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Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Vanessa Bryant’s Net Worth at $600 Million Following Kobe Bryant’s Death

Vanessa Bryant

Vanessa Bryant is now worth $600 million after her husband, Kobe Bryant, died along with their 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, in a helicopter crash earlier this year. The couple had no prenuptial agreement, according to the International Business Times.

At the time of his death, Bryant had reportedly earned anywhere from $600 to $770 million throughout his professional basketball career, according to Forbes and other sources. In his 20-year NBA career, Bryant had earned more than $323 million in NBA salary and about $350 million from various endorsements.

According to data that was compiled by Spotrac and Basketball-Reference in December 2018, Bryant ranked number two among the 25 highest-paid NBA players of all time. His highest paying single-season salary was at $30.5 million during the 2013 to 2014 playing season. When he started, he had a yearly salary of $1 million back in 1996 during his rookie year in the league. By the time he retired, he was earning more than $25 million per year in base salary alone.

Bryant was the highest-paid athlete in the history of team sports when he finally hung up his sneakers and retired in 2016. His annual salary with the Los Angeles Lakers was the highest in the NBA in the final six seasons of his 20-year career. Although Bryant‘s salary was the highest in the NBA at the time, he was the second-highest-paid NBA player in his career behind former Minnesota Timberwolves/Boston Celtics’ player Kevin Garnett, who earned $334.3 million in his 21 NBA seasons. Garnett’s highest single-season salary was $28 million.

Earlier last month, attorneys for Vanessa Bryant filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against the company that operated the helicopter. Bryant’s complaint, which was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, was filed against Island Express Helicopters, Island Express Holding Corp. and the estate of the pilot, Ara Zobayan.

Bryant was a five-time NBA champion, a two-time Finals MVP, and the 2008 Most Valuable Player. During Bryant’s career, he made the All-Star team 18 times. He was the youngest player to ever reach 30,000 points. Bryant retired from the NBA in 2016, and scored an NBA-season high 60 points in his final game.



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Construction Workers Embrace the Robots That Do Their Jobs

A robotic excavator can dig a pipeline trench without a human in the cab. An engineers' union is partnering with the company that makes the tech.

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How Long Could the World Run on Geothermal Power?

If everyone went 100 percent geothermal today, Earth’s store of thermal energy would still outlive the sun.

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South African court clears Cyril Ramaphosa over donation

The high court dismisses the public protector's findings over a donation to President Ramaphosa.

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Ethiopian Airlines crash: 'I saw body parts being taken in white bags'

The BBC's Emmanuel Igunza reflects a year on from the deadly Ethiopia Airlines Boeing 737 Max crash.

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Dyson Corrale Hair Straightener: Features, Release Date, Price

We tried the company’s $500 Corrale straightener, which claims to smooth hair with more precision—and less damage.

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An Interview With James Dyson: Hair Care Products, EVs, Sustainability

In a wide-ranging interview, the British entrepreneur talks about hair dryers, plastics, electric cars, and why he's not bothered by political controversy.

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Trailer for LeBron James’ I PROMISE School documentary series is out

The first academic year of LeBron James’ I Promise school is featured in a new documentary.

Quibi and the I PROMISE school dropped the new trailer for the documentary on Monday. The film gives viewers an in-depth view of the school’s first year and tells “the story of LeBron James’ efforts to close the achievement gap in his hometown of Akron, Ohio through the eyes of the inspiring students who are resetting expectations of their futures,” according to a released put out by James’ SpringHill Entertainment and Quibi.

READ MORE: Kent State will provide free tuition for eligible students from LeBron James’ I Promise School

“The series will explore the day-to-day trials, triumphs, and life-changing impact of the school staff, students and families working together in a unique, family-first educational environment that embraces the trauma and challenges many face in Akron,” James added in the statement, according to WKYC.

The documentary also includes footage from when the school opened in July 2018, as well as snippets from classrooms and comments from the Lakers star.

“When you grow up in the inner-city, in the projects, no one cares about you,” James says in the trailer, reported WKYC. “The goal of this school is to have these kids feel like super heroes.”

Now in its second full year, the I PROMISE school continues to set high marks. Recently, it was announced that Kent State University had partnered with the LeBron James Family Foundation to offer free, four-year tuition to eligible students from the I Promise school. Students receiving the scholarships are also eligible to receive free room and board for one year.

READ MORE: LeBron James says it’s OK for men to cry: ‘It’s a different time’

Marc Levin, who did Brick City and Chicagoland, is directing the documentary series and James’ SpringHill Entertainment is producing it, along with Verizon Media’s RYOT and Blowback Productions.

Last fall, James announced the next phase of the school is to provide needed housing for transitional students and their families. The I PROMISE Village is expected to open in July.

The post Trailer for LeBron James’ I PROMISE School documentary series is out appeared first on TheGrio.



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VR Was Supposed to Help Us Work Remotely. So Where Is It?

Shuttered offices and social isolation. Working from home was supposed to be great, but the only thing worse than conference rooms is conference calls.

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Gayle King discusses ‘painful’ Kobe Bryant interview backlash with Oprah Winfrey

Gayle King said she has moved on from the public thrashing she received from rappers like Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent after she asked a question about Kobe Bryant’s past rape case during an interview with the NBA legend’s friend.

In a sit down with her bestie during the last stop of Oprah Winfrey’s “2020 Vision: Your Life in Focus Tour” this past Saturday, King said the aftermath of asking former WNBA star Lisa Leslie about the sexual assault case and its impact on Bryant’s legacy was “very painful” and left her with some scrapes.

However, King says she is forging ahead.

READ MORE: OPINION: The Gayle King vs Snoop Dogg debacle woke up cells of pick-me’s & Black woman haters

“I have moved on,” King, 65, told Winfrey, 66, reported PEOPLE, which obtained an advanced clip of the exchange. “Is there a scab? Yeah. But I have moved on.”

“I put on my game face and my big girl pants because I never lost sight of who I was, what I believe I am, and my intention. I’ve never lost sight of that. But it certainly was a learning curve, and it was very painful,” King added.

Bryant pleaded not guilty to felony sexual assault in 2003 after a 19-year-old Denver woman accused him of sexually assaulting her. Criminal charges against Bryant were later dropped, but a civil suit was settled out of court.

In the days after Bryant, his daughter, Gianna and seven other passengers were killed in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26, King interviewed Leslie on the full scope of Bryant’s legacy. CBS promoted the interview with the clip of King asking Leslie about Bryant’s rape case, which King slammed as “out of context” of her wide-ranging interview.

After the clip surfaced, Snoop Dogg, who was still mourning Bryant’s death, took to social media and posted a profanity-laced video directed at King for what he said was her insensitivity to Bryant’s widow, Vanessa, and their daughters. Snoop’s comments received backlash and were taken as a threat against King. The rapper later apologized and went on Jada Pinkett Smith’s Red Table Talk to further express his intentions.

In the PEOPLE clip from Winfrey’s Denver tour stop, the media mogul said what made matters worse for King was the “good people” who remained mum during her ordeal.

“In every circumstance, I think this is something for us to remember,” Winfrey said. “It’s not the people who are being mean, it’s not the badness, it’s not the vitriol that’s being put into the world, but it’s the good people who remain silent that becomes so hurtful.”

“I think we can disagree politically, we can disagree socially, if you want to, but I just think humanity should prevail always,” King added, according to PEOPLE. “I think we still have to figure out a way to navigate that with each other. That we can disagree, and you can be mad at me even, but you can’t speak to me the way I was spoken to and threatened.”

Winfrey also commended King for not allowing the hardship to make her doubt herself.

“No, I absolutely didn’t, Oprah,” King replied, according to PEOPLE.

The duo also discussed their life-long friendship, navigating relationships, and their various careers.

READ MORE: ‘The Oprah Winfrey Show The Podcast’ kicks off on March 3

Winfrey told King that she “never needed therapy” because she had King as a friend.

“We have talked about everything and nothing,” King replied. “You’ve never had therapy, but I’ve been to five therapists when I was married. And may I just say this? Nobody has been a better therapist than Oprah!”

Winfrey’s entire interview with King airs 8 p.m. tomorrow on Oprah’s Facebook Channel and the WW Now Facebook Channel.

The post Gayle King discusses ‘painful’ Kobe Bryant interview backlash with Oprah Winfrey appeared first on TheGrio.



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Despite Coronavirus, Washington Isn't Worried About Its Primary

The state conducts its elections almost entirely by mail. The rest of the country should pay attention. 

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Nigeria's dethroned Emir of Kano accepts removal

Muhammadu Sanusi II says the new emir should be embraced after he is ousted for "insubordination".

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The National Council of Negro Women is Helping HBCU Bethune-Cookman University in $8M Fundraising Effort

Bethune-Cookman University

The National Council of Negro Women Inc. (NCNW) has announced that in conjunction with HBCU Bethune-Cookman University (B-CU), they have launched “Advancing the Legacy,” a celebration of the accomplishments of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, who is the founder of both the NCNW and B-CU.

“Advancing the Legacy,” is an awareness and fundraising initiative to help raise money to provide ongoing support of Dr. Bethune’s lifelong mission of ensuring access to higher education for African American students. “It’s only appropriate that during Black History Month we recognize and honor all of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune’s accomplishments because they are many and they are as relevant and important today as when she began in 1904,” said Dr. LaBrent Chrite, B-CU president in a written statement.

“We have accomplished so much over the past year in terms of preparing for B-CU’s future, and we just have one last bridge to cross,” Dr. Chrite added. “Everything we have done and will continue to do is intended to protect and advance Dr. Bethune’s legacy and ensure access to higher education for African American students.”

NCNW National Chair and President Dr. Johnnetta Cole and B-CU President Dr. LaBrent Chrite, announced the initiative to protect the vision and mission of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune. Cole and Chrite were joined by Judge Belvin Perry, Ret., and Chair, B-CU Board of Trustees; Janice Mathews, Esq., and NCNW Executive Director; students from B-CU along with members of the B-CU Washington, D.C. Metro alumni chapter.

“Dr. Bethune fearlessly and successfully surpassed countless obstacles faced by a black woman, who was raised by former slaves. Even during her childhood in South Carolina, she understood the power of education and made her life’s work to provide access to young black men and women,” said Dr. Cole. “She also understood the importance of empowering black women which is why she established the NCNW. B-CU and NCNW are forever connected by her vision and legacy.”

One of the purposes of the initiative is to raise $12 million for Bethune-Cookman University and so far, the school has achieved one-third of its $12M campaign goal. They still need $8 million to close the gap in scholarship funding. The Advancing the Legacy campaign includes a digital element, asking people to make a financial donation online at advancingthelegacy.com and to assist in sharing their support on social media by using the hashtag #AdvancingBCU. All funds will be allocated in support of students, to reduce the cost of access and to strengthen retention and graduation rates.

Dr. Bethune will be formally recognized later this year when her statue will become part of the National Statuary Hall Collection in the Capitol Rotunda. This will mark the first time there will be an African American to have a state-commissioned statue in Statuary Hall.



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Can't Stop Touching Your Face? Science Has Some Theories Why

Ground squirrels do it. So do human fetuses. How did we all end up with this unhygienic habit?

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These Industrial Robots Get More Adept With Every Task

Vicarious, a secretive 10-year-old startup backed by Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and Jeff Bezos, reveals its progress and an initial customer.

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*Call of Duty* Will Launch a Free-to-Play, Cross-Platform Game

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Jack Dorsey's Reprieve as Twitter CEO May Not Last

A deal with activist investor Elliott Management preserves Dorsey's job. But it gives him—and Twitter—tough targets to meet this year.

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Most Medical Imaging Devices Run Outdated Operating Systems

The end of Windows 7 support has hit health care extra hard, leaving several machines vulnerable.

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How plants protect themselves from sun damage

For plants, sunlight can be a double-edged sword. They need it to drive photosynthesis, the process that allows them to store solar energy as sugar molecules, but too much sun can dehydrate and damage their leaves.

A primary strategy that plants use to protect themselves from this kind of photodamage is to dissipate the extra light as heat. However, there has been much debate over the past several decades over how plants actually achieve this.

“During photosynthesis, light-harvesting complexes play two seemingly contradictory roles. They absorb energy to drive water-splitting and photosynthesis, but at the same time, when there’s too much energy, they have to also be able to get rid of it,” says Gabriela Schlau-Cohen, the Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Career Development Assistant Professor of Chemistry at MIT.

In a new study, Schlau-Cohen and colleagues at MIT, the University of Pavia, and the University of Verona directly observed, for the first time, one of the possible mechanisms that have been proposed for how plants dissipate energy. The researchers used a highly sensitive type of spectroscopy to determine that excess energy is transferred from chlorophyll, the pigment that gives leaves their green color, to other pigments called carotenoids, which can then release the energy as heat.

“This is the first direct observation of chlorophyll-to-carotenoid energy transfer in the light-harvesting complex of green plants,” says Schlau-Cohen, who is the senior author of the study. “That’s the simplest proposal, but no one’s been able to find this photophysical pathway until now.”

MIT graduate student Minjung Son is the lead author of the study, which appears today in Nature Communications. Other authors are Samuel Gordon ’18, Alberta Pinnola of the University of Pavia, in Italy, and Roberto Bassi of the University of Verona.

Excess energy

When sunlight strikes a plant, specialized proteins known as light-harvesting complexes absorb light energy in the form of photons, with the help of pigments such as chlorophyll. These photons drive the production of sugar molecules, which store the energy for later use.

Much previous research has shown that plants are able to quickly adapt to changes in sunlight intensity. In very sunny conditions, they convert only about 30 percent of the available sunlight into sugar, while the rest is released as heat. If this excess energy is allowed to remain in the plant cells, it creates harmful molecules called free radicals that can damage proteins and other important cellular molecules.

“Plants can respond to fast changes in solar intensity by getting rid of extra energy, but what that photophysical pathway is has been debated for decades,” Schlau-Cohen says.

The simplest hypothesis for how plants get rid of these extra photons is that once the light-harvesting complex absorbs them, chlorophylls pass them to nearby molecules called carotenoids. Carotenoids, which include lycopene and beta-carotene, are very good at getting rid of excess energy through rapid vibration. They are also skillful scavengers of free radicals, which helps to prevent damage to cells.

A similar type of energy transfer has been observed in bacterial proteins that are related to chlorophyll, but until now, it had not been seen in plants. One reason why it has been hard to observe this phenomenon is that it occurs on a very fast time scale (femtoseconds, or quadrillionths of a second). Another obstacle is that the energy transfer spans a broad range of energy levels. Until recently, existing methods for observing this process could only measure a small swath of the spectrum of visible light.

In 2017, Schlau-Cohen’s lab developed a modification to a femtosecond spectroscopic technique that allows them to look at a broader range of energy levels, spanning red to blue light. This meant that they could monitor energy transfer between chlorophylls, which absorb red light, and carotenoids, which absorb blue and green light.

In this study, the researchers used this technique to show that photons move from an excited state, which is spread over multiple chlorophyll molecules within a light-harvesting complex, to nearby carotenoid molecules within the complex.

“By broadening the spectral bandwidth, we could look at the connection between the blue and the red ranges, allowing us to map out the changes in energy level. You can see energy moving from one excited state to another,” Schlau-Cohen says.

Once the carotenoids accept the excess energy, they release most of it as heat, preventing light-induced damage to the cells.

Boosting crop yields

The researchers performed their experiments in two different environments — one in which the proteins were in a detergent solution, and one in which they were embedded in a special type of self-assembling membrane called a nanodisc. They found that the energy transfer occurred more rapidly in the nanodisc, suggesting that environmental conditions affect the rate of energy dissipation.

It remains a mystery exactly how excess sunlight triggers this mechanism within plant cells. Schlau-Cohen’s lab is now exploring whether the organization of chlorophylls and carotenoids within the chloroplast membrane play a role in activating the photoprotection system.

A better understanding of plants’ natural photoprotection system could help scientists develop new ways to improve crop yields, Schlau-Cohen says. A 2016 paper from University of Illinois researchers showed that by overproducing all of the proteins involved in photoprotection, crop yields could be boosted by 15 to 20 percent. That paper also suggested that production could be further increased to a theoretical maximum of about 30 percent.

“If we understand the mechanism, instead of just upregulating everything and getting 15 to  20 percent, we could really optimize the system and get to that theoretical maximum of 30 percent,” Schlau-Cohen says.

The research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.



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Exclusive: How Google Uses Machine Learning to Analyze Soccer Moves

How powerful is your kick? Did you pass effectively? The latest Jacquard wearable uses machine learning to scrutinize a player’s footwork in real time.

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