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Unsolved 'Game of Thrones' Mysteries, Solved By The Night King Himself

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In Season 8, Episode 3, “Game of Thrones” became a song of ice chips and fire. 

Warning: Spoilers ahead!

When all hope seemed to be lost as the Night King (Vladimír Furdík) comes face-to-face with Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright), Arya (Maisie Williams) leaps out of the darkness to stab the blue-eyed villain with her Valyrian steel dagger. The Night King shatters, along with all hope of learning more about the White Walkers’ motivations and their mysterious past.

During a phone call with HuffPost, the Night King himself, Furdík, joked that having his death finally out in the open was “like somebody releasing me from the jail.”

“I’m free,” he said, “so if somebody asks me something, I can answer them.”

So we did ask the Slovak actor and stuntman. Though the Night King is now gone from the show ― and Furdík himself isn’t clued in to all the secrets ― he shed some light on the mysteries that remain.

The feeling when you finally get some answers about the Night King.

How did the Night King survive the dragon fire?

He’s resistant … on the day when we shot, everything was CGI. There was one big fire around me. I was in the middle of the fire, and the rest of the fire was CGI. And then he survived because he can’t die this way.

On the show, the Night King has multiple moments where he stares down Jon Snow (Kit Harington). What do you think the meaning of that is?

It’s interesting. I’m thinking about this as well. I think there should be something in the history between them. Maybe they are the same blood, and they don’t know it. Maybe Jon Snow doesn’t know he’s kind of like the great-great-great-grandfather or something.

Sure. There are people who think the Night King is a Targaryen like Jon.

Yeah. He just thinks, the Night King thinks, “Hey, just let me go. What do you want from me? Just let me alone.” I feel like on the set just, “Hey, boy, young boy, stay. Stop. Stop. Stop. Don’t follow me.”

In the show, the Night King turns babies into White Walkers by touching them. Why do you think Arya doesn’t turn into a White Walker when he touches her?

Because he doesn’t touch her in the right place. Yeah, he doesn’t have time to touch her in the right place because he holds her throat, and then holds her arm. He doesn’t have time to put the fingers on exactly the place where they should be. Also because she’s more than a teenager. She’s already a woman. She wasn’t a baby.

For a while, people have theorized that the Night King and Bran are the same person. Now that the Night King is dead, can we finally put this theory to rest?

I don’t think they are the same, and the history should be something stronger, a stronger story than “they are the same.” There should be a stronger story. 

As the Night King, is it difficult to take bathroom breaks?

It was difficult, really, because I had also long nails on my fingers, and it’s not easy to put the trousers down with the long nails. [Laughs] Open the zips and everything. It was really difficult. I spent sometimes 50 minutes.

Speaking of the long nails, some wanted to know how the Night King managed to have such well-manicured nails

I don’t know. I think he doesn’t care about the long nails.

Editor’s note: Mara Mikialian, HBO’s Senior Vice President of Media Relations, also pointed us to this behind-the-scenes video where you can see that the Night King’s hands are prosthetic. “They get to be kept beautiful all the time,” she said. “Exactly,” added Furdík.


Cyclone Fani Death Toll At 34 In Odisha, Over 1 Crore Affected Across 11 Districts

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BHUBANESWAR — The death toll due to Cyclone Fani mounted to 34 in Odisha on Sunday, two days after it caused widespread damage in the coastal region and left hundreds grappling with water shortage and power cuts, an official said.

Although the official figure is 34, many more are feared dead in the calamity as information from several areas, including the severely-damaged Khurda district, is still awaited.

The number of people affected by the cyclone has also jumped to around 1.08 crore in 14,835 villages spread across at least 11 districts, the official said, adding that over 13.41 lakh people had been evacuated in a span of 24 hours ahead of the disaster.

Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik has already unveiled a relief package for those affected by the calamity.

In Puri and in those parts of Khurda that had been “extremely severely affected”, the families will get 50 kg of rice, Rs 2,000 in cash and polythene sheets if they are covered under the National Food Security Act (NFSA), Patnaik said.

For the rest of Khurda district, categorised as “severely affected”, the NFSA families will get a month’s quota of rice, Rs 1,000 and polythene sheets, Patnaik said.

Those living in the “moderately-affected” districts of Cuttack, Kendrapara and Jagatsinghpur will be eligible for a month’s quota of rice and Rs 500 in cash.

The chief minister also announced an assistance of Rs 95,100 for fully-damaged houses, Rs 52,000 for partially-damaged houses and Rs 3,200 for houses that had suffered minor damage.

Patnaik, who visited the cyclone-ravaged Puri and distributed relief to the affected people, claimed that water supply had been restored in 70 per cent areas of the seaside pilgrim town and 40 per cent of the places in Bhubaneswar.

“I hope water supply will be fully restored in Bhubaneswar shortly and at least in 90 per cent areas of Puri town by Monday,” he said. “The government has made arrangements to provide cooked food for free over the next 15 days. We will also take up tree plantation on a mission mode.” 

Patnaik, however, could not give the details on the status of the ongoing work for power restoration in the affected areas.

“We have to be very careful to avoid accidental electrocution,” he said, when asked if power supply will be restored in Bhubaneswar, which continued without electricity for the third day on Sunday.

According to Chief Secretary A P Padhi, 21 of the 34 deaths were registered in Puri district, where the storm made a landfall on Friday, flattening fragile houses, uprooting scores of trees, electric poles and mobile towers.

Giving the break up, Special Relief Commissioner (SRC) B P Sethi said four deaths each were reported from Jajpur and Mayurbhanj districts, and two from Cuttack, while Kendrapara district accounted for three casualties.

The massive evacuation, touted as the largest ever ahead of a natural calamity in the country, played a major role in keeping human casualties to a minimum, he said, adding nearly 25,000 tourists had also been evacuated from Puri, Ganjam and Balasore districts as a precautionary measure.

The state government had mounted a massive restoration work across 14,835 villages and 46 urban areas ravaged by the storm, affecting 1.08 crore people, Sethi said.

The “extremely-severe” cyclone, one of the “rarest of rare”, unleashed copious rain and windstorm that gusted up to 240 kmph on Friday, blowing away thatched houses and swamping towns and villages, before weakening and entering West Bengal.

As the cyclone barrelled through entire coastal Odisha, 11 districts of Balasore, Bhadrak, Cuttack, Dhenkanal, Ganjam, Jagatsinghpur, Jajpur, Kendrapara, Khurda, Mayurbhanj and Puri were severely affected.

Assuring that efforts were on to restore electricity supply in the affected areas, Energy Secretary Hemant Sharma said the power infrastructure was severely damaged in Puri, Khurda, Ganjam, Jagatsinghpur, Kendrapara and Balasore districts during the cyclone.

The SRC said clearing of roads and power restoration work was in full swing, while 321 mobile medical teams had been deployed with adequate number of doctors.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is likely to visit Odisha to review the situation. Modi had spoken to Patnaik on Saturday and assured continuous support from the Centre for the rehabilitation work.

Meanwhile, the East Coast Railway (ECoR) resumed operations on the Howrah-Chennai route on Sunday.

“Barring the Bhubaneswar-Tirupati Express and the Visakhapatnam Intercity Express, all trains originating from the state capital, including the Bhubaneswar-New Delhi Rajdhani Express, will be running normally from Sunday,” an ECoR official said. 

'Game Of Thrones' Won't Stop Hinting At That Dark Daenerys Theory

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Warning: Spoilers below!

You mad after that episode of “Game of Thrones”? Because Dany (Emilia Clarke) is, and it seems like she’s just getting started.

Wasn’t this supposed to be a victory lap?

In Episode 3, “The Long Night,” Arya (Maisie Williams) shattered the Night King (Vladimír Furdík) — the embodiment of death — into a million ice cubes with one thrust of a Valyrian steel dagger ― thus supposedly ending the threat of the army of the dead.

But apparently, death doesn’t have anything on Cersei Lannister (Lena Headey).

Whereas the Night King clearly hadn’t been watching game film (Arya’s been practicing that dagger switch for a while, dude), Cersei did her prep work. In Episode 4, she dealt the dragon queen two shocking losses: Missandei (Nathalie Emmanuel) and her baby boy Rhaegal. 

Missandei of Naath has been on the show since Season 3, becoming one of Dany’s closest friends and most trusted advisers after the Mother of Dragons acquired the Unsullied army. Sadly, now her watch has ended.

As much as we loved Missandei, she was probably on borrowed time already, planning a beach getaway with Grey Worm (Jacob Anderson) before the battle with the dead even began.

In Sunday’s episode, after being captured by Cersei’s forces, Missandei is beheaded by the Mountain (Hafþór Björnsson) in front of Dany and what’s left of her army. Her last word was “Dracarys,” basically imploring Dany to burn the eff out of Cersei.

Grey Worm is, understandably, heartbroken. 

R.I.P.

And in addition to that loss ― among ongoing struggles with Jon Snow (Kit Harington) and Sansa (Sophie Turner) ― the Mother of Dragons lost another one of her kiddos. Rhaegal is taken down by Euron (Pilou Asbæk) and his fleet in a surprise attack when Dany and her team are heading south to King’s Landing. 

With that, it looks like a well-worn “Game of Thrones” theory may finally be coming true: It’s time for the Mad Queen to “burn them all.” 

“Game of Thrones” is a cyclical show, as all the constant callbacks of Season 8 prove over and over again, and the idea that Dany becomes the villain, aka the Mad Queen — much like her father, Aerys Targaryen II, the Mad King — has been alive within the fan base for years.

We asked her friend zone ambassador, Jorah Mormont (Iain Glen), about the idea in 2017 —and at the time, he was doubtful, telling us, “My belief in her is such that I can’t see her going that way myself, so I think that’s highly unlikely. It becomes academic whether I would stand by her or not because I don’t believe that would happen.”

But times have changed. 

In Season 8, Episode 3, Khaleesi lost Jorah and a lot of her Dothraki and Unsullied forces to the army of the dead. Even before she lost Missandei and Rhaegal, Episode 4 basically foreshadowed that the “Mad Queen” is on her way, and King’s Landing (along with all the citizens inside) is about to burn.

First off, everyone’s kind of hanging out with Jon after the Battle of Winterfell, leaving Dany alone like she’s the new kid at her high school cafeteria. (Seriously, can someone please just pay attention to the dragon queen? Jon did nothing in the battle. He did not yell, “Go.” He did not collect $200.) Unsurprisingly, she’s not happy.

Dany forbids Jon from telling anyone about his parentage, thinking the North would rally around him instead of her. (Spoiler alert: He does anyway.) Daenerys then goes around saying lines about Cersei such as, “We will rip her out root and stem,” causing Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) to remind her, “The objective here is to remove Cersei without destroying King’s Landing.”

Dany doesn’t give a shiz. 

The hints continued, and they were about as subtle as an undead giant banging down Winterfell’s gate. 

Sansa realizes Tyrion is fearful of Dany, causing him to retort: “Every good ruler needs to inspire a bit of fear.” And after hearing about Jon’s true parentage from Tyrion, Varys (Conleth Hill) questions Dany’s “state of mind.” He later tells Tyrion that Jon could be a “solution” if Dany is about to go all Mad Queen and destroy innocent lives.

Tyrion does his best to defend Dany as much as he can, but by the end of the episode, it seems he’s about to blurt out, “I get it, everybody. Chill.”

The Episode 5 preview also seems to add more evidence to the theory, showing Tyrion looking concerned as heck while at Dragonstone.

Game of Thrones” seems to have been preparing fans for this turn of events, showing Dany gradually losing her empathy on her path to the throne.

After saying adios to Daario Naharis (Michiel Huisman) in the “Game of Thrones” Season 6 finale, she told Tyrion, “Do you know what frightens me? I said farewell to a man who loves me, a man I thought I cared for, and I felt nothing.”

Mad Queen vibes were also prevalent in Season 7 when she burned Randyll Tarly (James Faulkner) and his son Dickon (Tom Hopper) to a crisp for not bending the knee. (Though, really, they should’ve just bent the knee. That’s kind of on them.)

We’ll see what happens in Episode 5 next week, but it’s safe to say Dany’s new House words are, “We don’t need no water, let that Mother of Dragons burn.”

Elections Phase 5: Rajnath, Rahul, Sonia In Fray Today, 12.64% Turnout Till 10AM

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Voters check their name before casting their vote during general election in village Kapoorawala, in Sanganer on the outskirts of Jaipur on May 6, 2019. 

Voting began Monday for the fifth phase of Lok Sabha election in 51 constituencies spread across seven states with many political bigwigs, including Rajnath Singh, Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and Smriti Irani, being in the fray.

About 8.75 crore people will decide the fate of 674 candidates in the fifth of the seven-phase elections.

Polling is being held in 14 seats in Uttar Pradesh, 12 in Rajasthan, seven seats each in West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh, five in Bihar and four in Jharkhand. In Jammu and Kashmir, polling will take place in Ladakh constituency and Pulwama and Shopian districts of Anantnag seat.

Polling percentage till 10 am

Bihar  — 11.51%

Jammu & Kashmir — 1.36%

Madhya Pradesh — 13.02%

Rajasthan — 14%

Uttar Pradesh — 9.86%

West Bengal — 16.56%

Jharkhand — 13.46%

BJP defending 40 seats

The stakes are high for the ruling BJP and its allies as it had swept 40 of these seats in 2014, leaving just two for the Congress and the rest for other opposition parties such as the Trinamool Congress (seven).

With this phase, election will be over in 424 seats and polling in the remaining 118 seats will be held on May 12 and 19.

The fifth phase of polling in 14 Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh will see a clash of titans, including Union ministers Rajnath Singh and Smriti Irani, UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi and Congress president Rahul Gandhi.

The BJP had bagged 12 of these seats in 2014 with the Congress winning Sonia Gandhi’s Rae Bareli and Rahul Gandhi’s Amethi ― the only two constituencies where the Congress succeeded out of the 80 in the entire state.

The Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) is contesting on five seats, while its ally Samajwadi Party (SP) is fighting on seven seats.

In Amethi and Rae Bareli, the SP-BSP alliance has not put up any candidate, leaving the two constituencies for the Congress.

Key candidates

Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh is seeking re-election from Lucknow, while his colleague at the Centre Smriti Irani is again taking on Rahul Gandhi in Amethi.

Union ministers and BJP leaders Rajyawardhan Rathore (Jaipur Rural-Rajasthan), Arjun Ram Meghwal (Bikaner-Rajasthan) and Jayant Sinha (Hazaribagh-Jharkhand) are also in the fray in this phase.

Election to 542 Lok Sabha seats is being conducted in seven phases between April 11 and May 19. Election in Vellore constituency in Tamil Nadu has been cancelled following excess use of money power. Results will be declared on May 23.

(With PTI inputs)

Game Of Thrones Theories: 7 Of The Biggest Questions From Season 8

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We can’t quite believe we’re at this point already, but there are officially only two episodes of Game Of Thrones left. Ever. 

The fourth, which aired in the early hours of Monday morning, featured the aftermath of the Battle Of Winterfell, as the armies in the North evaluate their losses and prepare to head south. 

There are a lot of questions currently unanswered and plenty of loose ends to tie up. 

This list is far from exhaustive (we can, and will, chat about this show all day) but these are the top seven things we’ve been losing sleep over...

Is Samwell Tarly writing Game Of Thrones?

For a long time now, fans have been toying with whether Sam could be writing the histories that become Game Of Thrones (basically a fictionalised version of George RR Martin) and the theory gained pace when one of the episodes in season seven saw Sam receiving advice on how to write historical accounts.

Author George has bolstered this line of thinking too, by stating that Sam is the character he identifies with the most.

So could we be heading for a The Hobbit style ending, where Sam is revealed as the author? It certainly seems like one of the more likely outcomes.

Sam’s character arc hasn’t been the simplest (or greatest), but his survival to this point suggests he’ll have significance when the wars are over. Revealing him to be the author of the entire show would be a little cheesy, but given how sentimental and emotional everyone will be in the closing minutes, the writers could potentially get away with it.

Where did Bran Stark go during the Battle Of Winterfell?

Physically Bran was in Godswood, where he was placed to lure in the Night King – a plan that worked in the end (shout out to the MVP, Arya Stark).

But Bran, the Three Eyed Raven, spent most of the show somewhere else, as he used his powers to warg and travel in his mind. Unfortunately, we didn’t get to see what he was doing and quite frankly, need to know. Now.

Bran can influence events while warging, which gives us even more questions. Was he just watching to make sure the Night King was on his way? Perhaps he found a way to spy on other parts of the battle? Or could he have been controlling one of the key players? There’s a lot to discuss and hopefully it doesn’t get glossed over.

In the meantime though, at least we can all enjoy the Bran memes which have been shared in the past few weeks.

Will Greyworm and Missandei get their happy ending?

Back in episode two, we saw Greyworm and Missandei discussing their plans for life after the war, vowing to stick together. The whole scene was lovely and we’d be totally shipping these two... if it wasn’t for the fact it seems incredibly likely at least one of them will die.

If anything, their declaration of love felt like a huge signpost towards the fact they won’t make it to the end so it was surprising when they both then survived the Battle of Winterfell.

Given his warrior prowess, Greyworm should be able to make it through the fight against Cersei Lannister’s armies too, but the couple could then have a final problem on their hands. If she takes the throne, will Daenerys Targaryen let one of her most-trusted advisers leave Westeros? The answer to that will surely be no.

Sorry guys – do they have a couple name? Greyandei? erm, Missworm? – but this probably isn’t going to end well for you.

Have we definitely seen the last of the White Walkers?

While the Long Night climaxed with Arya killing the Night King and in doing so, appearing to destroy his entire army, we can’t help but feel a little skeptical.

It seems a little too good to be true that the White Walkers are now completely gone and we didn’t really get to find out much about them. What about the weird symbolism? And the Night King’s exact motivations? His possible ties to Bran?

Plenty of people have been wondering this and luckily for us, Jimmy Kimmel is one of them.

The US chat show welcomed Game Of Thrones creators David Benioff and Dan Weiss to his show earlier this week and asked them point blank if we’ve seen the last of the White Walkers.

Their response? “Yeah, we’re not going to answer that.” Hmm.

How will Jaime Lannister negotiate Cersei vs. everyone else?

This season has seen Jaime heroically turned his back on his sister/lover and fight for the living at Winterfell, while she focussed on getting her own troops ready to defend King’s Landing.

With the White Walkers (probably) defeated, the next thing on everyone’s to-do list is the fight for the throne itself, which leaves Jaime in a less-than-ideal situation thanks to his loyalties on both sides.

In the Long Night, we cheered when he fought shoulder-to-shoulder with the newly-knighted Brienne of Tarth, and their bond is stronger than ever – but it might not be enough to make him realise Cersei really isn’t the best choice for the Iron Throne.

There’s also the small matter of Cersei being pregnant with his child and Euron Greyjoy’s insistence on skulking around and generally annoying everyone.

At this point, Jaime is one of the most fascinating characters as his actions could completely change the game. And let’s not forget the Valonqar theory either, which suggests he could complete his redemption arc by killing his sister. 

What about the North?

Sansa Stark put this question to Daenerys but an interruption (the arrival of Theon Greyjoy, RIP) meant we never got an answer.

With the Seven Kingdoms defended – after the North men and Starks played key roles – Sansa is probably going to push harder for an answer on what the future holds for her people, who are still reluctant to support Daenerys. 

Sansa has proved herself to be a seriously good strategist and is clearly one of the smartest people left in Westeros, so we doubt she’s ever going to follow Jon Snow’s lead and bend the knee. 

Who’s going to die next?

The Long Night saw numerous characters fall but most of the key players are still alive, including the Starks, the Lannister siblings and fan favourites Brienne and Tormund. 

But there’s one fight left, as the survivors from the Battle Of Winterfell head south to fight Cersei’s armies so more deaths are definitely coming. 

Earlier this week, Emilia Clarke teased the carnage to come, promising “even bigger” episodes and a “mental” fourth instalment.

Tissues at the ready, people. These last three episodes are going to be devastating.

Cyclone Fani: Modi Conducts Aerial Survey Of Areas Ravaged By Storm

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday conducted an aerial survey to assess the loss and destruction caused by Cyclone Fani in Odisha.

Modi was received by Governor Ganeshi Lal and Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik on his arrival at the Biju Patnaik International Airport here.

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At least 34 people were killed during Cyclone ‘Fani’, which barrelled through coastal Odisha on Friday last, causing widespread destruction and leaving hundreds grappling with water shortage and power cut.

The National Crisis Management Committee (NCMC), headed by Cabinet Secretary P K Sinha, had on Sunday reviewed relief measures in affected areas of Odisha, West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh.

Modi said that the communication between the Centre and the state was very good and he was also monitoring the situation personally as well. 

“Naveen Patnaik has done great work, and the way people of Odisha followed every instruction has been praiseworthy,” NDTV quoted Modi as saying after the aerial survey.

(With PTI inputs)

Sacked BSF Soldier Tej Bahadur Moves SC Against EC's Cancellation Of His Candidature

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NEW DELHI — Sacked BSF jawan Tej Bahadur Yadav on Monday moved the Supreme Court challenging the Election Commission’s decision to cancel his candidature from the Varanasi Lok Sabha constituency from where Prime Minister Narendra Modi is contesting.

Yadav, who was dismissed in 2017 after he posted a video online complaining about the food served to the troops, was fielded by the Samajwadi Party as its candidate from the Varanasi seat.

However, the returning officer rejected Yadav’s nomination papers citing his failure to submit a certificate that he was not sacked for either corruption or disloyalty.

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Yadav, in his plea, termed the decision of the poll panel discriminatory and unreasonable and said it should be set aside. 

The SP had initially fielded Shalini Yadav as its candidate to contest against Modi and later nominated the sacked BSF jawan.

Royal Baby Name Predictions: What Will Meghan Markle And Prince Harry Choose?

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Elizabeth and Diana are popular predictions for the next royal baby's name. 

Meghan Markle is in the final stretch of her pregnancy, so naturally, royal fans are abuzz with speculation about the baby’s name. Many are even placing bets before the arrival of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s bundle of joy. 

According to the British betting company Ladbrokes, Elizabeth is the current favorite baby name, with 6-1 odds, followed by 8-1 for Diana and Victoria and 12-1 for Albert, Alice, Grace and Philip. Arthur, James and Mary are also in the running, with 16-1 odds. 

Ladbrokes representative Alex Apati suggested that the popularity of Elizabeth among bettors is due to the possibility that the duchess may deliver on April 21, Queen Elizabeth’s birthday. 

“It’s no coincidence that punters backing the royal baby to be born on the Queen’s birthday are expecting Harry and Meghan to opt for ‘Elizabeth’ on the name front,” Apati said in a statement

Name predictions with lower odds include nods to political figures and current events, such as Barack (100-1), Theresa (100-1), Piers (200-1), Donald (250-1) and Brexit (500-1).

Less popular bets include Barack, Donald and Brexit.  

Ladbrokes reports 8-11 odds that the royal baby will be a girl and evens for a boy. Bettors are also predicting the birth date: April 22 to 28 leads with 7-4 odds, followed by April 15 to 21 and April 8 to 14 with 3-1 odds. The odds for the time of birth are 5-2 for afternoon, 2-1 for evening and evens for morning.

Other betting companies are getting involved in the royal baby speculation. Paddy Power reports 3-1 odds on Diana as the baby name, 8-1 for Grace and 14-1 for Victoria, Alice, James and Arthur. Diana also leads with William Hill, which reports 10-1 odds, as well as 12-1 for Alice and Isabella and 16-1 for Alexandra, Elizabeth and Grace. Among boys’ names, the top pick is Arthur, at 4-1, followed by Edward, James and Philip at 16-1. 

Bettors have had mixed success predicting royal baby names. When the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge welcomed their first child in 2013, George was the lead pick at Ladbrokes, William Hill and Paddy Power. Charlotte was in second place, behind Alice, when their second child was born in 2015, though the name rose to the top spot in the days between the princess’ birth and name announcement. 

Prince William and Kate Middleton’s third child did not follow suit, however. Louis was not a top pick at the time of the prince’s birth, as bettors focused on Arthur, James, Albert, Frederick and Philip. 

The betting odds aren't always accurate predictors when it comes to royal baby names. 

It’s possible that Markle and Prince Harry will choose a less traditional name for their baby, who will be seventh in line to the throne. 

“Harry and Meghan have a lot more flexibility in terms of feeling that they need to be deferential to tradition and follow a strict protocol,” Arianne Chernock, an associate professor of modern British history at Boston University, told HuffPost in October after the couple’s pregnancy announcement. 

“I think we will see some nods to a more American spirit in some part of the name. I’m not saying it would be the first name, but in one of the given names, at least, they’re going to honor both sides,” she added. “I think the names will be meaningful to them, wherever they look for inspiration. I think, obviously, it’s something that’s very purposeful and that they would take on as a meaningful way of communicating something about their vision for their family.”

Whatever route they take, we think it’s safe to assume the baby’s name will not be Brexit. 


Dear Meghan Markle... Tips For First-Time Mums From Women Who've Been There

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The Duchess of Sussex could be due any day now, and excitement is bubbling among royal fans across the globe. This will be both Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s first child – so what advice would HuffPost UK readers give the Sussexes?

We asked mums to share the things they wish they’d known before their first child was born. And there’s plenty of helpful advice to go around.

Get The Nursery Organised – Before Baby Arrives

Rebecca Patterson, mum-of-one and author of The Nest Planner, advises new parents to get their house in order before their baby arrives. “I don’t mean major lifting and decorating,” she says. “Just clear out any unwanted clutter, tidy up areas that you have been meaning to do for ages and create a feeling of calm in your home.

“Make sure your room is as clean and organised as the beautiful new nursery – it is important that you have your own space as well.”

Trust Your Instincts – Not The Parenting Books

Mum-of-one Antonina Mamzenko, a family photographer, says she wishes she had thrown out all of her parenting books, bar one. "I wish I’d trusted my gut and listened to my baby’s cues on what they needed,” she says. “There is so much conflicting advice out there, it gets overwhelming and you start doubting yourself and your own instincts.”

She says the only book she found helpful was Baby Calm by Sarah Ockwell Smith: “It basically says ‘trust yourself’ and gives some practical tips on dealing with what a normal baby does – ie. not sleeping, wanting to feed, and wanting to be held a lot! You can’t spoil a baby by holding them or responding to their cries - that’s how they evolved to survive, and I wish I had just trusted myself on that.” 

Limit The Number Of Visitors In The First Week

Nicola Rowley, who juggles being a PR strategist with being a mum to a four-year-old, urges new mums not to fall into the trap of letting all your relatives drop in within the first week. 

“Don’t make the mistake of having lots of visitors all of the time,” says Rowley, who is also founder of the Working Mum Association. “You also need time to bond and get to know each other. Having a little person with you is life-changing in every way and it’s a great moment to really savour those first few special cuddles.”

Find Your Mum Tribe

“The one piece of advice I give all friends about to have a baby is that they should do NCT classes [new parent support groups], or the equivalent, in their local area,” says Abi Wright, mum to two-year-old Margot.

“Having other mums around you going through the same thing you are is so important. The mums I met through NCT were my lifeline during that first year, and gave me advice and support. Many have been through it before so are speaking from experience, which as a new mum is invaluable. Two years on we still see each other on a regular basis. I honestly don’t know what I would have done without them.”

Find A Decent Sling For Carrying Baby

Speaking from experience, Helen Rankin, a mum-of-four and founder of Cheeky Wipes, urges new mums to invest in a decent sling for carrying their baby. “There are sling libraries all over the country where you can try a few types to see what works best for you,” she says. “They’re a life-saver and it feels lovely carrying your snuggly baby around too.”

Your Relationship Might Suffer (And That’s OK)

Relationships require work no matter what your situation. Add a tiny baby who needs attention 24/7 into the mix and you’re bound to feel the strain. 

Kelly Ainsworth, mum of two boys and a parenting consultant at Modern Mummas Parenting, says it’s a “challenging balancing act” trying to maintain a good relationship with your partner while prioritising your new baby. “Your other half may feel a little neglected as you nurture and feed your new baby,” she says. “But then the tables turn as baby gets a bit bigger and more interactive, and you can take a little time out as and when you need it.”

She advises taking a bath with your partner at the end of a long day, adding: “It can be an amazing bonding time.”

Celebrate Your Small Wins

Susan Renee, a mum of two boys and professional newborn photographer at Kingshill Studios in Aberdeen, urges first-time mums: “Don’t be too hard on yourself.”

She says you’ll probably need to reduce your own expectations of what you can realistically achieve in a typical day with a newborn. “Celebrate the small wins and try not to get too bogged down when things don’t quite go to plan. Don’t worry – this phase will pass and things will get easier.”

Take Photos – And Make Sure You’re In Them

Mamzenko advises new mums to document the everyday moments, as these will be what you treasure more as time passes. “Those are the pictures the world doesn’t need to see. You need to take them for yourself, however imperfect they are. And make sure you exist in those photographs – when the baby grows up they’ll want to see you, their mother, in those early childhood photographs,” she says.

Find A Bath Time That Suits You

Sinead Murphy, mum-of-three and co-founder of Shnuggle (a baby bath product), says bath time should be at a time of day when both you and your baby are most relaxed. “For some people this can be before bed as it can create a calm and relaxing atmosphere, but if another time of day works better then it’s best to just go with the flow and find the right time of day that works for you and baby,” she says.

Try to enjoy bath time, interact with baby and make it a bonding experience for you both to enjoy. 

Be Kind To Your Body

Don’t forget you need time to heal, says Rankin. She advises first-time mums to invest in reusable maternity pads which can be frozen with water and witch hazel to help “reduce swelling and bruising post birth”. She suggests wearing them with period pants to help reduce chafing.

Prioritise Your Wellbeing And Ask For Help

Dr Pragya Agarwal, an academic, entrepreneur and mum-of-three, says it’s really important to talk to someone if you feel low, tearful and depressed. “PND (postnatal depression) is very real and there is absolutely no shame in asking for help,” she says.

She also urges new mums to care for their wellbeing and know when to put themselves first: “It is so easy to just lose ourselves in it [motherhood] completely, and though the attention is justifiably on the new child, it is important and OK to take time away from being a mother. It is OK to take a few minutes for ourselves, to go and do things that helps us achieve equilibrium and balance.”

Modi's 'Bhrashtachari' Remark: Opposition Condemns PM, Rahul Adds A 'Huge Hug'

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During the heated political campaign, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took aim at former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi while attacking Congress chief Rahul Gandhi.

Speaking at a rally in Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh, Modi said, “Your father was termed Mr Clean by his courtiers, but his life ended as bhrashtachari no 1”.

The Prime Minister’s statement has stirred a debate with the Opposition strongly condemning it and asking for an apology and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders backing Modi. 

Rahul and Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra have also responded to the barb on their father. 

“Modi Ji, the battle is over. Your Karma awaits you. Projecting your inner beliefs about yourself onto my father won’t protect you. All my love and a huge hug,” Rahul tweeted. 

Priyanka said Modi’s remark reflects his “uncontrolled madness”. “The PM, who seeks votes in the name of martyrs, due to his unbridled obsession has disrespected the supreme sacrifice of a good and noble human being. The people of Amethi, for whom Rajiv Gandhi gave their life, will give a reply. But yes, Modiji, this country never forgives those who deceive,” she said in a tweet in Hindi. 

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Other Opposition leaders, including West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and Samajwadi Party’s Akhilesh Yadav, also hit out at Modi. 

Banerjee condemned the statement and said Rajiv Gandhi had laid down his life for the motherland. “The comments made by ‘Expiry PM’ Modi ji against former PM Rajiv Gandhi Ji are very unfortunate,” she said.

Yadav said whatever political disagreements people might have, those martyred deserved the people’s respect and their families deserves empathy. “Election or not, this is basic humanity.”

Yadav claimed that the prime minister’s statement indicated the level to which people can stoop for the sake of clinging on to power.

Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot claimed that Modi was a master telling lies and he was trying to defame Congress leaders with baseless and irrelevant statements.

He asked whether it behoves Modi to “insult” a former prime minister and accused him of lowering the dignity of his office.

Claiming that Modi was “jolted” by the corruption allegations in the Rafale deal, he said the Congress will continue to rake up the issue till the prime minister is held accountable.

MNS chief Raj Thackeray also condemned Modi’s statement, saying the country will not pardon him for the remarks.

In a tweet, Thackeray said:

Congress leader Shiela Dikshit condemned the “derogatory” language used by Modi against Rajiv Gandhi and said it has lowered the BJP leader’s reputation among people.

Dikshit also sought an unqualified apology from Modi and added that his remarks have “deeply hurt the people of the country”.

BJP backs Modi’s statement

Meanwhile, BJP leaders are defending Modi with Prakash Javadekar saying that every single word the PM had said about Rajiv Gandhi was true. 

“Everything the PM said was true. After the killings of Sikhs in the 1984 riots, didn’t Rajiv Gandhi support it? He had said when a big tree fell, the earth shook. Scriptures do not say that. The scriptures say when the earth shakes, big trees fall...they turned science on its head.

“They (Congress) are playing the politics of abuses. The Gandhis are rattled and they cannot tolerate it. The people of this country know everything. After four phases of polling (in the ongoing Lok Sabha election), it is clear that the Congress is losing,” Javadekar said.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley wondered why Rahul Gandhi gets disturbed when issues on integrity of the Rajiv Gandhi-led government are raised.

He said the Congress chief thinks that “dynast” does not have to answer any question even though he can attack Modi, a man of utmost integrity.

“Why is Rahul Gandhi so disturbed if the integrity issues of the Rajiv Gandhi government are raised? Why did Ottavio Quattrocchi get kickbacks in Bofors? Who was the Q’ connection? No reply has come,” Jaitley said.

He said that former prime minister Indira Gandhi was also assassinated and yet the Congress is questioned about the Emergency and the Operation Blue Star.

(With PTI inputs)

Kalki Koechlin, Ravir Shorey Join Season 2 Of 'Sacred Games'

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Netflix India on Monday tweeted out a ‘cast reveal’ of Sacred Games season 2 announcing two new members of the cast — Kalki Koechlin and Ranvir Shorey. The first season of the show, starring Saif Ali Khan as Sartaj Singh and Nawazuddin Siddiqui as Gaitonde, was very well received by audiences in India and outside. Read review here

If the new teaser is anything to go by, Koechlin and Shorey will likely play important roles in season 2. 

This comes almost a month after Netflix India had teased the return of the show with a tweet that said, “Koi bolta hai sach hai, koi bolta hai mazak, par mandala kabhi kisi ko samajh mein nahi aya.”

The second season is likely to premier later this year, though Netflix has not announced a particular date. 

The revelation was made in the first look of season two, directed by Anurag Kashyap and Neeraj Ghaywan.  Like season one, Kashyap is at the helm of the portions featuring Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s Ganesh Gaitonde, while Ghaywan will direct the scenes with Saif Ali Khan’s Sartaj Singh. 

Kalki, who will be essaying the role of Batya in the season two, said she is excited to be a part of the series.“Personally, I am a fan of the series, and it is super awesome to be a part of the Sacred Games and Netflix family. Season 2 promises to be much more exciting and I cannot wait for viewers to watch me in the series,” Kalki said in a statement. 

Ranvir said working on the fan-favourite show was a delight. “The digital platform is so empowering and working on this audience-favourite show has been an absolute delight. My character in ‘Sacred Games 2’, Shahid Khan, is a complete departure from any of the roles I’ve played before, and I’m looking forward to fans across the world bingeing on the new season,” he said. 

Vikramaditya Motwane and Varun Grover are returning as the showrunner and the lead writer, respectively. Based on Vikram Chandra’s award-winning book of the same name, “Sacred Games Season 2” will premiere on Netflix later this year.

(with PTI news)

[SPOILERS] Twitter Users Out For Blood After Shocking 'Game Of Thrones' Deaths

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Game of Thrones” fans had to suffer through (spoilers!) more shocking deaths on Sunday night. 

Euron Greyjoy killed the dragon Rhaegal and Cersei Lannister executed Missandei as Grey Worm and Daenerys watched. 

Twitter users are already out for revenge, with many practically demanding blood and fire in next week’s episode: 

Sharp-Eyed ‘Game Of Thrones’ Viewers Just Spotted A HUGE Mistake

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Eagle-eyed “Game of Thrones” fans noticed something very wrong in Sunday night’s episode, and it had nothing to do with death and betrayal. 

It was something that resembled a coffee cup. More specifically, a Starbucks cup.

Looks like the company’s ubiquitous shops have even gained a foothold in Westeros.

While errors have certainly happened on the show before, fans were left wondering just how in the heck one of the most expensive shows in TV history managed to make a mistake this big:  

Actor Karan Oberoi Arrested By Mumbai Police On Rape Charges

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MUMBAI — Actor-model Karan Oberoi has been arrested for allegedly raping and blackmailing a woman in suburban Oshiwara, a police official said on Monday.

The woman recently complained to police that Oberoi, who was in a relationship with her since 2016, allegedly raped her on the pretext of marrying her, he said.

He also shot some objectionable videos of the woman and demanded money from her while threatening to release the clips, the official said.

Based on the woman’s complaint, Oberoi was arrested on Sunday and booked under Indian Penal Code Sections 376 (rape) and 384 (extortion), Oshiwara police station’s senior inspector Shailesh Pasalwad said.

Oberoi acted in some popular television serials like Jassi Jaisi Koi Nahin and Inside Edge.

He also appeared in some advertisements of cars, bikes and apparels.

I Can't Stay Body Positive When My Body Is In Pain

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There are some mornings when I just cannot get out of bed. Literally. I cannot get out of bed no matter how much I may need or want to.

I’ve been dealing with chronic pain and intestinal illness for a few years. Some days, I wake up ready to take on the world. Other days, I wake up with blurred vision, stomach pains, headaches and muscle soreness that’s as unpredictable as it is painful, and all I can manage to do is stay in my sheets and feel sorry for myself.

On those days, I loathe my body. I hate it for holding me back, causing me pain and essentially keeping me from doing what I want it to do. And on those days when I am angry with my body, I get mad at myself. Because I know I shouldn’t feel that way.

In a world where hourglass figures and Instagram likes create standards of self-worth, there is a growing counterculture of body positivity that reminds us to always love ourselves as we are. Through positive messaging, personal testimonies from influencers and campaigning to change the way bodies are presented in media, many of us have come to know that true beauty and self-worth are way more than skin-deep and it’s what’s inside that counts.

But what do you do when your insides feel like they’re falling apart?

There's a lot of focus on loving how our bodies look and not enough focus on how our bodies feel.

Keah Brown, a 27-year-old journalist and writer from western New York, is no stranger to these kinds of bad days. She was born with cerebral palsy, which affects her motor skills on the right side of her body. In 2017, she started the hashtag #DisabledAndCute to show her own journey toward self-love and to make space for other people with chronic pain, illness and disability in the movement toward body positivity.

But while Brown is on a solid journey to body positivity now, it wasn’t always that way. She had to grow into loving her ever-changing body and feeling less lonely in it, and even now some days are easier than others.

“Just because I love myself now, I still have bad days,” Brown said. “You’re going to be frustrated, angry and sad, and it’s going to hurt and suck and it’s going to feel like you’re the only person in the world with your chronic illness or disability.”

“A lot of disability and chronic pain is adjusting to the world because it wasn’t created with body parts like mine in mind,” she continued. “True body positivity is about honesty. Some days you’re not going to feel good about your body. But you have to try your best to be kind to yourself on those days.”

And part of being compassionate with yourself is knowing and accepting that it’s OK if you don’t always feel your best, added Ashlee Bennett, also known as “The Body Image Therapist,” an online counselor based in Melbourne, Australia.

“It’s almost like the [body positive] movement has turned on the people through social discourse who need it the most. It’s lost some of its meaning,” Bennett said. “It’s viewed as, ‘Just feel positive in your body, happy sunshine rainbows!’ But the roots of this movement for body positivity is actually for people who don’t fit into the ideal of beauty or the ideal of health.”

While there’s no right or wrong way to be body positive, there’s a lot of focus on loving how our bodies look and not enough focus on how our bodies feel. So how do you stay body positive when your body is sick, hurt or failing you? Here are some tips:

Be flexible with your routine.

Some days when you’re not feeling your best, you just have to do things differently than you planned, and it’s OK to do things differently.

“I know that even though I’m a writer, I can’t write everyday. Sometimes my hands will cramp and I’m just out of commission,” Brown said. “So I’ll just brainstorm in my head and try to do something like that instead of trying to push my body past its limit.”

Also, don’t underestimate the power of doing nothing.

“Sometimes keeping it moving means putting on Netflix and giving yourself the room to just be,” Brown added. “We’re taught so much that we gotta keep moving. Sometimes you just gotta relax.”

Learn your limits.

When you’re feeling really negative in your body, I think it can be really helpful to use the Spoon Theory,” Bennett said. “Let’s say we all have 12 spoons in the day. Getting up in the morning takes one spoon, maybe cleaning the house takes five spoons ... and you notice your spoons deplete pretty quickly. You have to be more realistic about what you can actually produce in a day and do in a day so you’re not adding to harmful self-critique.”

In other words, know your limits and stick to them. That’ll help make it so you’re not so critical of your body when it physically can’t do any more.

“A lot of times we tell people to push past pain like it’s not there, but that’s not possible,” Brown added. “I think those messages are dangerous. I don’t think that we should have to hurt ourselves to prove our worth.”

Mute guidance that make you feel bad.

“People who offer unsolicited advice in general are exhausting,” Brown said. I feel like people only offer essential oils or yoga or eating differently. I’m like, I’m still going to wake up with cerebral palsy!”

While advice (like even this article) is often given with good intentions, not everything is going to work for everybody. If ever you find yourself overwhelmed by all the positive messaging ― whether on Instagram or IRL ― it might be best to just put everything and everyone on mute for a while and just let yourself be.

“Let your body be a body, and to be a body means that you’re going to experience illness. Everyone does, and it doesn’t matter how much kale you eat,” Bennett said.

Find what makes you feel good in your own skin.

“If I can be in the right pair of jeans, a nice shirt, a red lipstick and put a pair of false eyelashes on me, it’s over. I’m ready to go.” Brown said. “Every morning and every night, I say four things that I like about myself and that’s helped me mentally. What makes me feel beautiful is just the knowledge that I’m trying every day.”

If you still don’t feel good, know that it’s OK.

Bennett sums it up best: “It’s OK to not feel positive in your body. I think sometimes when we force ourselves to feel positive and just gloss over it, it can make us feel worse,” she said. “If you’re in pain, if you’re feeling really frustrated, if you’re angry, if you’re crying, let yourself feel those emotions. That’s actually the most positive thing you can do for your body in those moments.”

“Some days you’re not going to love your body, you’re going to hate it,” Brown added. “But trying every day to get to the other side of that frustration. Take your time getting out of it. Try your best. Don’t ever think you’re taking too long.”

Nobody’s perfect and no body is perfect. There are some days in which our outlook is going to be bleak ― and that includes how we may look at ourselves. The cure isn’t always going to be pushing through the pain or scrolling through Instagram for inspiration. Healing happens when we are kind and compassionate toward ourselves.


Earth Put On Red Alert By Shocking Report On Future Of Nature And Humanity

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Planet Earth has been put on red alert by hundreds of leading scientists who have warned humanity faces an existential threat within decades if the steep decline of nature is not reversed.

The conclusions of the greatest-ever stock-taking of the living world, published on Monday, show that ecosystems and wild populations are shrinking, deteriorating or vanishing completely, and up to one million species of land and marine life could be made extinct by humans’ actions if present trends continue.

Food, pollination, clean water and a stable climate all depend on a thriving plant and animal population, but forests and wetlands are being erased worldwide and oceans are under growing stress, says the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), the United Nations’ expert nature panel of nearly 500 scientists, in the landmark global assessment report. 

The three-year project analysed around 15,000 academic studies that focused on everything from plankton and fish to bees, coral, forests, frogs and insects.

If we continue to pollute the planet and waste natural resources as we have been doing, it won’t just affect people’s quality of life but will lead to a further deterioration of earth’s planetary systems, said the IPBES scientists.

A Hawksbill turtle in the Maldives. This species is considered critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature — the last category before “extinct.”  

“The essential, interconnected web of life on Earth is getting smaller and increasingly frayed. This loss is a direct result of human activity and constitutes a direct threat to human well-being in all regions of the world,” said professor Josef Settele, a research ecologist and co-chair of the 1,800 page report, the summary of which was agreed to by 132 governments meeting in Paris this weekend, including the U.S.

The scale and rapid speed of this decline of nature is unprecedented in human history and is likely to continue for at least 50 years, say the authors of the global study, but can still largely be turned around if governments, businesses and individuals urgently commit to working together to conserve and restore nature, and to use fewer natural resources better.

It will require a concerted worldwide effort to change the way we live, said IPBES chair Sir Robert Watson, a former chief scientist at NASA who is now with the U.K. government. 

“The whole world is focused on climate change but loss of biodiversity is just as important,” said Watson. “You can’t deal with one without the other. There is a recognition now that biodiversity is an environmental issue, but it’s also about economics and development, too. We have to reform the economic system.”

The global assessment report, which will not be published in full until later this year (only the conclusions have been released), is unique among governmental biodiversity studies because it identifies both the direct drivers of nature’s losses ― such as climate change, agricultural expansion, pollution and the exploitation of oceans and forests ― and the underlying causes.

These indirect drivers are more controversial and include world population, which has doubled since 1970 (from 3.7 billion to 7.6 billion people), the tenfold increase in global trade over the last five decades, the sheer amount of goods that people now buy in rich countries, as well as supply chains, the endless pursuit of economic growth, damaging subsidies and the sharp growth of new technologies, all of which put demands on natural resources.

The Fimiston Open Pit gold mine in Western Australia. Our demands on natural resources come at a heavy cost for biodiversity.

Unless both direct and indirect drivers are addressed simultaneously, there is little hope of the transformational change needed to avert a planetary crisis, said global assessment lead author Kai Chan, professor at the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability at the University of British Columbia.

“The present system [of environmental protection] has not worked well enough. Governments must get serious about reining in the power of business to regulate itself. We must also focus on supply chains. At present, nature is undermined every time we buy something through the raw materials used or the way goods are produced,” he said.

“Few governments fully understand the magnitude of the problems we face. Most deny the reality of the existential threat we face,” Chan added.

The global assessment report also shows:

  • Urban areas have more than doubled in size since 1992, and 100 million hectares of tropical forest were lost from 1980 to 2000.
  • Around 25% of animal and plant species are threatened, and around 1 million species already face extinction, many within decades if no action is taken.
  • The current rate of species extinction is at least tens to hundreds of times higher than it has averaged over the past 10 million years.
  • Nearly half the live coral cover on coral reefs has been lost since the 1870s, with losses in recent decades accelerating due to climate change.
  • Two-thirds of the oceans are under stress, and over 85% of wetlands area has been lost.
  • The frequency and intensity of extreme weather events have increased in the past 50 years, while the global average sea level has risen by between 6 and 8 inches since 1900.
  • Climate change is projected to become increasingly important as a direct driver of changes in nature and its contributions to humanity in the next decades.
  • There are around 2,500 conflicts over fossil fuels, water, food and land currently occurring worldwide.
Corals grow right up to the edge of a mangrove forest in Raja Ampat, Indonesia. Mangroves are one of the world’s most threatened ecosystems.  

The global assessment report is a critical piece of science, Joyce Msuya, acting executive director of the UN’s Environment Program, told HuffPost.

“It is a reminder that nature is not a luxury but is the building block of economic growth, food security, livelihoods and health. It tells us there is a window of opportunity to change track.”

The authors collectively call for bold, far-reaching economic and social changes, including paying for large-scale ecological restoration of degraded lands, and strengthening international targets to control climate change and biodiversity loss.

NGOs are among those echoing the call for major, transformative changes. “We must end this war against nature. We must eat less meat, which takes up most agricultural land at the expense of nature, and we must stop treating our oceans like a waste dump while also exploiting their resources to the point of collapse,” said John Sauven, director of Greenpeace.

The good news, said Watson, is that governments have accepted the report. “They know the problem. They cannot disagree with the evidence because they have signed off on it.

“Now we need action.”

New Media, New Violations: Election Campaigning on Facebook Violates Code Of Conduct

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Analysis of Facebook advertisements by political parties shows that a total of 2,235 advertisements worth approximately Rs 1.59 crore ran in violation of the silence period associated with the first four phases of the Lok Sabha general elections taking place right now. The amount of money spent on advertisements by the official BJP page is more than three times the next biggest spender, the INC, and between these two parties, more than 2,000 ads in violation of the silence period have run through the elections so far.

Take, for example, the following advertisement:

Neha yaar, how can you hang up on such a cool boyfriend?!, remarks a pyjama-clad young woman to her roommate, having overheard yet another fight. Across the dreamcatcher and in the foreground of a “Keep Calm” poster, exasperated Neha responds that he’s not all that cool-shool, he only keeps calling because Modi has made mobile internet data cheap!

The sponsored advertisement, part of #MyFirstVoteForModi campaign, is targeted at Facebook users between the ages of 18 and 24. Starting from the 21st of April, the ad will be shown until the end of the elections on the 19th of May, violating the silence periods of five phases of the elections.

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Violations of the silence period are routine, and cut across political parties. Using the tools provided by the Graph Application Programming Interface (API), we creatively compiled a database of sixteen political parties’ advertisements, and then queried this database to gather evidence of violations across phases 1, 2, 3 and 4.

The silence period, or the period of tranquil before the polls, is a feature of elections that aims to preserve the space for reflection before polling day. In India, it can be found in Section 126 of the Representation of the People Act of 1951, where any active campaigning by parties and candidates or display of ‘election matter,’ including through electronic media, is prohibited for a 48-hour period before the conclusion of the polls.

The task of monitoring compliance to the silence period is complicated both by the use of social media for campaigning, as well as the multi-phase nature of the Indian elections. Acknowledging this, the Election Commission of India (ECI) issued a communication to political parties calling for the letter and spirit of the law to be respected. “In a multi-phased election, the silence period of last 48 hours may be on in certain constituencies while campaign is ongoing in other constituencies. In such event, there should not be any direct or indirect reference amounting to soliciting support for parties or candidates in the constituencies observing the silence period,” the letter stated.

This is easier said than done, or even enforced.

Democracy of the loudest

Ad targeting on Facebook allows publishers of ads to define specific audiences, as well as the time period during which the ads should be shown. Such a definition can be on the basis of the location of users, their gender, interests etc. Ads can be further defined by excluding certain classes from the curated audience. Such a nature of targeting is what allows an advertisement that casually references boyfriends of young women to be made by the same party whose followers aggressively defend cultural values that militate against unmarried romantic relations.

But because ad targeting design was probably not made with silence periods of multi-phase elections in mind, it is not intuitively possible to limit ads from being shown during specific periods for specific regions. So while a large number of ads violate the silence period, it is hard to understand whether that is intentional, or simply a fallout of the design affordances. Except in certain cases.

On the 9th of April, less than two hours before the silence period for the first phase commenced, the BJP released advertisements amounting between Rs 7—16 lakh. These ads were targeted broadly, including at users residing in states that were going to the polls shortly after, on the 11th. Such a strategic investment is characteristic of the BJP. The amount of money spent on advertisements by the official BJP page is more than three times the next biggest spender, the INC, and more than ten times the third biggest spender, the Left Democratic Front of Kerala.

Table: List of official political party pages and their sponsored ads
*CPI, CPI-M, INC-J&K, BSP, SP, PMK, JDS, AIADMK have not sponsored any political advertisements on their official pages.
**Advertisement spend between February and April, as shown in the Ad library


The data accessed through the API has many shortcomings: as reported in HuffPost India, sponsored political advertisements are also run by pages that ostensibly have nothing to do with political parties, making it hard to get an authentic picture of the efforts including the money spent. Further, not all ads relating to the elections are labelled by publishers as related to ‘national importance.’ Besides, Facebook is part of a larger mosaic of companies where political propaganda circulates.

Social media platforms including Facebook have committed to acknowledging and/ or processing violations of the silence period within three hours of their reporting by the ECI. This commitment is part of a Voluntary Code of Ethics presented by the companies to the ECI, where they make commitments for a ‘free, fair and ethical’ use of social media platforms.

At the time of the writing of this article, we have filed a report of the violations found in our database to the ECI. The article will be updated with any responses by the ECI.

(The authors are investigating new forms of propaganda in social media and elections.)

This Is What Happens To Your Brain When You Work On Less Than 6 Hours Of Sleep

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You may think you're fine at work when you're sleep-deprived, but research says otherwise.

Too many employees are tired zombies, going to work sleepless. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which recommends between seven and nine hours of sleep each night for adults, has found that 1 in 3 adults are falling short of this. In a 2016 CareerBuilder survey of 3,200 employees, 1 in 5 said they averaged five hours of sleep or less a night. 

Yet many of us are unaware of the effects of sleep deprivation.

“If you got fewer than seven hours of sleep last night, you are a little bit sleep-deprived. And you will probably deny that and say, ‘No, I’m fine.’ But if we were to bring you into one of our sleep labs and have you do some performance tests, we would be able to see that you are not as good at doing those as you are fully rested,” said Jeanne Duffy, a neuroscientist and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School in the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders. 

Once sleeplessness becomes a pattern, you may not even realize you are impaired. “Let’s say you are getting eight hours of sleep a night and then you suddenly start getting six. You really notice it on the first day or two after that. And then you stop noticing it,” Duffy said about chronic sleep deprivation. “And it’s not because you’re not impaired by it. It’s because you sort of have a new frame of reference.”

But there are real tradeoffs you make when you forgo sleep. When you stay up too late bingeing a show, or worrying about your job, or taking care of a child, your performance at work the next day is compromised.

1. You’re distracted. 

Are you repeatedly switching from tab to tab on your browser, unable to focus on your work?

That could be a response to sleep deprivation, said Duffy. One way your brain tries to keep you awake “is to constantly look for distractions. That will impact your ability to focus on a task and be able to do that task,” she said. 

2. You’re anxious. 

Too little sleep and the world can feel like a minefield of danger the next day. If you feel on edge at work, lack of sleep may be the source.

Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, had 18 people come into their sleep lab for a night of normal rest and then a night of total sleep deprivation. After the night of sleep deprivation, anxiety levels in participants were 30 percent higher, with half of the people reaching the levels reported in individuals with anxiety disorders. 

3. You’re angrier. 

It only takes a few lost hours of sleep for your mood to change for the worse.

In a 2018 Journal of Experimental Psychology study by Iowa State researchers142 community residents were randomly assigned either to maintain their regular sleep routine, which averaged to almost 7 hours of shut-eye a night, or to sacrifice sleep. The second group, which got about 4 1/2 hours, reported more anger and distress over everyday nuisances like an uncomfortable shirt or a barking dog. 

4. You’re less patient with colleagues. 

“It makes us short-tempered,” Duffy said about sleep deprivation. 

If you’re in charge of others at work, it is imperative for you to get enough rest to be a good manager. A 2017 study led by management researchers Cristiano Guarana and Christopher Barnes measured the sleep of 40 managers and their 120 direct reports and the quality of the relationships between them during the first three months of working together. They found that when the boss was sleep-deprived, management-worker relations suffered. Bosses were less patient and more irritable, and employees reported worse interactions.

“When people are sleep-deprived or suffer lower quality of sleep, the prefrontal cortex of their brain suffers an especially detrimental effect. This is the region that is responsible for self-control,” Barnes said in an Academy of Management Journal video about how sleep influences work behavior. “Sleep-deprived people or people who have poor quality of sleep are less effective at using self-control to guide their own actions.”

5. You take bigger risks. 

Chronic sleep restriction can alter your behavior in less obvious ways by driving you to make riskier decisions, according to a 2017 Annals of Neurology study.

Researchers compared the decision-making of men ages 18-28 who got only five hours a night for a week with another group who had a restful eight hours of sleep a night. They were asked to choose between the safe option of receiving a set amount of money or gambling on a higher amount that could become no money if they lost. The more sleep-deprived participants were more likely to gamble on the riskier choice. 

If you must power through a sleep-deprived day ... 

Let’s be clear: There are times when you may be just too sleepy to work and could present a risk to yourself and others. In those cases, make the smart call not to go in. If you operate potentially dangerous machinery or need strong physical balance or careful hand-eye coordination to be safe, stay home. Even commuting to work can be a hazard when you are too sleepy to drive safely. 

“If you’re in that situation, rather than fighting it, you really should pull over, even if it’s a crazy place to pull over, because you start to lose your judgment about how impaired you are,” said Paul Glovinsky, the clinical director of the St. Peter’s Sleep Center in Albany, New York, and the author of “You Are Getting Sleepy: Lifestyle-Based Solutions for Insomnia.”

But in cases where you are not dangerously sleep-deprived, here are some energizing tips to help you survive a tired day:

Get outside. Before you start your workday, get out into the sun. Being exposed to natural light tells your internal biological clock to be alert. “Our circadian system is very responsive to light,” Glovinsky said. 

Move around. When you are sitting at your desk doing repetitive tasks, you are more likely to feel tired. Take breaks, get up and stretch your legs. “You can move around and do a little bit of exercise. Those kinds of things can help you over the short term,” Duffy said. 

Have caffeine but don’t overdo it. Drinking coffee can block the sleep-inducing chemicals in your brain and cause temporary alertness. The National Sleep Foundation said that three 8 oz. cups of coffee over a whole day is considered a moderate amount. 

Nap if possible. Duffy said a 20-minute nap could be beneficial: “You can often wake up from that and feel really refreshed and have that last for several hours.”

But don’t doze off too long or you could slip into the deep stages of sleep. “That’s the kind of sleep that you wake up from and you feel groggy,” she said.

Sleep that night. Although there is no magic to get those lost hours back, the best way to recover from sleeplessness is to sleep. “You have to make a sleep a priority and to set yourself time to get enough sleep every night,” Duffy said.

Clean Chit To CJI Gogoi From In-House Inquiry That Complainant Rejected

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The in-house inquiry committee, looking into allegations of sexual harassment levelled against Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi by a former woman employee of the Supreme Court, has “found no substance” in the allegations.

The in-house inquiry committee was headed by Justice SA Bobde, who is the senior-most judge in the Supreme Court after the CJI, and its two other members are women judges of the apex court — justices Indu Malhotra and Indira Banerjee.

The Secretary General of the Supreme Court, according to Live Law, stated that the committee found no substance in the allegations contained in the complaint of the former employee of the Supreme Court. 

For the latest elections news and more, follow HuffPost India on TwitterFacebook, and subscribe to our newsletter.

Earlier, the complainant had walked out of the in-house inquiry panel proceedings, raising various objections including denial of her lawyer’s presence.

She had said she was also “scared of her safety” as she was followed by two to four men while returning from the proceedings. She had also claimed that the committee did not inform about the procedure that was to be followed during the inquiry.

(With PTI inputs)

8 Homework Questions That Stumped Parents

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Homework is not just the bane of many students’ lives. It can also lead to major frustration for their parents

Sometimes a homework question comes along that is so confusing, it stumps kids and parents alike. And many of those frustrated adults take to social media to share their bewilderment.

We’ve rounded up eight such problems that have made waves online over the years ― or came to us directly from the HuffPost Parents community.

The Kindergarten Worksheet 

In 2017, New York mom Royce Winnick posted a photo of her 5-year-old daughter’s take-home worksheet on Facebook and asked if anyone could figure out the answer to the last question. The worksheet focused on the letter T and instructed students to “tap out the word in the picture and write out the sounds you hear.”

While the first answers were simply “tub,” “ten” and “top,” the last one showed a drawing of rabbits with no clear T-word description. “The real answer was ‘vet’ which makes no sense!” Winnick told HuffPost at the time. 

The Other Kindergarten Worksheet

Winnick also shared another worksheet with HuffPost that “also had ridiculous answers.”

“The answers to the two bottoms ones are kin and Ken!” she said. “Again, how is a 5-year-old supposed to know that?”

The Third Grade Math Problem

In 2017, a mom named Dusty Sappington posted a photo showing a section of her 8-year-old daughter Izzy’s math homework on Reddit. The problem stated, “Janell had 15 marbles. She lost some of them. How many does Janell have now?”

“To be honest, I’m unsure if it was printed in error or was a question to test her knowledge of less than and greater than, which she has touched on in the past,” Sappington told HuffPost at the time. “Being the mother of a third-grader and a fifth-grader, I have seen a lot of homework over the years that has our family laughing at the absurdities, scratching our heads and relying too much on Google.”

The Uncertain Family Tree

In March, we asked members of the HuffPost Parents Facebook community if they had come across homework questions that stumped them. One user, Malina Mchls, shared a confusing question from her niece’s homework: 

“I am German and live in England. I was helping my niece with her German homework and she had to do a family tree. At the end it asked for a relation to a previously unknown family member. It went something like Peter is Mary’s brother and Steven is Mary’s husband, what is Peter to John? Like who TF is John?”

The First Grade Math Problem

In 2017, the Holderness family shared a problem from son Penn Charles’ first grade homework on Facebook. The caption included the hashtag #mybrainhurts. 

“FYI, this was the final page on a 7 page sheet, the previous 6 pages were a much more normal level for a first grader. I don’t think the teacher expects everyone to get this, I think it was meant to be a problem that would challenge the children, so for that reason I think it’s great that our school included it!” dad Penn Holderness noted in a comment.

The First Grade Number Pattern

While this one was a bonus question on a test, it still stumped parents. In 2017, Twitter user mmatigari shared a math question that allegedly appeared on an exam for first graders in Singapore

The question revolved around a number pattern called a petite circle sum, which most adults appeared to agree seemed a little too difficult for children so young. 

The Fifth Grade Math Question

In 2016, a U.K. father took to Facebook to bemoan his fifth grade son’s math homework. “Calculate the perimeter of these composite rectilinear shapes,” one problem commanded.

When the Manchester Evening News tweeted the question, many grown-ups expressed their confusion, while others explained how they arrived at the answer. 

The Symphony Conundrum

In 2017, a “trick question” from a U.K. math teacher had a viral moment on Twitter. The question asks: “An orchestra of 120 players takes 40 minutes to play Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. How long would it take for 60 players to play the symphony?”

Twitter user Doug Mataconis shared the teacher’s question along with the caption, “That’s not how this works. That’s not how any of this works.” Many responses suggested equal bewilderment, but the teacher who wrote the problem, Claire Longmoor, clarified that it was a “trick question just to keep the kids on their toes.” Still, as others pointed out, Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony is actually closer to 70 minutes than 40. 

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