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#daniel frederiksen
my-chaos-radio · 5 months
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Release: October 13, 2023.
Lyrics:
Circles, keep running in circles
Feels like every dream you've ever had just slowly fades away
Hopeless, some days feel so hopeless
Just another day, another struggle, 'nother win to chase
Yeah, I get that sometimes life can bring you down
And you try to win the fight, but you don't know how
Whenever you're falling and you don't know where you're going
Even if your wings are broken, soon enough, you'll fly again
When everything's failing and your eyes just won't stop raining
Even if your fire's out, then soon enough, you'll burn again
You know in the ups and downs, I'll be there
When the lights go out, I'll be there
In the coldest hour, I'll be there for you
In the highs and lows, I'll be there
When you lose control, I'll be there
It'll be alright, yeah, I'll be there for you (I'll be there for you)
Donde te encontrés al borde
Y tocando fondo, hacete amigo de la soledad
Vive, intenta y sonríe
Es un paso a paso y tiempo pa' dejar lo malo atrás
Es hoy, conexión, con vos mismo, con el interior
Trabajar en tu mejor versión y poner a volar el corazón
Whenever you're falling and you don't know where you're going
Even if your wings are broken, soon enough, you'll fly again
When everything's failing and your eyes just won't stop raining
Even if your fire's out, then soon enough, you'll burn again
You know in the ups and downs, I'll be there
When the lights go out, I'll be there
In the coldest hour, I'll be there for you (I'll be there)
In the highs and lows, I'll be there
When you lose control, I'll be there
It'll be alright, yeah, I'll be there for you
Songwriter:
In the highs and lows, I'll be there
When you lose control
It'll be alright, I'll be there for you
Juergen Dohr / Guido Kramer / Dennis Bierbrodt / Stefan Dabruck / Erik Smaaland / Robin Schulz / Daniel Deimann / Alida Peck / Tobias Frederiksen / Rita Sahatçiu Ora / Mikkel Cox / Tiago Pacheco Lezcano
SongFacts:
“I’ll Be There” is an empowerment anthem that reminds us: No matter what happens, there is someone there for us even in the darkest moment. Robin Schulz provides the musical foundation for this encouraging message with a production in which sparkling soundscapes, uplifting beats and a nostalgic basic feeling create a lot of atmosphere. In combination with Rita Ora's outshining vocals and Tiago PZK's raw emotional energy, "I'll Be There" unfolds tremendous power - as do the song's lyrics.
"When everything's failing / And your eyes just won't stop raining / Even if your fire's out, then soon enough you'll burn again," sings Rita Ora, and promises: "In the coldest hour, I'll be there for you.” Meanwhile, Tiago PZK has a few tips for dealing with the crisis: "Vive, intenta y sonríe / Es un paso a paso / Y tiempo pa dejar lo malo atrás" (Live, try to smile / Take one step at a time / It's time , to leave the bad behind you." His subsequent appeal "Trabajar en tu mejor version / y poner valor al corazón" (Work on the best version of yourself / And put the heart at the center) is part of what makes this song stand out feels like a musical hug - just right for the rainy autumn days…
Robin Schulz's new single marks the beginning of the next chapter in his musical journey. Together with Rita Ora and Tiago PZK, the German mega-producer is once again leaving an unmistakable landmark on the musical map with "I'll Be There". Schulz recently received a total of 15 new awards at a celebratory awards ceremony for his long-standing label Warner Music Central Europe for his achievements, including two Diamond and multiple Platinum and Multi-Platinum awards, adding to his already massive tally of over 840 Gold, Platinum and Diamond awards in 30 countries.
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between-two-worlds · 2 years
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Mermaids (2003) | A Magical Kiss
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nagdabbit · 3 years
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MY GIRLFRIEND IS HOME FOR DYNAMITE FOR ONCE
"i just think it's neat that dustin rhodes gets to walk out to brain stew."
"when i get old, i hope the doctor that replaces my knees is as good as dustin's."
"my new fitness goal is hook's shoulder-waist ratio, taz's neck, and malakai black's legs. i could kill god."
"i still think i should be allowed to be friends with eddie kingston. it would be great. we'd get arrested immediately."
"what does hook... do? i feel a great deal of affection for him, but does he do anything?"
"step one, be friends with ruby soho. step two, be friends with lars frederiksen. step three, get close to tim armstong and get revenge for brody."
"dante can fly, good lord. look at him. he's soaring, flying. i dont remember the rest of the song."
"smug, whispy haired little shit. i changed my mind, hook doesn't actually need to do anything. no thoughts, head empty, only violence."
"hobbs just hits so fuckin hard. he came to wreck shit, and wreck shit he did."
"babe im gonna start actually competing just so i can get close to dan lambert. just for a second. that's all i need."
"colt, come out here and get your loud son."
"at this rate, chuck will never get to do a cuss on tv."
"oh shit did i miss wardlow? fuck, i love that guy."
"i changed my mind, i want hayter's shoulders and taz's neck. with my tits? so powerful."
"hey why is there a commercial immediately at the start of ruby's match."
was sitting upside down, tried to sit up, fell off the couch, crawled back up into my lap, and held me by the face for emphasis, "babe, babe, i fucking hate jr."
"i need dark order to be okay again. i cant enjoy tacos when my boys aren't getting along. i fucking love tacos."
"do you think brandi and cody realize that they're super boring? midcard and mrs is gonna be a bad show."
"i find the highschoolers boring, is that so wrong of me?"
"aw, hey look, it's mr. dr. baker!"
"he's just got a widdle baby face. sweet widdle eyes. just looks like a good boy."
"oh, noooo, why did daniel bryan danielson beat up that nerd?"
"aw, babe, you didnt get to sing. do you want me to fight them? i will fight them. for honor, for love. can we get tacos."
"suzuki is the only genuinely terrifying wrestler. he is the only man i would willingly call sir."
"hell yeah, bloodletting, i love this shit."
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seattlemysterybooks · 7 years
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prettysinister
top: 1937 Morrow hardcover
bottom two: 1944 Dell map back reissue
cover art by George A. Frederiksen
Geoffrey Homes, aka Daniel Mainwaring, author of Build My Gallows High, adapted into the film noir classic Out of the Past
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adistantmusic · 7 years
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Matilda Review 18/3/17- Perth, Australia
First time seeing this show live, and wow
 Pretty sure Eva Murawski was my Matilda. We were sitting pretty far back so it could have been Annabella Cowley. Anyways she had a lovely strong voice. I did feel like she was reciting lines rather than acting them, but it kind of works with the character since she’s so beaten down. She did enunciate every word clearly, and the accents work quite nicely. 
Lucy Maunder was on for Miss Honey, she has such a lovely singing voice. She did flub a line towards the end but otherwise great performance.
James Millar as Trunchbull was great. I feel like he wasn't overly consistent in embodying the character, as sometimes he was quite feminine and other times more masculine, but overall a great performance. 
I really liked Marika Aubrey’s interpretation of Mrs Wormwood, she was a little softer in her line delivery than Margherita, which I quite liked. I feel like her dance could have been more technically strong, but otherwise she was great
Daniel Frederiksen was pretty good, but not a stand out performance. His line delivery did feel very natural though.
I really don't like Mrs Phelps as a character, she’s just annoying.
Kids were great, so switched on all the time. Shontaè Minniecon (Hortensia) said her spelling bee lines super sassy which I loved. Too far back to recognise facial features so I’m not sure who else was on. I noticed they spoke quite slowly, and were careful to enunciate every word.
One thing I found really cool was that during quiet, Matilda had a jagged box lighting effect around her, instead of standing on a pile of books. I really liked this as it separated her from what was happening around her, and, paired with the other characters being frozen, was very effective.
School song was insane to see live, the lighting, choreography and use of props and stage were just perfect. That is how you stage a number.
The visuals in this show are just stunning through.
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SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE THEATRE REVIEW (PLAYHOUSE, MELBOURNE)
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Feature pic: Claire van der Boom and Michael Wahr. Jeff Busby/MTC
Towards the end of Shakespeare in Love, Melbourne Theatre Company’s major 2019 production, the play returns to an image of Shakespeare sitting and writing at his desk, illuminated by candlelight. The moment jolts: for much of its running time, this is a portrait of writing that’s social and highly energetic.
It’s also a portrait of writing that’s deeply connected to the passions of its protagonist. That would be Will Shakespeare (Michael Wahr), who’s struggling to finish his play Romeo and Ethel the Pirate’s Daughter. Chief among his passions is his growing love for the wealthy Viola de Lesseps (Claire van der Boom) who disguises herself as a man so she can indulge her true passion for acting (women were banned from the stage at the time.)
Viola is being forced to marry the dastardly Lord Wessex (Daniel Frederiksen). Comedy and a bit of drama ensues as Will juggles rehearsals with a motley group of players, a friendly rivalry with fellow playwright Kit Marlowe (Luke Arnold), his love for Viola and the demands of his wealthy benefactors.
The plot will be familiar to those who watched the 1998 film whose screenplay, by Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard, was adapted for the stage by English playwright Lee Hall. This production is by some order of magnitude better than the film. The breezy pacing, delightfully calibrated performances and clever moments of theatricality – both grand and small – are all used to entertaining effect.
Gabriela Tylesova’s revolving set is put to good use throughout, speeding up scene transitions or, as in a lovely moment wherein Viola recites Sonnet 18, seemingly slowing down time, underlying the poetry of Shakespeare’s language. Looming over the action is an oversized blue theatre curtain, a constant, gentle reminder that this is theatre about theatre.
Not that these reminders are limited to the set. The script mines humour from the idea that Shakespeare is famous to us but labouring in semi-obscurity on stage, and it even playfully broaches the subject of the disputed authorship of his work, as in a scene where Marlowe feeds his friend lines to woo Viola.
The production is full of nice little touches, from the players performing musical interludes between scenes (is that Francis Greenslade playing the recorder?) to the increasingly noticeable codpiece being swung around by Lord Wessex, seemingly growing alongside the character’s unfurling misogyny.
Various performers in the 14-member ensemble all help maintain the play’s lightness of touch. Deidre Rubenstein commands absolute attention in a deliciously entertaining role as Queen Elizabeth I, resplendent in some outstanding gowns.
It would be remiss of me to not mention Rosie the dog, sporting her own mini Elizabethan collar. The audience broke into audible awws and spontaneous applause at her first appearance on stage, seemingly proving Queen Elizabeth’s observation in the play that theatre-makers can’t go wrong with dogs.
Director Simon Phillips finds plenty of humour in the ludicrous formalities of the upper crust Elizabethans, as in a ball scene whose absurd choreography recalls a similar moment in Yorgos Lanthimos’ film The Favourite.
He also takes a playfully open approach to gender and sexuality, from casting Aljin Abella in dual roles as John Webster and Mistress Quickly to having Marlowe flirt with men. And while some late tonal shifts are somewhat jarring, such is the pace of proceedings that things find their feet again relatively quickly.
I doubt that this production of Shakespeare in Love would disprove a key wager in the show: that a play can’t show the true nature of love. But then, it’d be unfair to expect it to. This is a warm-hearted and well-executed entertainment, and a beguiling reminder of theatre’s joyful possibilities.
Shakespeare In Love is at Arts Centre Melbourne, Playhouse until August 14.
- written by Anders Furze (Daily Review)
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rockzone · 2 years
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New Album: Radioactive - XXX
Release Date: 11 Mar 2022
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"XXX" is the new studio album from Radioactive, a band first started in 1991, masterminded by Swedish guitarist/songwriter/producer Tommy Denander (pictured above). XXX will be the fifth album overall under this moniker and the first new release since 2015.
As with past Radioactive albums, "XXX" features a stunning list of guest vocalists lending their talents to the proceedings. Robin McAuley, Robbie LaBlanc, Jerome Mazza, Clif Magness, Christian Ingebrigtsen, and Daniel Byrne all contribute their talents. Tommy also brought in a very special guest, renowned producer Mutt Lange, who co-wrote two tracks, 'Move It' and 'I Have A Dream', with Tommy and Olle Romö and provided background vocals for them as well.
Erik Grönwall (ex-H.E.A.T.) contributed to the writing of 'I Have A Dream' and the rest of the tracks were written by Tommy and Olle Romö, who also plays drums on the album. Additional drums are provided by Neil Anami with all other instruments (guitar, bass, and keyboards) handled by Tommy.
After some years of working as a studio musician in Sweden, Tommy Denander moved to Los Angeles in 1987 at just 19 years old. He quickly befriended some of the top players in town, from the guys in Toto to David Foster, Bill Champlin, and Michael Landau.
When Toto played in Sweden 1991, Tommy asked them if they would play on his album if he got signed to a record deal. To his amazement, they all said yes. As luck would have it, just a few days later, Tommy signed with Sony Music and in October of that year he travelled to Los Angeles to start the recording of the first Radioactive album with Jeff Porcaro, Mike Porcaro, Steve Porcaro, and David Paich as his backing band.
More albums followed, and on each of them, Tommy has managed to put together a sensational cast of musicians including Bobby Kimball, Fergie Frederiksen, Tony Franklin, Marcel Jacob, Steve Overland, Jeff Porcaro, Steve Porcaro, Andreas Carlsson, Yngwie Malmsteen, Bruce Kulick, Neal Schon, Michael Landau, Kelly Keagy, Robin Beck, James Christian, Gary Barden, Steve Lukather and many more.
Radioactive "XXX" is another gem in Tommy's storied and ever growing body of work. It's a true delight for AOR/Melodic Rock fans
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orbemnews · 3 years
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In its latest lurch to the far right, Denmark plans to send refugees back to Syria They did not speak a word of Danish yet the Scandinavian country was an outpost of calm for the siblings, who fled the destruction and death that followed the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011. On arriving in 2015, it only took them a year to learn the language, and now Dania is months away from finishing high school in the Danish port of Kolding. “We were very happy at the beginning and felt safe being here,” Dania, who hopes to work in bio-medicine, said. “We [wanted] a good future, therefore we did everything [we could] to learn Danish.” The siblings asked CNN to withhold their last name due to concerns for family members back in Syria. Hussam, 20, described Denmark as a place of peace, a country where his family felt at home, and “a society that gives you the freedom to live the way you want.” He hoped to study engineering or medicine once he completed high school next year. Those dreams were dashed when Denmark became the first democratic European nation to tell Syrian refugees originating from Damascus and its surrounding countryside to return to the war-torn nation. In 2019, the Danish government began reviewing the residency permits of refugees who came from Damascus — a move based on its assessment that the conditions there had improved and it was therefore safe for refugees to return. In February, it was announced they were also reviewing the status of several hundred Syrian refugees from Damascus’ surrounding region. But critics say the policy of stripping Syrians of residency permits is the latest salvo aimed at Denmark’s non-White refugee and immigrant community. While fighting has subsided considerably in the region around Damascus, activists say the Danish government is actively putting Syrians in harm’s way. “We disagree with the decision to deem the Damascus area, or any other area [in Syria], safe for refugees,” Charlotte Slente, the secretary general of the Danish Refugee Council, told CNN. “We have knowledge from various reports of arbitrary detention and ongoing civil rights abuses of the civilian population in Syria,” she added, citing a March Human Rights Council report, which found that the Syrian government’s policy and acts “amount to crimes against humanity [and] have continued unabated for nearly 10 years, without any sign that the government intends to discontinue them.” The Danish minister for immigration and integration, Mattias Tesfaye, defended the policy in a statement to CNN, saying that “Denmark has been open and honest from day one” that residence permits for Syrian refugees are “temporary, and that the permit can be revoked if the need for protection ceases to exist.” “The approach of the Danish government is to provide protection to those in need of it, but when the conditions in their home country have improved, former refugees should return to the home country and reestablish their life there,” Tesfaye added. Dania and Hussam’s family have been caught in the dragnet. The Danish Immigration Service uprooted their lives in February by refusing to extend their father’s residency permit, which their own visas are linked to, according to their lawyer Daniel Nørrung. Dania and Hussam had been told to leave Denmark by March 5, but with the help of a lawyer, the family is challenging the decision with the Refugee Appeals Board. “It’s a bit problematic, Dania and Hussam were given a date to leave Denmark when their father’s case has not even been finalized,” Nørrung told CNN. If the appeals board upholds the immigration service’s decision, the family will be stripped of their rights to study, work or live in the country. This mean they risk being sent to one of two deportation facilities — known as “departure centers” — for people who have been refused asylum and refugees like them who have lost their status. “We are going to languish in a center, where people are broken down, humiliated and held in helplessness and hopelessness, instead of being able to go out and contribute to society,” Dania said. Uprooting lives The Danish government has refused to extend the residency permits of least 300 Syrian refugees since 2019, after its security assessment concluded that the situation in Damascus was “no longer so serious.” Authorities are currently reexamining the protection of more than 400 more Syrian refugees living in the country, according to figures given to CNN by the Ministry of Immigration and Integration. This is part of a self-described paradigm shift of Danish refugee policy, said Nikolas Feith Tan, a refugee law expert at the Danish Institute of Human Rights. The move has seen successive governments enact legislative amendments that have shifted the country’s focus from the integration and permanent protection of refugees to the kind of temporary residency permits Dania and Hussam were placed under. In January, the country’s left-wing Social Democrat Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen reiterated her party’s intention to be as restrictive on immigration as her right-wing predecessors, telling parliament the goal was to have “zero asylum seekers.” Frederiksen adopted a hardline stance on immigration in the run-up to Denmark’s 2019 election, luring voters away from the right-wing populist Danish People’s Party (DPP). After winning the election, the Social Democrat party is “locked in now” to prove it is not soft on immigration, or it risks drawing the ire of right-wing parties or the electorate, Kristina Bakkær Simonsen, an associate professor at Aarhus University, who specializes in immigrant integration, discrimination and stigmatization, told CNN. While the Danish government “cannot carry out forced returns” as it does not have diplomatic relations with Syria, “the government’s clear hope is that this group of people will choose to return voluntarily, which some Syrians already have done,” Tan added. To help with the move “a bag of money from the Danish state” is provided to the voluntary Syrian returnees, the immigration and integration minister Tesfaye has said. His ministry told CNN the financial support is around $28,150, and since 2019 more than 250 Syrian refugees have taken the financial support package. But activists say Syrians are being compelled to return by the Danish government’s efforts to make life intolerable for those without residency rights. The deportation centers Dania and Hussam dread entering “are like torture, designed to break people down,” Michala Clante Bendixen, the head of Refugees Welcome Denmark, told CNN. The centers are partially open, which means their occupants are able to move in and out freely, said Bendixen. But the occupants have to check in every evening, and have no income, rights to employment or access to public housing. One center is around four miles from the nearest bus stop, making it impossible for anyone to leave in the day. “There are no activities, no training courses, you can’t even cook your own food,” Bendixen said, noting that even in prison there are opportunities to make money. Instead of returning to their country of origin, refugees sometimes “go underground” and flee to other European countries “where they will try and reopen their asylum cases,” Bendixen said. Targeting immigrants and refugees In recent years, Denmark has rolled out some of the harshest anti-immigrant policies in Europe, including a so-called jewelry bill that allows the government to take certain assets from asylum seekers to contribute to the country’s welfare state. In 2017, the former Liberal Party immigration minister Inger Stojberg celebrated the passage of another law that tightened immigration controls with cake. The following year, a decade-old proposal by the right-wing populist DPP to ban face coverings in public came into force, essentially criminalizing Muslim women who wear the niqab or burqa. In 2019, the government forced social and ethnic change in 15 low-income housing estates across the country — which it called “hard ghettos” and which Danish regulations define partly according to the races of residents. This year, the authorities said it would drop the term “ghetto” but expand the law to prevent the growth of such enclaves. The aim is that by the end of the decade, “residents with non-Western backgrounds” can only comprise up to 30% of any neighborhood in Denmark, according to a press release from the Interior and Housing Ministry. “For far too many years, we have closed our eyes to the development that was underway, and only acted when the integration problems became too great,” housing minister Kaare Dybvad Bek said in a statement. “We will do this by preventing more vulnerable housing areas and by creating more mixed housing areas throughout Denmark.” But the government is not succeeding in escaping the scrutiny that “they are trying to avoid by renaming ghetto areas, when they keep prioritizing ethnicity as the prime criterion” of these policies, Simonsen told CNN. ‘Copying the far right’ Critics say the governing coalition, which is led by the Social Democrats, is copying the language of the Danish far right. “Denmark is strong when it comes to rights and solidarity; burden sharing and economic equality; fair governance and no corruption,” Bendixen said. “In that way, it is very surprising and very paradoxical we have this growing xenophobia and also managed to make … clearly discriminatory laws” for refugees and immigrants, she said. Some maintain that, at its core, Denmark’s identity is tied to its White heritage — something reflected in official statistics, which divides the population into three categories: “persons of Danish origins,” “immigrants,” and “descendants of immigrants.” This means that second-generation immigrants, who are naturalized Danish citizens, are not counted officially in the Danish category. Last year, the immigration and integration minister Tesfaye announced a new classification for people from primarily Muslim countries. The category, called MENAPT, will include people from or with heritage from Middle Eastern and North African countries as well as Pakistan and Afghanistan. “It will provide a clearer picture of how people from 24 countries, primarily in the Middle East and North Africa, who have played a major role in immigration to Denmark, cope in relation to, for example, crime and employment,” a government statement wrote. What it shows, Bendixen said, is that there appears to be “two sets of laws” in Denmark: “One set for ‘the real Danes,’ and one set for the ‘others who don’t belong here.'” While analysts have noted that Danish political discourse on immigrants is extremely negative compared to other European countries, the policy of removing the refugee status of Syrians has been controversial in the country. The plight of young Danish-speaking Syrians have filled the pages of the country’s largest broadsheets and Facebook groups have been set up to campaign for them to remain. The action has also made the country an outlier among its closest allies. In March, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the UN Security Council that it was “not in the interest of the Syrian people to pressure Syrian refugees to return to Syria, including to regime-held areas, where many fear they will be arbitrary detained, tortured, or even killed by Assad’s security forces in retaliation for fleeing.” “We agree with the UN that refugee returns must be voluntary, well-informed, and should ensure the safety and dignity of the people involved — or else they should not happen,” Blinken added. But Denmark does not appear to be reconsidering the move. “The government’s policy is working, and I won’t back down, it won’t happen,” immigration minister Tesfaye told Agence France Presse. In a statement to CNN he pointed to reports by the UK Home Office, the European Union’s Asylum Office and the Swedish government that said the security situation in Damascus had improved. However, neither of those nations are repatriating Syrians to the Damascus region, while the EU does not recommend doing so. All Hussam and Dania want to do is remain in Denmark. But instead of worrying about exams and other everyday concerns like their Danish friends, the siblings now fear their family may face repercussions on returning to Syria for “turning our backs” against the regime. Hussam also stands the risk of being conscripted into the Syrian army, he said. “Syria is not safe, and will not be safe no matter what city it is, as long as a dictator rules it,” he said. Source link Orbem News #Denmark #Latest #Lurch #plans #Refugees #send #Syria
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newstfionline · 3 years
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Friday, April 16, 2021
Biden Administration to Impose Tough Sanctions on Russia (NYT) The Biden administration is set to announce on Thursday a string of long-awaited measures against Russia, including far-reaching financial sanctions, for the hacking of government and private networks and a range of other activity, according to people who have been briefed on the moves. The sanctions are meant to cut deeper than previous efforts to punish Russia for interfering in elections, targeting the country’s sovereign debt, according to people briefed on the matter. Administration officials were determined to draft a response that would impose real costs on Moscow, as many previous rounds of sanctions have been shrugged off. Restrictions on sovereign debt affect a nation’s ability to raise dollar-denominated bonds, with lenders fearful of being cut off from American financial markets. The United States has used similar techniques against Iran, among others.
California governor says all schools must reopen (AP) California Gov. Gavin Newsom is urging all schools in the state to reopen, saying there are no health barriers to getting children back into classrooms and ending distance learning. His wishes remain an expectation rather than a mandate because California’s decentralized education system lets the 1,200 school districts govern themselves. Some of the largest school districts are reopening, including Los Angeles and San Diego.
Texas Nearly Went Dark Because Officials Misjudged Weather (Bloomberg) Texas came uncomfortably close to another round of rolling blackouts Tuesday night because grid operators misjudged the weather. The Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which manages most of the state’s grid, had counted on a mild cold front sweeping the state, lowering demand for power. It didn’t happen. As a result, demand on the grid was about 3,000 megawatts higher than anticipated—or the equivalent of 600,000 homes. The forecasting error, coming as 25% of power generation was off line for seasonal repairs, was another grim reminder of the vulnerability of Texas’s grid. Two months ago, a deep winter freeze knocked out almost half the state’s generating capacity, leaving millions of people in the dark for days. But Tuesday’s weather was hardly extreme, and the close call has raised questions about whether the grid operator, known as Ercot, can prevent a repeat of the February energy crisis. “It’s a disgrace for a power grid in modern times to struggle to keep the lights on during a mild day,” said Daniel Cohan, an associate professor of environmental engineering at Rice University. “We’ll be in trouble when a summer heat wave comes in and demand is one-and-a-half times as much as it was yesterday.”
‘How can a democracy function if we can’t talk to one another?’ U.S. justices ask (Reuters) Two U.S. Supreme Court justices from opposite ends of the ideological spectrum are calling on Americans to learn to talk civilly to each other or risk lasting damage to the nation’s democratic system. Speaking in a pre-recorded discussion released on Wednesday, liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor and conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch both bemoaned the current state of public discourse, which they said was abetted by the spread of disinformation on social media. “We have a ... very heated debate going on. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing, but it can turn into an awful thing, into something that destroys the fabric of our community, if we don’t learn to talk to each other,” Sotomayor said. Gorsuch, appointed by Trump, said people could learn from the court, where the justices tout their ability to remain cordial despite their differences. “How can a democracy function if we can’t talk to one another and if we can’t disagree kindly, with respect for one another’s differences and different points of view?” Gorsuch asked.
A retiring Castro to bring younger face to Cuba’s communists (AP) This week’s Communist Party congress could be the last with a Castro at the helm of Cuba’s all-powerful political institution. Six years after the death of Fidel Castro, his brother and fellow leader of the island’s 1959 revolution, Raul Castro, is being watched to see if he fulfills his commitment to give up the reins of the only political organization permitted in the country of 11 million people. At the previous Communist Party congress, in 2016, Castro announced that owing to the “inexorable laws of life,” he would step down as first secretary-general of the Communist Party in 2021 and yield power to Miguel Diaz-Canel. Also expected to resign at the gathering is Castro’s deputy, 90-year-old José Ramón Machado. That would potentially leave the 17-member Politburo for the first time without any veterans of the guerrilla insurgency, or what many Cubans affectionately refer to as the “historic generation.”
Denmark’s Closing Time: You Don’t Have To Go Home, But You Can’t Stay Here (NYT) Denmark has become the first EU country to strip 1,250 Syrians of their asylum status, forcing them to leave the country where they have built new lives and return to a still-shattered Syria. Those being told to go include high school and university students, truck drivers, factory employees, store owners, and volunteers in nongovernmental organizations. One 27-year-old woman has been living in Denmark since 2015 with her parents and four brothers. She is fluent in Danish and was studying chemistry and biotechnology at the Technical University of Denmark. Immigration authorities told her in February she must return to Damascus, while her parents and brothers are allowed to stay in Denmark. Another couple in their 50s were told they must leave, but their two sons, 20 and 22, can stay. The Danish government can’t forcibly deport the refugees, but those who don’t go voluntarily wind up in “departure centers” where they can remain indefinitely. Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has said Denmark’s goal is to have “zero asylum seekers.”
Violent protests shake Pakistan (Foreign Policy) A hard-line Islamist political party, Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), staged violent protests in major Pakistani cities this week. More than 300 people were injured, and two police officers died during the violence. Media reports and videos indicate that protesters took some police officers hostage. TLP was protesting the arrest of its leader, which Pakistani officials say was intended to “maintain law and order”—a move that clearly backfired. In February, Pakistani officials agreed to put before parliament a TLP demand to expel the French ambassador after remarks by French President Emmanuel Macron that the TLP deemed Islamophobic. The deadline for the demand to be implemented is April 20, and the TLP has vowed major demonstrations if it isn’t met. On Thursday, the French Embassy in Pakistan urged its citizens there to leave the country temporarily, citing “serious threats to French interests.” Pakistan has long treated the TLP, which aggressively defends Pakistan’s blasphemy laws and rails against religious minorities, with kid gloves. That changed on Wednesday, when the government announced it will ban the group. But Pakistan has often banned extremist groups only to have them reemerge under new names. The TLP, which has substantial support among religious conservatives, is unlikely to go away.
In India, Second Wave of Covid-19 Prompts a New Exodus (NYT) Cities in India are once again locking down to fight Covid-19—and workers are once again pouring out and heading back home to rural areas, which health experts fear could accelerate the spread of the virus and devastate poorly equipped villages, as it did last time. Thousands are fleeing hot spots in cities as India hits another record, with more than 200,000 daily new infections reported on Thursday. Bus stations are packed. Crowds are growing at railway stations. India risks repeating the traumatic mass movement that occurred last year after it enforced one of the world’s toughest national lockdowns, eliminating millions of jobs virtually overnight. That lockdown fueled the most disruptive migration across the Indian subcontinent since it was split in two between India and Pakistan in 1947. Tens of millions of lowly paid migrant workers and their families fled cities by train, bus, cargo truck, bicycle, even by blistered feet to reach home villages hundreds of miles away, where the cost of living was cheaper and they could help and be helped by loved ones. The migration also played a significant role in spreading the virus, as local officials in remote districts reported that they were swamped with the sick.
US troop pullout will leave behind an uncertain Afghanistan (AP) The Biden administration’s surprise announcement of an unconditional troop withdrawal from Afghanistan by Sept. 11 appears to strip the Taliban and the Afghan government of considerable leverage and could ramp up pressure on them to reach a peace deal. The Taliban and Afghan government can no longer hold the U.S. hostage—the Taliban with escalating violence and the Afghan president with dragging his feet on a power-sharing deal with the insurgents that doesn’t include him as president—because Washington made it clear that U.S. troops are leaving, no matter what. Still, there are growing fears that Afghanistan will collapse into worsening chaos, brutal civil war, or even a takeover by the Taliban once the Americans are gone—opening a new chapter in the constant war that has lasted for decades.
Beijing skies turn yellow as sand, dust engulf Chinese capital (Reuters) The skies above Beijing turned yellow and air pollution soared to severe levels as a giant cloud of sand and dust particles rolled into the city, propelled by strong winds from the north of China. The amount of sand in the air was less than that during two sandstorms in northern China last month, but the windspeed was higher, allowing the dusty weather to travel faster and farther, according to the meteorological administration. China typically blames Mongolia’s Gobi desert for its annual sandstorms. Beijing has been planting millions of trees along its border to block out sandstorms, part of a project known as the “Great Green Wall”.
Myanmar on the way to becoming a failed state? (The Economist) Myanmar could become Asia’s next failed state. Daily protests continue and soldiers are rampaging through rebellious districts, beating and killing at random; the overall death toll has passed 700. Citizens have burned down shops tied to the army and a general strike has paralysed businesses and public services. In the borderlands some of the 20 or so armed groups that have battled the government on-and-off for decades are taking advantage of the crisis to seize military outposts or caches of weapons. A vacuum is being created in a territory bigger than France that abuts Asia’s biggest powers, China and India. It will be filled by violence and suffering. Although Myanmar is not yet as lawless as Afghanistan, it is rapidly heading in that direction. The ruin of Myanmar is not only a calamity for the 54m Burmese; it also threatens to spread chaos as drugs, disease and refugees spill over Myanmar’s borders.
Drug-resistant bacteria (Financial Times) The World Health Organization has warned none of the antibiotics currently being developed against antimicrobial resistance are enough to tackle drug-resistant bacteria that are expected to kill millions by 2050. In a report published on Thursday, the WHO said that none of the 43 such drugs in the pipeline addressed the 13 most dangerous superbugs it had identified. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has been described by experts as a silent pandemic. Research suggests the spread of bugs that tolerate drugs kills about 700,000 people a year, a figure that could rise to 10m by 2050—the same number of lives claimed by cancer each year.
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between-two-worlds · 2 years
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Mermaids (2003) | Underwater Rescue
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Audio Gift!
Matilda the Musical Australia Crown Theatre, Perth 29th March 2017 Evening performance Matilda: Eva Murawski Mrs Wormwood: Marika Aubrey Mr Wormwood: Daniel Frederiksen Miss Trunchbull: James Millar Miss Honey: Elise McCann Mrs Phelps: Cle Morgan
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=1kGA2g7mVFbAf_-yw69USsLRbTMV1odas
Fun fact: I was actually sitting 3rd row and some actors would walk right by me!
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comunidaderock · 4 years
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𝚁𝚊𝚖𝚘𝚗𝚎𝚜 𝚎 𝚘𝚜 𝟸𝟻 𝚊𝚗𝚘𝚜 𝚍𝚊 𝚍𝚎𝚜𝚙𝚎𝚍𝚒𝚍𝚊 𝚌𝚘𝚖 𝚘 𝚕𝚎𝚗𝚍á𝚛𝚒𝚘 “¡𝙰𝚍𝚒𝚘𝚜 𝙰𝚖𝚒𝚐𝚘𝚜!” . Em julho de 1995 os Ramones deram o seu último passo nos estúdios ao gravar o disco iAdios Amigos!, anunciado como o trabalho de despedida da banda que desde o seu início mudou todos os caminhos do punk rock mundial. Pra marcar o adeus, o quarteto formado na época por Joey Ramone (vocal), Johnny Ramone (guitarra), CJ Ramone (baixo) e Marky Ramone (bateria) apresentou um disco rápido e pesado que trouxe a maioria das músicas escritas pelo ex-baixista Dee Dee Ramone em parceria com o produtor Daniel Rey. Daniel Rey já era um parceiro de longa data e havia trabalhado na produção dos discos Halfway To Sanity (1987) e Brain Drain (1989). Internamente os problemas eram grandes e se traduziam em assuntos como a insatisfação de Johnny com os resultados financeiros dos lançamentos anteriores e a situação de Joey Ramone que descobriu no mesmo ano um câncer linfático que o debilitaria de forma comprometedora. Mesmo em meio a esse turbilhão, a performance do vocalista foi essencial para que iAdios Amigos! não fosse um disco melancólico e sim trouxesse o espírito forte dos Ramones em todas as suas características. A clássica abertura com “One, two, three, four” traz a cover de “I Don’t Want To Grow Up” de Tom Waits mostrando todos esses ingredientes com o peso e a velocidade que os reis do punk sabiam executar com maestria. O baterista Marky também contribuiu com a faixa “Have A Nice Day” e CJ Ramone brilhou cantando quatro faixas, entre elas os destaques “The Crusher” e “Cretin Family”. Dee Dee Ramone, que sempre foi uma bandeira da banda e um dos baixistas mais idolatrados do estilo, teve a honra de encerrar a discografia na última faixa “Born To Die In Berlin” cantando por telefone um verso em alemão. A turnê do disco iria durar até agosto de 1996 quando os Ramones pisaram no palco pela última vez num show com vários amigos convidados, como Chris Cornell, Eddie Vedder, Lemmy Kilmister, Tim Armstrong e Lars Frederiksen do Rancid, além do próprio Dee Dee. . 🆂🅾🅼🅾🆂 🅰 🅲🅾🅼🆄🅽🅸🅳🅰🅳🅴 🆁🅾🅲🅺 . #ramones #comunidaderock https://www.instagram.com/p/CDIPuQ8AVYD/?igshid=12l7zsuynxm4d
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angrymarks · 5 years
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Even people in WWE believe Daniel Bryan suffered a concussion
Even people in WWE believe Daniel Bryan suffered a concussion http://angrymarks.com/index.php?ArticleID=54836 Roman Reigns tells WWE to "have my music ready" for Raw, Lars Frederiksen of Rancid says he's backing AEW.
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matilda-australia · 7 years
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Matilda the Musical delights and revolts in equally pleasurable measures at Adelaide’s Festival Theatre
Patrick McDonald, Chief Arts Writer, The AdvertiserMay 27, 2017 12:26am
ALL the indomitable, magical, rebellious, creative and occasionally revolting joys of being a child come flooding back to life in the dazzling spectacle that is Matilda the Musical.
However, the real beauty of Dennis Kelly’s script and Tim Minchin’s songs is that they also embrace the darker, more deliciously gruesome side of author Roald Dahl’s original novel.
In fact, the show positively revels in its misbehaviour.
Denied the love and attention of her hilariously stupid parents, five-year-old genius Matilda escapes into a world of stories, eventually discovering powers that enable her to control real-life outcomes.
Four girls alternate in the lead role and on opening night Izellah Connelly was superb, bringing out all the sadness and hope behind Matilda’s stoic mask yet also revealing her mischievous side with some kung-fu choreography on her big number, Naughty.
James Millar’s evil headmistress Miss Trunchbull is possibly the greatest pantomime villain to ever darken a musical’s stage, with a grotesque and gargantuan physique that evokes roars of laughter with every hammer-throwing twist and torturous turn.
Meek teacher Miss Honey, played with genuine affection by Lucy Maunder, sets out to champion Matilda but instead finds herself being rescued from a Patheticexistence.
Marika Aubrey and Daniel Frederiksen form a delightfully daft duo as Matilda’s parents Mr and Mrs Wormwood, a dodgy used car salesman and would-be ballroom dancer.
Be sure to return early for the second act or you’ll miss Frederiksen’s interval vaudeville act about the educational virtues of TV, which leads straight into the showstopper number When I Grow Up as children swing out over the audience in a triumphant display.
If there’s a fault, it’s that sometimes Minchin’s penchant for linguistic athleticism (or just plain verbosity) can be difficult to decipher, particularly when there’s an entire chorus of children trying to enunciate the tongue-twisting lyrics and dance simultaneously.
The other star of the show is Rob Howell’s set design, which takes the theme of the giant Scrabble-style alphabet blocks which surround the stage and reconfigures the tile effect to form everything from lounge rooms to libraries.
Minchin’s lyrics also riff on the spelling theme and the two elements are combined to great effect in the School Song, as students dance and climb on the cage-like gates with parkour-like daring to light up certain letters.
From Mrs Wormwood’s samba routine on the J-Lo inspired Loud, through the funky disco groove of Revolting Children, to some truly magical stage effects and the biggest burp in history, Matilda the Musical delights and disgusts in equally pleasurable measures.
Matilda the Musical
Festival Theatre, Adelaide
Until July 16
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dorcasrempel · 5 years
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New capsule can orally deliver drugs that usually have to be injected
Many drugs, especially those made of proteins, cannot be taken orally because they are broken down in the gastrointestinal tract before they can take effect. One example is insulin, which patients with diabetes have to inject daily or even more frequently.
In hopes of coming up with an alternative to those injections, MIT engineers, working with scientists from Novo Nordisk, have designed a new drug capsule that can carry insulin or other protein drugs and protect them from the harsh environment of the gastrointestinal tract. When the capsule reaches the small intestine, it breaks down to reveal dissolvable microneedles that attach to the intestinal wall and release drug for uptake into the bloodstream.
“We are really pleased with the latest results of the new oral delivery device our lab members have developed with our collaborators, and we look forward to hopefully seeing it help people with diabetes and others in the future,” says Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor at MIT and a member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research.
In tests in pigs, the researchers showed that this capsule could load a comparable amount of insulin to that of an injection, enabling fast uptake into the bloodstream after the microneedles were released.
Langer and Giovanni Traverso, an assistant professor in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering and a gastroenterologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, are the senior authors of the study, which appears today in Nature Medicine. The lead authors of the paper are recent MIT PhD recipient Alex Abramson and former MIT postdoc Ester Caffarel-Salvador.
Microneedle delivery
Langer and Traverso have previously developed several novel strategies for oral delivery of drugs that usually have to be injected. Those efforts include a pill coated with many tiny needles, as well as star-shaped structures that unfold and can remain in the stomach from days to weeks while releasing drugs.
“A lot of this work is motivated by the recognition that both patients and health care providers prefer the oral route of administration over the injectable one,” Traverso says.
Earlier this year, they developed a blueberry-sized capsule containing a small needle made of compressed insulin. Upon reaching the stomach, the needle injects the drug into the stomach lining. In the new study, the researchers set out to develop a capsule that could inject its contents into the wall of the small intestine.
Most drugs are absorbed through the small intestine, Traverso says, in part because of its extremely large surface area — 250 square meters, or about the size of a tennis court. Also, Traverso noted that pain receptors are lacking in this part of the body, potentially enabling pain-free micro-injections in the small intestine for delivery of drugs like insulin.
To allow their capsule to reach the small intestine and perform these micro-injections, the researchers coated it with a polymer that can survive the acidic environment of the stomach, which has a pH of 1.5 to 3.5. When the capsule reaches the small intestine, the higher pH (around 6) triggers it to break open, and three folded arms inside the capsule spring open.
Each arm contains patches of 1-millimeter-long microneedles that can carry insulin or other drugs. When the arms unfold open, the force of their release allows the tiny microneedles to just penetrate the topmost layer of the small intestine tissue. After insertion, the needles dissolve and release the drug.
“We performed numerous safety tests on animal and human tissue to ensure that the penetration event allowed for drug delivery without causing a full thickness perforation or any other serious adverse events,” Abramson says.
To reduce the risk of blockage in the intestine, the researchers designed the arms so that they would break apart after the microneedle patches are applied.
The new capsule represents an important step toward achieving oral delivery of protein drugs, which has been very difficult to do, says David Putnam, a professor of biomedical engineering and chemical and biomolecular engineering at Cornell University.   “It’s a compelling paper,” says Putnam, who was not involved in the study. “Delivering proteins is the holy grail of drug delivery. People have been trying to do it for decades.”
Insulin demonstration
In tests in pigs, the researchers showed that the 30-millimeter-long capsules could deliver doses of insulin effectively and generate an immediate blood-glucose-lowering response. They also showed that no blockages formed in the intestine and the arms were excreted safely after applying the microneedle patches.
“We designed the arms such that they maintained sufficient strength to deliver the insulin microneedles to the small intestine wall, while still dissolving within several hours to prevent obstruction of the gastrointestinal tract,” Caffarel-Salvador says.
Although the researchers used insulin to demonstrate the new system, they believe it could also be used to deliver other protein drugs such as hormones, enzymes, or antibodies, as well as RNA-based drugs.
“We can deliver insulin, but we see applications for many other therapeutics and possibly vaccines,” Traverso says. “We’re working very closely with our collaborators to identify the next steps and applications where we can have the greatest impact.”
The research was funded by Novo Nordisk and the National Institutes of Health. Other authors of the paper include Vance Soares, Daniel Minahan, Ryan Yu Tian, Xiaoya Lu, David Dellal, Yuan Gao, Soyoung Kim, Jacob Wainer, Joy Collins, Siddartha Tamang, Alison Hayward, Tadayuki Yoshitake, Hsiang-Chieh Lee, James Fujimoto, Johannes Fels, Morten Revsgaard Frederiksen, Ulrik Rahbek, and Niclas Roxhed.
New capsule can orally deliver drugs that usually have to be injected syndicated from https://osmowaterfilters.blogspot.com/
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sankey2608 · 5 years
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Dutch Eredivisie 2019/20 | Regular Season |  Heerenveen vs SC Heracles Almelo (HRN vs HRA)
HRN vs HRA Dream11 Prediction | HRA vs HRN Dream11 Prediction | Heerenveen vs SC Heracles Almelo Dream11 Prediction | SC Heracles Almelo vs Heerenveen Dream11 Prediction | Dutch Eredivisie 2019/2 | Dream11 Prediction | Dream11 Preview | Dream Team | Grand League | Small League
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Match Details and Preview
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The full Squad of  Heerenveen (HRN)
Warner Hahn, Filip Bednarek, Trevor Doornbusch, Sheral Floranus, Daniel Høegh, Lucas Woudenberg, Ibrahim Dresevic, Ricardo van Rhijn, Sven Botman, Vanja Drkusic, Janne Rasanen, Andreas Skovgaard, Hicham Faik, Nemanja Mihajlovic, Chidera Ejuke, Ben Rienstra, Jordy Bruijn, Rodney Kongolo, Emil Frederiksen, Rami Hajal, Hamdi Akujobi, Jens Odgaard, Mitchell Van Bergen, Arjen Van Der Heide
The full Squad of  Heracles Almelo (HRA)
Janis Blaswich, Michael Brouwer, Koen Bucker, Lennart Czyborra, Robin Pröpper, Dario van den Buijs, Mats Knoester, Navajo Bakboord, Jelle van Benthem, Maximilian Rossmann, Stephen Sama, Jeff Hardeveld, Tim Breukers, Teun Bijleveld, Mauro Júnior, Mohammed Osman, Adrian Szoke, Sebastian Jakubiak, Orestis Kiomourtzoglou, Dabney Souza, Joey Konings, Niels Leemhuis, Reuven Niemeijer, Alexander Merkel, Cyriel Dessers, Sylvester van der Water, Jesper Drost
Updated News and Expected Playing 11
Heerenveen  (HRN)
Heerenveen finished the battle in a frustrating eleventh because of a guard that basically yielded excessively numerous objectives. They just lost once during pre-season against Volendam, getting draws against Mechelen and St. Pauli, and beating Buitenpost, Meppen, and Sunderland. Heerenveen forked out nearly £2m on youthful Nigerian aggressor Chidera Ejuke from Valerenga however lost two key players in Vlap and Pierre, while Thorsby proceeded onward a free exchange to Sampdoria. Heerenveen visits Almelo having lost their keep going four Eredivisie coordinates out and about, which incorporated an earlier gathering at the Polman Stadion. There ought to be some new faces in Heerenveen's beginning XI with the most prominent possibly being Rodney Kongolo, who joined from Manchester City. Hoegh is harmed for the visitors while Ejuke is ineligible for this match.
Playing 11 :
Hahn;, Floranus, Botman, Dresevic, Woudenberg, Kongolo, Faik, Rienstra, Van Bergen, Odgaard, Bruijn
Heracles Almelo (HRA)
Heracles appreciated a solid season last time around however finished the season inadequately with five sequential thrashings. They have Heerenveen in this opening game who lost their keep going four out and about a year ago and for the most part attempted to counteract objectives from home which could mean this is a high-scoring game. Heracles first cordial saw them lose to Excelsior before beating Rot Weiss Oberhausen and afterward losing again to another Dutch side Volendam. Three successes against Asteras Tripolis, Helmond Sport, and most astonishingly Bayer Leverkusen pursued Drost is harmed for the hosts while Konings and Peterson are recorded as far fetched because of minor wounds which may see new signings Navajo Bakboord, Adrian Szöke and Cyriel Dessers discovering places in beginning eleven.
Playing 11 :
Blaswich, Breukers, Van den Buijs, Rossmann, Czyborra, Merkel, Osman, Szoke, Van der Water, Dessers, Mauro Junior
Betting Tips
Dutch Eredivisie 2019/20 August 4, 2019 3:45 PM Heerenveen vs SC Heracles Almelo Ⓜ️atch Winner 👉Heerenveen
Pitch Report :
Match to be played at Polman Stadion.
Captain and Vice-captain Choice
Rienstra, Van Bergen, Odgaard, Bruijn, Osman, Szoke, Van der Water, Dessers, Mauro Junior
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