened in the bottom of the fifth inning after right-fielder Josh Reddick singled and Springer followed with his second double of the night. But that was all the Astros got off Strasburg, who retired the next two batters.
Astros reliever Brad Peacock opened the sixth inning in place of Verlander, who had thrown 93 pitches.
Call upheld.
Unreal.
What a failure.
— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) October 30, 2019
That is an absolutely awful call… what are we doin?
— Jake Arrieta (@JArrieta34) October 30, 2019
Not interference in last year’s World Series pic.twitter.com/miwMTFcXfJ
— Red Sox Stats (@redsoxstats) October 30, 2019
The seventh inning opened with a sequence of plays that will likely be talked about for a long time.
After a single by Nationals catcher Yan Gomes, the next batter, Turner, appeared to have beaten out a dribbler to the reliever Peacock who threw late to first base. The throw got past first baseman Yuli Gurriel as the runners advanced.
But Turner was called out for running inside the base path and interfering with Peacock’s throw. After a lengthy delay in which the umpires consulted league officials in New York, the call on the field was confirmed.
So instead of having runners at second and third with no outs, the Nationals had a runner at first with one out. But a batter later, the Nationals’ Rendon launched a two-run home run that extended their lead to 5-2.
Strasburg retired the Astros without incident in the seventh and eighth innings. He was pulled for reliever Sean Doolittle after retiring the first batter he faced in the ninth.
The 2019 World Series is the first postseason series across professional baseball, hockey and basketball in which the road team won the first six games.
Mountaineer Nirmal Purja, shown here at a press conference in May, has climbed the world’s 14 highest mountains in six months.
Prakash Mathema /AFP/Getty Images
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Prakash Mathema /AFP/Getty Images
A Nepalese climber has summited the world’s 14 highest peaks in six months and six days, smashing the previous record by more than seven years.
Nirmal “Nims” Purja, who served in the British military before attempting the lofty feat, reached the top of Mount Shishapangma in China on Tuesday morning. The Himalayan summit is some 8,027 meters (26,335 feet) above sea level. It’s also the smallest of the 14 mountains on Earth that soar above 8,000 meters — a realm mountaineers refer to as the “death zone.”
“I am overwhelmed and incredibly proud to have completed this final summit and achieved my goal of climbing the world’s 14 tallest mountains in record time,” Purja said in a statement. “It has been a gruelling but humbling six months, and I hope to have proven that anything is possible with some determination, self-belief and positivity.”
The two most recent records for climbing the world’s tallest 14 peaks were held by Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka, at 7 years, 11 months and 14 days, and South Korean climber Kim Chang-ho, who did it more than a month faster than Kukuczka.
Wait till the end !
Yesterday, we had a pretty tough day. We climbed for 15 hrs non stop in an extreme weather conditions with the wind speed of more than 75 km/hr. Spent more than 3 hrs finding the way/route on the glacier.#nimsdai #BremontProjectPossible #14peaks7months pic.twitter.com/w2TNILtmtr
— Nirmal Purja MBE (@nimsdai) October 26, 2019
A video from Purja’s trek up the final mountain illustrates some of the challenges the team faced earlier this week – what Purja termed a “pretty tough day.”
The climbers were blasted by wind and snow.
“We climbed for 15 hrs non stop in an extreme weather conditions with the wind speed of more than 75 km/hr. Spent more than 3 hrs finding the way/route on the glacier,” Purja said. On that same day, an avalanche also threatened the climbers, according to Purja.
“MISSION ACHIEVED!” he announced from the summit of Shishapangma on Tuesday morning.
Purja, who was born in a village in Nepal more than 2,000 meters above sea level, kicked off his journey in late April by reaching the peak of Nepal’s Annapurna. He dubbed the 14-peak goal “Project Possible.”
From Annapurna, Purja quickly climbed five of the world’s tallest mountains in May, including Everest. A photo he took on Everest showed a long line of climbers waiting to reach the summit, which quickly went viral.
The crowds in the photo highlighted concerns about a high death toll this year on Everest, where at least 11 climbers died. As Sushmita Pathak reported for NPR, “It prompted Nepal to revise rules on who gets to climb the world’s highest peak.”
Along with his background in Nepal and making long treks on a daily basis, Purja credits the training he received in the British military for helping him accomplish the rapid-turn-around climbs. He joined the Brigade of Gurkhas in 2003 and later joined the special forces unit of the U.K.’s Royal Navy.
“It is about the recovery between the mountains which will be my physical challenge; then it will be the mental challenge to move on to the next mountain,” he said before completing the climbs.
Purja said he shattered the record “with a rotating support team made up of exclusively Nepalese climbers.” He summited five peaks in Pakistan in July.
“MISSION ACHIEVED !” says @nimsdai from the summit of #Shishapangma #14peaks7months #History
At 8:58 hrs local time, Nims and his team reached the summit of Shisha Pangma. Team Members includes: Mingma David Sherpa, Galjen Sherpa and Gesman Tamang.#BremontProjectPossible pic.twitter.com/PeYUVQ7RnL
— Nirmal Purja MBE (@nimsdai) October 29, 2019
According to the BBC, last month “his challenge was held up while he waited for permission to climb the final mountain, Shishapangma, in the Tibetan autonomous region of China.” That permission came through earlier this month after Nepal’s government requested help from China, the broadcaster added.
According to Purja’s website, his personal achievement wasn’t the only record set by the team. Mingma David Sherpa, who accompanied Purja on nine of the climbs, also became the youngest person to summit all 14 of these peaks.
During the course of their climbs, Purja and his team members say they rescued at least three other mountaineers who were in trouble.
The NCAA has long argued that it was converting revenues, such as the $1 billion from the men’s basketball tournament, into scholarships and other opportunities for students.
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Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images
In a surprise move, the NCAA says it intends to allow college athletes to earn compensation — but it says it’s only starting to work out the details of how that would take place. The organization’s board of governors said Tuesday that it had voted unanimously to permit student-athletes to benefit from the use of their name, image and likeness.
“We must embrace change to provide the best possible experience for college athletes,” said Michael Drake, the NCAA board chair who is also president of Ohio State University. In a statement, Drake stressed the need for “additional flexibility” in the NCAA’s approach.
Drake added, “This modernization for the future is a natural extension of the numerous steps NCAA members have taken in recent years to improve support for student-athletes, including full cost of attendance and guaranteed scholarships.”
The timeline for implementing the changes was not immediately clear in the NCAA’s statement.
The NCAA, the national governing body for collegiate athletics, said its decision followed input over the past few months from “current and former student-athletes, coaches, presidents, faculty and commissioners across all three divisions.”
Notably, the decision follows California’s adoption of a law that bans schools in the state from preventing student-athletes from accepting compensation from advertisers and allows them to hire agents. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the legislation late last month, calling it the “beginning of a national movement.”
Indeed, it did spark a trend. Politicians in Illinois, New York, Florida and other states have introduced bills allowing endorsement deals for college athletes. And days after the California bill was signed, national politicians signaled they would push for something similar in Congress.
Amid this groundswell of political support for paying college athletes, the NCAA has quickly eased its public resistance to the idea. After initially pushing back hard on California’s measure, the NCAA has recently been taking a more conciliatory tone, suggesting it would “move forward with ongoing efforts to make adjustments” to the organization’s practices.
The NCAA has reported annual revenues topping $1 billion, largely on the strength of TV rights and marketing fees connected with its most prominent sports and events, such as the highly lucrative Division 1 men’s basketball tournament.
And though the organization long argued that it was converting those revenues into scholarships and other opportunities for students, that line had lately attracted prominent skeptics — such as NFL cornerback Richard Sherman and NBA superstar LeBron James, who hosted Newsom’s signing ceremony on his sports programming company la st month.
“As a national governing body, the NCAA is uniquely positioned to modify its rules to ensure fairness and a level playing field for student-athletes,” organization President Mark Emmert said in a statement Tuesday. “The board’s action today creates a path to enhance opportunities for student-athletes while ensuring they compete against students and not professionals.”
For the third year in a row, the percentage of companies that offer high-deductible plans as the sole health insurance option will decline in 2020, according to a survey of large employers by the National Business Group on Health.
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Everything old is new again. As open enrollment gets underway for next year’s job-based health insurance coverage, some employees are seeing traditional plans offered alongside or instead of the plans with sky-high deductibles that may have been their only choice in the past.
Some employers say that in a tight labor market, offering a more generous plan with a deductible that’s less than four figures can be an attractive recruitment tool. Plus, a more traditional plan may appeal to workers who want more predictable out-of-pocket costs, even if the premium is a bit higher.
That’s what happened at Digital River, a 650-person global e-commerce payment processing business based in Minnetonka, Minn.
Four years ago, faced with premium increases approaching double-digit percentages, Digital River ditched its traditional preferred provider organization plan in favor of three high-deductible plans. Each had different deductibles and different premiums, but all linked to health savings accounts that are exempt from taxes.
This year, though, the company added back two traditional preferred provider plans to its offerings for workers.
Even with three plan options, “we still had employees who said they wanted other choices,” says KT Schmidt, the company’s chief administrative officer.
Digital River isn’t the only company broadening its offerings. For the third year in a row, the percentage of companies that offer high-deductible plans as the sole option will decline in 2020, according to a survey of large employers by the National Business Group on Health. A quarter of the firms polled will offer these plans as the only option next year — down 14 percentage points from two years ago.
That said, high-deductible plans are hardly disappearing. Fifty-eight percent of covered employees worked at companies that offered a high-deductible plan with a savings account in 2019, according to an annual survey of employer health benefits released by the Kaiser Family Foundation last month.
That was second only to the 76% of covered workers who were at firms that offered a PPO plan. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation; it is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.)
When Digital River switched to exclusively high-deductible plans for 2016, the firm put some of the $1 million it saved into the new health savings accounts that employees could use to cover their out-of-pocket expenses before reaching the deductible.
Employees could also contribute to those accounts to save money for medical expenses. This year the deductibles on those plans are $1,850, $2,700 and $3,150 for single coverage, and $3,750, $5,300 and $6,300 for family plans.
The company put a lot of effort into educating employees about how the new plans work, Schmidt says. Premiums are typically lower in high-deductible plans. But under federal rules, until people reach their deductible, the plans pay only for specified preventive care, such as annual physicals and cancer screenings, and some care for chronic conditions.
Enrollees are on the hook for everything else, including most doctor visits and prescription drugs. In 2020, the minimum deductible for a plan that qualifies under federal rules for a tax-exempt health savings account is $1,400 for an individual and $2,800 for a family.
As their health savings account balances grew, “more people moved into the camp that could see the benefits” of the high-deductible strategy, Schmidt says. Still, not everyone wanted to be exposed to costs upfront, even if they ended up spending less overall.
“For some people, there remained a desire to pay more to simply have that peace of mind,” he says.
Digital River’s PPOs have deductibles of $400 and $900 for single coverage and $800 and $1,800 for families. The premiums are significantly more expensive than those of the high-deductible plans.
In the PPO plan with the $400/$800 deductible, the employee’s portion of the monthly premium ranges from $82.37 for single coverage to $356.46 for an employee plus two or more family members. The plan with the $2,700 deductible costs an employee $21.11 for single coverage, and the $5,300-deductible plan costs $160.29 for the employee plus at least two others.
But costs are more predictable in the PPO plan. Instead of owing the entire cost of a doctor visit or trip to the emergency room until they reach their annual deductible, people in the PPO plans generally owe set copayments or coinsurance charges for most types of care.
When Digital River introduced the PPO plans for this year, about 10% of employees moved from the high-deductible plans to the traditional plans.
Open enrollment for 2020 starts this fall, and the company is offering the same mix of traditional and high-deductible plans again for next year.
Adding PPOs to its roster of plans not only made employees happy but also made the company more competitive, Schmidt says. Two of Digital River’s biggest competitors offer only high-deductible plans, and the PPOs give Digital River an edge in attracting top talent, he believes.
According to the survey by the National Business Group on Health, employers that opted to add more choices to what they offered employees typically chose a traditional PPO plan. Members in these plans generally get the most generous coverage if they use providers in the plan’s network.
But if they go out of network, plans often cover that as well, though they pay a smaller proportion of the costs. For the most part, deductibles are lower than the federal minimum for qualified high-deductible plans.
Traditional plans like PPOs also give employers more flexibility to try different approaches to improve employees’ health, says Tracy Watts, a senior partner at benefits consultant Mercer.
“Some of the newer strategies that employers want to try just aren’t [health savings account] compatible,” says Watts. The firms might want to pay for care before the deductible is met, for example, or eliminate employee charges for certain services.
Examples of these strategies could include employer-subsidized telemedicine programs or direct primary care arrangements in which physicians are paid a monthly fee to provide care at no cost to the employee.
The “Cadillac tax,” a provision of the Affordable Care Act that would impose a 40% excise tax on the value of health plans that exceeded certain dollar thresholds, was a driving force behind the shift toward high-deductible plans. But the tax, originally supposed to take effect in 2018, has been pushed back to 2022. The House passed a bill repealing the tax in July, and there is a companion bill in the Senate.
It’s unclear what will happen, but employers appear to be taking the uncertainty in stride, says Brian Marcotte, president and CEO of the National Business Group on Health.
“I think employers don’t believe it’s going to happen, and that’s one of the reasons you’re seeing [more plan choices] introduced,” he says.
Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit, editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation. KHN is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
Vlatko Andonovski will replace Jill Ellis as the U.S. national women’s soccer team coach. He’s seen here coaching Reign FC of the National Women’s Soccer League earlier this month,
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Brad Smith/ISI Photos/Getty Images
Vlatko Andonovski was officially unveiled Monday as the U.S. Women’s National Team’s new head coach. The Macedonian-born 43-year-old takes the job following a successful stint in charge of the National Women’s Soccer League team Reign FC, where he was named NWSL Coach of the Year in 2019.
At an official presentation in New York City, Andonovski was introduced by U.S. Soccer President Carlos Cordeiro and USWNT General Manager Kate Markgraf.
“It’s a huge honor and I’m very excited to get started with this group of players and staff as we work towards continued success for this program. All of the talented coaches and players that have come before have built a legendary tradition of excellence and I’m committed to working very hard to continue to move this program forward,” Andonovski said in a statement Monday.
Andonovski has big shoes to fill. He replaces Jill Ellis, the most successful coach in USWNT history, who won 106 games and lost only seven. In her five-year tenure as head coach, she won two back-to-back World Cups.
He’ll also be the first man since 2014 to coach the women’s team. Five other men have taken up the mantle of USWNT head coach since the team’s formation in 1985, including Tony DiCicco, whom Ellis surpassed in becoming the winningest coach.
Live from New York…Vlatko Andonovski is Introduced as new #USWNT Head Coach https://t.co/DIBGrkHW40
— U.S. Soccer WNT (@USWNT) October 28, 2019
At the club level, Andonovski coached FC Kansas City to two NWSL titles between 2013 and 2017. He left Kansas City in 2018 to coach Washington-based Reign FC, where he led the team to two consecutive playoff appearances. Throughout his career, Andonovski has coached USWNT mainstays such as Megan Rapinoe and Becky Sauerbrunn.
U.S. Soccer officials said that his domestic experience and managerial style made him the perfect candidate for the job.
“We identified the qualities we thought were most important for this unique position, we talked to quite a few people in the women’s soccer community domestically and around the world, and in the end, Vlatko was the best fit with his experience with elite players, how he sees the game, how he coaches the game and manages players, and his overall personality and ability to take on a job of this magnitude,” said Markgraf.
United States players will first play under Andonovski in November, when the USWNT plays international friendlies against Sweden and Costa Rica. In January, Andonovski will be tasked with qualifying for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. If they qualify, Andonovski will have the chance to coach the team to an Olympic Gold Medal, the only major tournament Ellis did not win.
Fans began wildly speculating who would take over the USWNT when Ellis announced she would step down from his position as head coach in late July. Andonovski was reportedly on the shortlist of potential successors, something fans grew excited about.
Earlier this year, the USWNT played its way to its fourth ever World Cup title, when they beat Netherlands in the final 2-0.
Paolo Zialcita is an intern on NPR’s News Desk.
A statue of famous racehorse Zenyatta at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif.
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Jae C. Hong/AP
Two horses were euthanized this past weekend following injuries at Santa Anita Park, bringing the number of horses to die at the famed Southern California track to 36 in the calendar year.
On Sunday, a two-year-old filly named Bye Bye Beautiful was euthanized after sustaining a severe injury during a race. The death followed a training incident on Friday, when G Q Covergirl, a six-year-old mare, was euthanized following an injury to both of her front legs.
The deaths come just days before Santa Anita Park will host the 2019 Breeders’ Cup World Championships. Critics had called for those races to be moved from the racetrack — an initiative that didn’t come to fruition.
Outgoing Breeders’ Cup Ltd. CEO Craig Fravel said in a recent interview that the prestigious race chose not to change venues because “when people are trying to do the right thing, you need to stick with them.”
After this year’s Breeders’ Cup, Fravel will move on to oversee racing operations for Santa Anita Park’s owner, the Stronach Group.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has called on law enforcement to investigate the dead horses’ trainers.
“Santa Anita has taken extraordinary measures to protect horses, but it can’t criminally investigate trainers and veterinarians for the deaths of Bye Bye Beautiful and the other horses,” said PETA Senior Vice President Kathy Guillermo. “Law enforcement must do this. PETA again calls on the district attorney’s office to release its findings of its investigation into the deaths of the horses immediately and hold those responsible accountable.”
The track in Los Angeles County suspended racing for much of March — when horse deaths had reached nearly two dozen — as it worked to learn what was behind the high death toll.
The racetrack reopened in late March, after the park announced several changes, including limiting the use of pain or anti-inflammatory medications for horses and increasing the time required for horses to be on-site prior to a race. The track also has a new drainage system meant to make it safer.
But more horses have died since the park reopened for its autumn meet. Advocates for the abolition of horse racing have used these incidents as an example of poor living conditions that racing horses endure. Patrick Battuello, the founder of Horseracing Wrongs, told NPR that no amount of measures taken by Santa Anita Park will prevent deaths.
“With all of this talk about safety measures and welfare improvements and this hypervigilance that the industry has been displaying since they were exposed back in the spring, they still can’t stop the killings,” Battuello said.
An online petition calling for Santa Anita Park to shut down has garnered nearly 130,000 signatures.
Rick Baedeker, executive director of the California Horse Racing Board, spoke to NPR in March, expressing concern at the spike in deaths.
“We have had short periods of time where there have been numerous losses and the alarm bells have gone off, but nothing like this,” Baedeker said.
Both the CHRB and the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office have undertaken investigations into fatalities at Santa Anita Park. The CHRB’s findings are set to be published in December.
Paolo Zialcita is an intern on NPR’s News Desk.
President Trump is introduced during Game 5 of the World Series between the Houston Astros and the Washington Nationals on Sunday. Fans greeted Trump with boos and jeers, with some chanting “Lock him up.”
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Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
Fresh off announcing the death of one of the world’s most wanted terrorists, President Trump appeared at Game 5 of the World Series in Washington to find a crowd not eager to praise his achievement.
When Trump’s attendance was announced and he was shown on the big screen at Nationals Park on Sunday night, baseball fans greeted the president with loud boos and jeers. Sections of the ballpark chanted “Lock him up” — a spin on Trump’s refrain against Hillary Clinton that has remained common at his rallies, even after the 2016 presidential election.
President Trump was booed loudly by the fans at Nats Park when he was shown on the big screen.
Then came a loud chant: “Lock him up.” @wusa9 pic.twitter.com/LBbgSAHd6k— Adam Longo (@adamlongoTV) October 28, 2019
Trump, standing next to first lady Melania Trump, appeared unperturbed by the din, smiling and clapping before moving to say something to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.
Later in the game, fans unfurled a “VETERANS FOR IMPEACHMENT” banner right behind home plate.
In a press conference before the game, Washington Nationals manager Dave Martinez said of Trump: “He’s coming to the game. He’s a fan. Hopefully he cheers for the Washington Nationals, and I hope he enjoys the game.”
Asked if the Nationals wanted Trump there, Martinez said: “We haven’t really talked about it. We’re focusing on playing baseball.”
The Nationals ended up getting walloped by the Houston Astros, 7-1. They now trail 3-2 in the best-of-seven series.
Boos heard throughout Nationals Park as President Trump and the First Lady are announced and shown on screen after the “wave your caps” moment between innings pic.twitter.com/RSZlbMA2W7
— Monica Alba (@albamonica) October 28, 2019
It’s rare to see Trump out in public in Washington, a Democratic stronghold in which just 4% of residents voted for Trump in the 2016 general election.
In a break with tradition, Trump did not throw out the ceremonial first pitch Sunday night, as is customary when a sitting president attends a baseball game.
While league officials said Trump said he was not interested in throwing the first pitch, citing concerns about slowing down thousands of fans entering the ballpark, Nationals principal owner Mark Lerner indicated that there were many other first pitch candidates who were considered before the president.
Last week, Trump told reporters that the bulletproof vest he would have to wear made the idea of tossing the ball from the mound unappealing.
“They gotta dress me up in a lot of heavy armor. I’ll look too heavy. I don’t like that,” Trump said.
Chef José Andrés, an outspoken critic of Trump, throws the ceremonial first pitch before Game 5 of the World Series in Washington.
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Jeff Roberson/AP
Instead of the president, José Andrés, a Spanish-born chef and Washington restaurateur known for providing free emergency meals to victims of natural disasters as well as to furloughed federal workers through his organization World Central Kitchen, threw out the first pitch to stadium-wide applause.
Andrés has long been an outspoken critic of Trump, especially the president’s hardline immigration policies.
In 2015, Andrés pulled out of a plan to open a restaurant in the Trump International Hotel in Washington after then-candidate Trump made disparaging remarks about Mexican immigrants, calling them drug dealers and rapists as he campaigned.
On Sunday evening, Andrés thanked the Nationals and the MLB for inviting an immigrant to throw the first pitch.
Ness Nite subverts hip-hop tropes with “Gucciprada.”
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Enmi Yang/Courtesy of the artist
“I can twerk to anything. I’d twerk to Mozart!”
A bold statement. One I overheard through the chatter and bass of a Halloween party this past weekend. From across the living room-turned-dance floor, whose hardwood bore the scuff marks from shoes, scrapes from Ikea couches and a weird, sticky splotch that definitely fell into the category of “We’ll worry about that later,” homegirl in a Guy Fieri costume (let that part sink in) proclaimed herself to be a cross-genre twerker.
At first, hearing this threw me all the way off guard. But after some consideration, I determined this combo totally feasible. If the mood strikes, whose to say a gorgeous Requiem can’t insight some artful clapping?
Music is meant to be enjoyed, no matter what movement or expression goes along with it. And, like classical twerking, sometimes the best musical mashups are the joints you never saw coming — ones that subvert social folkways and switch up the points of view.
In the spirit of jumping out of the norm, this week’s update features selections from NPR Music interns Mano Sundaresan and Zoë Jones, who each have distinct tastes and a natural penchant for the cool and unorthodox.
As always, enjoy Heat Check in its entirety on Spotify.
The upcoming romantic thriller Queen & Slim (written by Lena Waithe and directed by Melina Matsoukas) teeters between skin-tingling intrigue and all-out hysteria as a black couple go on the lam after accidentally shooting a white police officer. It’s the type of situation that calls for your “ride or die” instincts to kick in.
So, of course, the soundtrack’s leading single has to embody that level of suspense, exhilaration and unexpected Bonnie & Clyde badassery. And if you’re going to call Megan Thee Stallion to get the job done, of course, the track has to be twerk-able. The Houston hottie crossed paths with New Orleans bounce artist VickeeLo and producer Blaqnmild to ensure the correct sonic ratio for the clappers. NOLA bounce sounds good on you, Meg. — Sidney Madden
YouTube
Hook’s voice is candy-coated sludge, her bars glowing Microsoft Paint scrawls. Her songs are always a few tics weirder, more home-cooked than the mainstream rap styles they pull from.
“Iffy” could’ve been refined into something crystalline, pleasant as anything from a major label pop rapper, but instead it’s a slushy fever dream where Hook haunts the corner of your room, bellowing heartbreak and stardust: “If I leave, I ain’t coming back!” You won’t want to wake up from this. — Mano Sundaresan
YouTube
In this soulful, slow-burning jam, UMI is trying to convince herself that she isn’t in love. “I just want a good time,” she explains, reminiscent of the thoughts many of us have when our feelings are a little too close to comfort. — Zoë Jones
YouTube
“I’ma make her feel like Guccipradachanellouisvuitton,” Ness Nite coos, the syllables spiraling inwards, lapping at each other’s tails. They’re a singer from Minneapolis making gender-less dream pop, sometimes leaning into rap flows, constantly subverting masculine hip-hop tropes. “Gucciprada” is a song of pastel hues and sliding synths, hurtling into the nearest designer store off the strength of its snaking chorus. — Mano Sundaresan
YouTube
After blowing up off a bovine bop and spending a solid amount of time as a living meme last year, Doja Cat has kept fans tuned in as she’s found new ways to express her eccentric, impetuous creativity. With her sophomore album, Hot Pink, on the way, Doja is getting more delightfully aggressive with her bars.
“That’s my ego that you stroking / N****, don’t laugh ’cause the p**** ain’t joking / N****, don’t splash when the p**** be soaking,” she purrs. — Sidney Madden
YouTube
Father sounds a little more like summer than fall on this breezy, keyboard-backed track, which is more than welcome as temperatures drop. Even when he’s iced out, he’s still so warm. — Zoë Jones
YouTube
As the Afro-alt-soul movement starts beaming out of places like Lagos, Nigeria and into the larger music stratosphere, you’ll want to remember Odunsi (The Engine) and the viscid, bouncy ride of “Wetin Dey.” — Sidney Madden
YouTube