Articles by admin

No Image

Roland Cazimero, Musician Who Helped Define Modern Hawaiian Culture, Dies At 66

Roland Cazimero.

Ric Noyle/Ric Noyle Photo Productions

hide caption

toggle caption

Ric Noyle/Ric Noyle Photo Productions

Roland Cazimero, a guitarist and singer who helped define the nobly mellifluous sound of contemporary Hawaiian music, primarily as one-half of The Brothers Cazimero, died in Honolulu on Sunday at 66 years old, his twin sister, Kanoe, confirmed. No cause of death was given, though the artist suffered in recent years from congestive heart issues, diabetes and carpal tunnel syndrome.

The Brothers Cazimero, with Robert on upright bass and Roland on 12-string acoustic guitar, had been a cornerstone of the Hawaiian music scene for the last 40 years, and arguably its singlemost influential group during that time. The duo’s trademark sound, liltingly sweet but rhythmically strong, was always distinguished by a full-bodied vocal blend: Robert, an exceptionally gifted singer, sang lead, while Roland handled the high harmonies, often in an imploring Hawaiian falsetto.

The Brothers Cazimero took flight precisely in step with, and at the center of, a cultural movement called the Hawaiian Renaissance, propelled by musicians, artisans and custodians of ancient hula and chant. In cadence and repertoire, the group honored the root sources of Hawaiian music. But Roland and Robert also had an instinct for pop songcraft, creating music that combined traditional materials with the earnest gleam of mainland folk-rockers like Crosby, Stills & Nash.

[embedded content]
YouTube

The self-titled debut album by The Brothers Cazimero was released in 1975; its most recent, Destiny, was released in 2008.

The duo was a perennial favorite at the Na Hoku Hanohano Awards, Hawaii’s version of the Grammys, winning enough “Song of the Year” honors to stock a compilation album, 20 Years of Hoku Award Winning Songs. As a live act, The Brothers Cazimero presented a study in contrasts; while Robert struck a tone of elegant precision, Roland played the part of a rascal and a wiseacre, which wasn’t a stretch.

Roland Kanoelani Cazimero was born 15 minutes after his sister Kanoe, in 1950, the youngest in a large family of 12 children, counting half-siblings. Their parents, William Ka`aihue Cazimero, Sr., and Elizabeth Kapeka Meheula, were local entertainers, and music was a constant presence around their house in the working-class Honolulu neighborhood of Kalihi.

Roland graduated from Kamehameha High School in 1968, one year after Robert. Soon afterward they joined Peter Moon, a ukulele player and slack-key guitarist, in a group called The Sunday Manoa. Its 1969 album Guava Jam quickly became a bedrock document of the Hawaiian Renaissance, its declarative subtitle making plain their artistic intentions: “Contemporary Hawaiian Folk Music.”

Robert and Roland broke away from Sunday Manoa to form The Brothers Cazimero in 1974, becoming both torchbearers and cultural ambassadors. For a dozen years, beginning in the early ’80s, they held a residency at the posh Monarch Room at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, performing mainly to delighted tourists. They also toured widely, appearing at Carnegie Hall.

Politically motivated civil disobedience was a key subtext of the Hawaiian Renaissance, and Roland counted himself an enthusiastic member of the resistance. “I’ve been supporting sovereignty from day one,” he once told the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, recalling his efforts to house and supply the protesters who occupied the tiny island of Kaho`olawe in 1976.

The following year, Roland collaborated with songwriter and chanter Keli`i Tau`a on an album called Hokule`a — The Musical Saga, paying tribute to the eponymous Polynesian voyaging canoe that traversed the oceans using only ancient navigation techniques. (The H?k?le`a, a symbol of the Hawaiian renaissance, has remained active, completing a three-year circumnavigation of the globe just weeks ago.)

Roland’s first true solo effort was Pele, a 1979 concept album about the Hawaiian goddess of fire, complete with expository voiceover. The songs framed a mythological story in often personal terms, forming a clear narrative arc. The sound of the album combined pastoral folk with something approaching prog, as on a track called “A Promise Forgotten.”

Along with Robert and twin sister Kanoe, known as Tootsie, Roland is survived by his wife, Lauwa`e Cazimero; another brother, Rodney; and his children Hawai’iki Cazimero, John Devin Kumau C. McWilliams, Jonah Cazimero, Jordan Malama Cazimero-Chinen, and Justin Pono Cazimero-Chinen.

[embedded content]

The Brothers Cazimero played their last proper concert on Maui in 2014. Roland had to interrupt the performance, and was treated in a local hospital for walking pneumonia.

During a recent interview with Leslie Wilcox for the PBS Hawaii program Long Story Short, Roland was asked whether Robert knew their playing days as The Brothers Cazimero were probably over. “I think he knows,” he said. “I tell him that I’m very proud of him doing what he’s doing, and that I want him to continue.”

He paused. “I miss playing with him a lot. I would love to play with him again, if possible.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Disney's Immersive 'Star Wars' Hotel Sounds Like a Dream for Fans

Ever wanted to visit the world of Star Wars?

Fans attending Disney’s D23 expo over the weekend were eager to hear more about the Star Wars-themed attractions coming to Disneyland and Walt Disney World (which are now known to be called Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge). What came as a surprise was the news that Walt Disney World is also introducing a Star Wars-themed hotel and resort. And this isn’t just any kind of lodging, either. The resort will be an immersive experience, complete with narratives and costumes for guests so they truly feel like they’re inside a giant spaceship within the Star Wars Galaxy.

Bob Chapek, Chairman of Walt Disney Parks & Resorts, confirmed on Saturday:

It’s unlike anything that exists today. From the second you arrive, you will become a part of a Star Wars story! You’ll immediately become a citizen of the Galaxy and experience all that entails, including dressing up in the proper attire. Once you leave Earth, you will discover a starship alive with characters, stories, and adventures that unfold all around you. It is 100% immersive, and the story will touch every single minute of your day, and it will culminate in a unique journey for every person who visits.

The windows of your rooms at this resort will even look out upon a simulation of deep space passing by instead of the real world outside on Earth. That sounds like it could be disorienting, especially if you do go out, but maybe you won’t ever want to leave anyway. In addition to the cool rooms, the resort appears to have bars tended by droids and other fun amenities. It’s unclear, though, how such an immersive package will relate to guests staying at Walt Disney World with the intention of leaving the resort and visiting the theme parks, including the Galaxy’s Edge stuff at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

While there is nothing like this, Chapek is correct, it does sound like something out of a sci-fi novel or movie or series — say, Westworld but with Star Wars characters and experiences rather than the Old West theme. There are also places that offer relatively minimal narrative experiences, such as the Overlook Film Festival’s interactive horror theatrics that go on while guests attend screenings and more. This Star Wars resort doesn’t promise to be a game in the way those ideas do, though surely role-players and cosplayers will feel right at home there.

Check out some concept art for the resort below and see larger images at the official Disney Parks Blog.

The NEW Star Wars resort hotel looks unbelievable! WOW. pic.twitter.com/dwHb3wMatG

— Star Wars Stuff (@starwarstuff) July 15, 2017

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)



No Image

Is Your Boss Too Controlling? Many Employees Clash With Micromanagers

Micromanagement can kill motivation, employee creativity and job satisfaction. It’s the biggest beef many workers have about their boss.

sorbetto/iStock

hide caption

toggle caption

sorbetto/iStock

Micromanagement is routinely the top complaint people have about their bosses, and in today’s good job market where workers have more options, that’s a bigger problem for employers.

People might have their own definition of when a manager crosses into being too controlling, but most people would probably agree that Marjon Bell’s former boss would fit.

On her first day on a marketing job at a Virginia Beach, Va., insurance company, Bell’s boss sent an email barring employees from bringing cell phones to the office. The email said that moms, especially, spent too much time on their phones checking up on their children.

That, Bell says, was just one of her boss’ many rules.

“If we left campus for lunch, [we had] to email her when we left and email her when we got back,” Bell says.

Predictably, few people took lunch.

The boss also monitored the instant messaging system, which displayed a green light when someone was logged in, and a yellow one after they had been idle.

“Usually you had like a 10-minute window before your light turned yellow, and then they changed it to only two minutes,” Bell says. “And I came back from the restroom, and my boss was standing at my cubicle wondering where I’d been.”

Bell says the micromanagement was systemic. Her employer offered a $500 monthly bonus that rewarded co-workers for micromanaging each other.

“If you came in five minutes late, if you left early, if you took a little bit longer at lunch, whoever reported you would get an accountability award,” she says.

It was unclear who Bell could trust, but she says morale was terrible. A disgruntled employee ransacked the toilets in the women’s bathroom, she says, “to stick it to the man.” Management posted a notice outlining “rules on bathroom use” on the stall doors in response.

Bell quit after six months.

“I did the absolute bare minimum to get my paycheck,” she says. “It did not make me want to help the company in any way.”

Steve Motenko, an executive coach in Seattle, hears stories like this all the time. Micromanagement can kill motivation, employee creativity and job satisfaction, and yet it remains the biggest beef workers have about their boss.

“That’s critically important, because it’s complaints about the boss that drive most people out of organizations,” he says.

That’s especially a problem when recruitment is a top concern for employers, many of whom Motenko says aren’t even aware of the micromanagers in their midst because departing employees often aren’t questioned about it in exit interviews.

Motenko says micromanagement can reflect several problems. A bad hire or a lack of training might force a manager to constantly intervene. A disorganized boss often creates havoc that makes teamwork impossible.

These are all understandable, if regrettable, outcomes of poor management, but may not mean the person is necessarily a habitual micromanager — and circumstances make close supervision necessary, he says.

Still, many leaders Motenko has counseled have an overactive command-and-control style of leadership that leaves little room for worker autonomy, and he argues that doesn’t fit most jobs today.

“We need employees who will do more than do what they’re told — employees who will think for themselves, who will be creative, and will try new approaches,” he says, “and all of that is squashed by micromanaging.”

Studies show lack of autonomy at work elevates stress hormones and can have other negative health effects, potentially even hastening mortality.

It certainly took its toll for Chicago resident Abby Koch 15 years ago, when she worked for a jewelry store owner.

“She would literally say things like, ‘well, I’m not a micromanager…’ as she was standing behind me, literally looking over my shoulder,” she says.

The owner’s constant critiques eroded Koch’s self-esteem and that of her coworker.

“The other employee ended up having to take medication just to be able to go to work and not be crippled by anxiety,” Koch says.

She lasted 18 months in that job.

“I ended up getting divorced, and I always thought my … I don’t know … lack of standing up for myself in that situation may have caused my husband to lose some respect for me,” she says.

Since then, she says she’s always prized and chosen jobs that give her autonomy.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

NBA In July? League Scores Bright Spot In Summer Ratings

Lonzo Ball of the Los Angeles Lakers stands on the court during a 2017 Summer League game against the Brooklyn Nets in Las Vegas.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Monday night in Las Vegas, thousands are expected to turn out for an NBA Championship game between the Los Angeles Lakers and Portland Trailblazers. Hundreds of thousands more, at least, are expected to tune in to ESPN for live coverage.

Wait, you say, it’s the middle of July — a time for baseball, beach and barbecue. But men’s pro basketball? Normally way off sports fans’ radar screens this time of year.

But there’s been nothing normal about NBA Summer League 2017.

Monday’s Lakers vs. Blazers Summer League championship will be missing L.A. star guard Lonzo Ball. He’s out with a mild strain in his calf. Still the game will provide the exclamation point to an event the NBA, local organizers and ESPN programmers say has been a raging success.

“Our ESPN and ESPN 2 [summer league] ratings are up 50 percent over last year’s” says Ashley O’Connor, the sports network’s senior manager for NBA programming and acquisitions.

Those ratings have included a July 7 Lakers game against the Los Angeles Clippersthat drew 879,000 viewers and an L.A. game against Boston a day later that attracted 1.1 million.

Yes, Las Vegas is a “Lakers town” because of the proximity of L.A. But what really drew all those eyes, and the Summer League’s first ever sellout, in advance of the Boston game, was Lonzo Ball.

The second pick in this year’s NBA draft is considered a potential once-in-a-generation player. And if you don’t believe the basketball experts and pundits, Lonzo’s dad, LaVar, is there to trumpet his son’s abilities. Indeed, if the loquacious LaVar were a fish, he would definitely be of the largemouth variety. He even explained that his son switched up his shoe brand during the games out of spite — he wasn’t able to score a deal with any of the major shoe companies.

For the win

LaVar Ball showed up at Summer League in Las Vegas for a few days and that helped drive the hype. His son Lonzo’s absence Monday is bound to dampen enthusiasm for the final game. But the Summer League has been a success beyond the Balls.

“I really understand now why people are drawn to it,” says Mark Anderson, with the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Anderson is a veteran sports reporter but this has been the first time he’s covered the Summer League nearly full time.

“For kids it’s $20; $30 for adults,” he says. “And that’s for the whole day. You have your choice of 8 games [in the summer league’s early stages] at two different arenas. So it’s an affordable, fun event where you can see some of the stars of tomorrow.”

Players such as Ball, De’Aaron Fox, Jayson Tatum, Dennis Smith Jr. were part of a particularly deep and talented NBA draft in late June. And Las Vegas Summer League has given fans a chance to see these players in their first professional games.

Still, despite the handful of future possible stars, Summer League, in reality, is a mecca for hoops vagabonds.

“Half these guys aren’t going to get on the floor [during a regular season NBA game] and the other half are going to be in Belgium,” says Portland Trailblazers General Manager Neil Olshey. In an ESPN interview during a Summer League game Sunday, Olshey provided a reality check to temper Summer League hyperbole. What hyperbole? How about San Antonio’s Bryn Forbes was the Summer League Steph Curry.

A lot of the top players in June’s draft, says Olshey, “went four months without playing basketball. They got coddled by their agents doing beauty contest workouts [for different teams], they travelled a little bit, they didn’t lift [weights], they don’t have the nutrition, they were in and out of airports. They practice three days [before Summer League] and then we expect these guys to come out and be in peak condition. It’s not going to happen!”

While Summer League play was inconsistent and sloppy, especially in the early part, some teams have gelled over the 11-day Las Vegas event. Tonight’s finalists for example, L.A. and Portland, were low seeded teams when the Summer League tournament started, based on their early Summer League play. But both have discovered a chemistry and are playing well heading into the championship game.

For ESPN, this year’s Summer League success validates the network’s decision to make a year-round commitment to the NBA. You can go back to last summer, when Kevin Durant signed with the Golden State Warriors and all the talk and coverage that generated. Then the regular season, the playoffs, which ended in June. After that the draft, and now the Summer League.

But after Monday night, things will go quiet for a bit. If people truly crave basketball, there’s still great WNBA action during the summer and into early fall. For those NBA-only fans though, it’ll finally be time for some baseball, beach and barbecue. Until September, when NBA training camps open and the circuit starts all over again.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

George A. Romero, Father of the Zombie Movie, Has Died at 77

When you think of what a zombie movie is, you have George A. Romero to thank for that.

While the term “zombie” existed previously, even in movies, it was his 1968 indie horror masterpiece, Night of the Living Dead, that gave us the iconic version of the undead monsters we know today. Romero continued from there with the satirical 1978 follow-up Dawn of the Dead plus the sequels Day of the Dead, Land of the Dead, Diary of the Dead, Survival of the Dead and the upcoming Road of the Dead, which arrives next year directed by Matt Birman from Romero’s script.

In addition to his zombie classics, Romero also directed the horror movies Creepshow, an anthology inspired by old horror comic books, The Crazies, Monkey Shines, The Dark Half, Knightriders and others. And he influenced so many more, including remakes of his own zombie movies and other zombie movies that are merely part of his legacy. With so many filmmakers being influenced by Romero, he also acted in the work of his followers’, including The Silence of the Lambs. And he appears in numerous documentaries about his work and horror in general, including Birth of the Living Dead and Doc of the Dead.

Romero died in his sleep this morning after a long battle with lung cancer, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Here are some of his most memorable movies:

Night of the Living Dead (1968):

[embedded content]

Dawn of the Living Dead (1978)

[embedded content]

Creepshow (1982):

[embedded content]

Survival of the Dead (2009):

[embedded content]

And more:

[embedded content]

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Artist Louie Gong Brings Authentic Native American Art To Mainstream Business

Louie Gong is a Native American visual artist and designer who got his start decorating Vans sneakers. Today he’s one of the most successful Native entrepreneurs in the country.

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Let’s head to the other side of the country now. In Washington state, a member of the Nooksack Indian Tribe wants to change how you think about Native American art. Louie Gong is an artist and entrepreneur, and he wants to move past what he sees as outdated stereotypes about Native art. Marcie Sillman of member station KUOW has the story.

MARCIE SILLMAN, BYLINE: Louie Gong leads the way into his store room.

LOUIE GONG: This is our blankets.

SILLMAN: Gong pulls one out of a cardboard box. It’s woven from soft red wool and decorated with an image of a traditional Native American thunderbird. And it’s an extremely popular item. Even Bernie Sanders bought one.

GONG: A lot of times, people who speak to tribal audiences are gifted blankets. And so when one of our Native leaders spoke on behalf of Bernie Sanders, Bernie Sanders himself gifted that Native leader this bright red thunderbird blanket.

SILLMAN: Louie Gong’s been in business less than a decade. Before that, he was a mental health counselor at the Muckleshoot Indian Reservation south of Seattle.

GONG: But I hadn’t really explored art or even considered it a possibility in my life until I helped the Muckleshoot Tribe create giveaway items for the 2006 canoe journey which they hosted.

SILLMAN: The canoe journey is an annual celebration of Northwest Native culture. The host tribe gives gifts to the guests. And with his knack for drawing, he decorated gift drum heads. A few months later, Gong took a black marker to a pair of gray Vans sneakers he picked up at the mall, doodling his version of a traditional Northwest Native design.

GONG: And I really wasn’t like coastalizing (ph) or nativizing them. I was Louisizing (ph) them, you know?

SILLMAN: Gong wore them to work, and his colleagues were so impressed, they asked him to decorate their Vans. Gong started to market the shoes on social media. The Vans company caught wind and not only condoned this, they invited him to create a pair of one-of-a-kind shoes for them. Eventually, Gong had so many orders, he quit his day job and set up shop in his apartment.

GONG: I look at all the work that I’m doing as collaborations with my ancestors and my family, the people that came before me. That’s why I named my business Eighth Generation. It was a way to honor the contributions and prior work of the people whose shoulders I’m standing on.

SILLMAN: Gong has contracted with four other Native artisans. He uses some of their designs on his products, as well as selling their work. They get most of the profits from their art. And that makes Gong a new brand of social entrepreneur, according to Lori Pourier. She’s the president of the First People’s Fund, a South Dakota-based organization that provides grants and training for Native American artists.

LORI POURIER: We always believe that there’s a balance between the head and heart and the work that we do. And Louie represents, you know, both of those as a businessman, as well as a community member and, you know, a leading culture bearer in his community.

SILLMAN: She points to a mentorship program Gong set up called Inspired Natives. His goal is to teach other indigenous artists what he’s learned about the business world, from social media marketing to working with non-Native corporations.

GONG: In native communities, we have art, and we have culture. What we don’t have in our community are business skills or good examples of creative artists who have been successful.

SILLMAN: Eighth Generation’s been so successful that last year, Gong opened a brick-and-mortar shop near Seattle’s historic waterfront.

COLLEEN ECHOHAWK: When I walked down to Pike Street Market (ph), and I looked down and I see a store, I’m just filled with just tremendous amount of pride.

SILLMAN: Colleen Echohawk directs the Chief Seattle Club, a social service center for the city’s Native Americans.

ECHOHAWK: Because there’s not many places in the city where you can feel authentic representation of Native people, where it hasn’t been colonized.

GONG: This is called the Busted Knuckle Gallery. I named it after my dad.

SILLMAN: Louie Gong’s father was a martial artist competing across North America. This room in Gong’s store serves as a gallery, a community meeting space and a metaphor.

GONG: You know, I grew up with a dad who was a professional fighter. And although I’m not exactly that person, I’ve taken a lot of the good parts of who my dad was and incorporated that into the rest of me.

SILLMAN: Louie Gong may not spar like his dad, but he never backs away from a challenge. For NPR News, I’m Marcie Sillman in Seattle.

Copyright © 2017 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. 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.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Doctors Report Removing 27 Contact Lenses From A Woman's Eye

In this file photo, a woman puts in her contact lens.

Suzanne Plunkett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Suzanne Plunkett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

It wasn’t old age, or disease: A “bluish foreign body” that was found in an English woman’s eye turned out to be a mass of contact lenses, surprising medical staff who were preparing the woman, 65, for routine cataract surgery. They report pulling 27 lenses from the woman’s eye.

“She was quite shocked,” specialist trainee ophthalmologist Rupal Morjaria tells Britain’s Optometry Today.

Morjaria says she and her colleagues were startled to find 17 contact lenses clumped together as they were injecting anesthesia into the woman’s eye at Solihull Hospital, southeast of Birmingham. They then recovered another 10 lenses. Part of their surprise, she said, was because the patient hadn’t complained of any irritation.

“When she was seen two weeks after I removed the lenses she said her eyes felt a lot more comfortable,” Morjaria tells Optometry Today. “She thought her previous discomfort was just part of old age and dry eye.”

The woman had not complained about problems other than cataracts, according to the report Morjaria and others published in the British Medical Journal. The patient had been wearing monthly disposable contact lenses for some 35 years, she said.

Morjaria said she hopes the episode, which occurred last winter, raises awareness for patients who wear contacts but might go long periods without getting an eye exam — perhaps because they order them online rather than in person. The incident should also raise issues for optometrists, she said, noting that the mass of contact lenses hadn’t triggered an obvious infection.

Their BMJ article prompted one physician to remark in the comment section, “It does make one wonder about the appropriateness and completeness of the examination of the referring clinician!”

As for the surgery that had been planned — it was postponed, in part to allow bacteria that had accumulated to clear from the area of the eye.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Federer Seizes Record 8th Wimbledon Title, Beating Cilic In Straight Sets

Switzerland’s Roger Federer defeated Croatia’s Marin Cilic to win his record eighth men’s singles title at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London Sunday.

Daniel Leal-Olivas/AP

hide caption

toggle caption

Daniel Leal-Olivas/AP

With Roger Federer at the top of his game — and his opponent, Marin Cilic, hobbled by a foot injury — the Swiss superstar seized his record eighth Wimbledon singles title on Sunday, winning in straight sets yet again.

For Federer, 35, the win breaks a tie he had held with Pete Sampras and William Renshaw. It also adds to his record for most Grand Slam singles championships, giving him 19. Federer’s first win in Wimbledon came in 2003 — and after Sunday’s victory, he said he’d like to come back next year.

“The tournament I played — not dropping a set and holding the trophy — it’s magical. It’s too much really,” Federer said after the match. “I can’t believe it yet.”

Federer used one of his six aces to put the match away and spark a celebration in London. The final tally — 6-3, 6-1, 6-4 — hints at Cilic’s struggles in the middle of this match, when a foot injury hindered his range and his ability to get to the net.

Moments after it was all over, Cilic said he wouldn’t let himself give up after being hurt, saying, “I gave my best, and that’s all I could do.”

“I’ll be gone again for the next six months if it keeps working out this fantastic when I come back!”

@rogerfederer#Wimbledonpic.twitter.com/XsReiwReBI

— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 16, 2017

Of his opponent, Federer said, “it is cruel sometimes, but he fought well.”

As for how Federer got here, NPR’s Tom Goldman reports:

“Federer roared through the draw without losing a set, while his closest and younger rivals — Andy Murray, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic — have fallen prey to injuries and upsets. Federer says his decision to skip this year’s clay court season has helped save his body for Wimbledon. After losing to Federer in the semifinals, Tomas Berdych said, quote, ‘I don’t see anything that would indicate Roger is getting older.’ “

Federer broke through in the first set, taking a 3-2 lead after Cilic was unable to fend off a third breakpoint. Federer followed that up immediately with a brisk service game that gave him a 4-2 edge. He later broke Cilic again to take the first set, 6-3.

Midway through the first set, Cilic was sent sprawling as he lunged to deal with the angle and spin of Federer’s shots — and despite Cilic reaching the ball in one long exchange, the Swiss was able to lift it cleanly back over the net for a winner.

From there, frustration seemed to build in Cilic — after the first set, he smacked his bag with his racket.

An unusual scene unfolded during the second set, after Federer raced to a 3-0 lead. That’s when Cilic asked for medical attention, and looked to be weeping on the bench, where he sat for a number of minutes speaking to the medical staff. It didn’t seem that Cilic received any treatment other than taking a couple of pills — presumably for either pain or inflammation.

When Cilic finally stood, grabbed his racket and walked back toward the baseline, the crowd rewarded him with loud applause. He then held serve to make it 3-1.

Federer won the second set, 6-1 — and in the changeover that followed, Cilic again summoned the doctor. This time, he took off his left shoe and had the physician look at his foot. As Federer sat snacking nearby, the doctor then wound tape around the ball of Cilic’s foot.

Cilic seemed to adjust both his movements on the court and his strategy, and he found some success by staying back at the baseline and rarely venturing to the center of the net. With the third set even at 1-1, Cilic fended off Federer’s threat to break his serve again.

In the games that followed, Cilic could be seen hopping and tapping his feet on his side of the court, trying to get life into his legs and give himself a chance against one of the game’s legendary players. But it wouldn’t be enough.

After the match, it was Federer’s turn to weep on the bench, sobbing openly as he struggled to process what he’d accomplished, using a towel to wipe his face as his wife and four children watched from the stands.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Disney Debuts Awesome New Looks at 'Star Wars,' 'Avengers: Infinity War' and More

A Wrinkle in Time

The Disney fan event known as the D23 Expo unveiled a slew of fantastic fantasies today, including the first footage from A Wrinkle in Time (first poster above) and a behind the scenes video from Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Here are some of the highlights.

Dumbo

Production has begun on a new live-action version under the direction of Tim Burton. Colin Farrell, Michael Keaton, Danny DeVito and Eva Green star. Don’t worry, Dumbo will fly again, this time thanks to state of the art visual effects. The movie is set for release on March 29, 2019.

#Dumbo: Disney shares first look photo of Tim Burton on the set of live-action remake https://t.co/oYw9L5zWDy#D23Expopic.twitter.com/2v9eb1f2tJ

— Hollywood Reporter (@THR) July 15, 2017

Pixar’s Coco

A new poster for Pixar’s next animated adventure was released. Coco will liven up theaters on November 22.

Disney’s new @pixarcoco sugar skull poster is pretty awesome. pic.twitter.com/ayS04gCHWg

— Fandango (@Fandango) July 15, 2017

A Wrinkle in Time

Originally published in 1963, Madeleine L’Engle’s novel A Wrinkle in Time was an instant success, winning a slew of awards and inspiring countless children to expand their imaginations. The book follows Meg Murray, a young teenage girl who searches across time and space for her missing scientist father. Along the way, she learns that the universe is under attack by an evil being.

Screenwriter Jennifer Lee (Frozen) came on board Disney’s big-screen adaptation in August 2014, followed by director Ava DuVernay (Selma) in February 2016. Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon and Mindy Kaling soon joined the cast, along with Chris Pine, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Storm Reid in the lead role of Meg Murray.

The first teaser was announced to thunderous reaction. Watch it below.

[embedded content]

A Wrinkle in Time will open in theaters on March 9, 2018.

Mary Poppins Returns

Our anticipation is high for the music-infused sequel, which will land on December 25, 2018. Emily Blunt stars in the role that Julie Andrews made famous. A new motion poster was released.

Emily Blunt is Mary Poppins in the upcoming sequel, #MaryPoppinsReturns. The brand new film opens in theatres December 2018. #D23Expopic.twitter.com/egxozrpRbr

— Walt Disney Studios (@DisneyStudios) July 15, 2017

Aladdin

We already knew that Guy Ritchie will direct the live-action version and now the stars have been announced. Mena Massoud (the upcoming TV version of Jack Ryan) will take the lead as Aladdin, Naomi Scott (Power Rangers) will play Jasmine and Will Smith will portray Genie, the role made famous in the animated version by Robin Williams’ voice.

Your live action Aladdin cast:

Aladdin- Mena Massoud
Jasmine- Naomi Scott
Genie- WILL SMITH #D23Expopic.twitter.com/LHkUMKhPQC

— Rotten Tomatoes (@RottenTomatoes) July 15, 2017

Star Wars: The Last Jedi

Directed by Rian Johnson, the eighth installment in the Star Wars series has generated considerable anticipation, which will only be heightened by the behind the scenes video that was screened. Watch it below.

[embedded content]

Really, John Boyega and Daisy Ridley best describe how we feel after watching that video.

We know. ?? #TheLastJedipic.twitter.com/Sidh7bQPfn

— Star Wars (@starwars) July 15, 2017

Star Wars: The Last Jedi will open on December 15.

Avengers: Infinity War

After Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige brought out more stars on stage than could be counted, the first trailer was screened for the fans in attendance. Our own Erik Davis sums up the reaction.

My heart’s still beating crazy fast – guys that #InfinityWar trailer brought the house down like nothing I’ve seen before. Chills#D23EXPOpic.twitter.com/mqH4e8vy36

— ErikDavis (@ErikDavis) July 15, 2017

Avengers: Infinity War will be released on May 4, 2018.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)