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What Plays in Peoria – Front Porch Republic

What Plays in Peoria – Front Porch Republic

People used to talk about whether something would “play in Peoria.” I don’t know if it matters anymore. Caterpillar left the city for Deerfield in 2017 (and then left Deerfield for Texas). A few years later, the proverbial center of American normalcy was one of the country’s fastest shrinking cities. When most people leave, how normal are the ones who stay?

Every summer we camp with family at a farm not far from Peoria. On our drive home this year, I saw in the city’s downtown a billboard advertising a therapy business called Occult Mental Health. Along with counseling and crisis intervention, they offer ketamine infusions and medical marijuana. And their slogan, printed in huge dark letters on the billboard, invites potential customers to imagine something even more ambitious than the passing peace of a nice high. “Embrace Your Inner Demons,” the board reads. Is that a permission slip, or is it a command? I wasn’t sure.

It didn’t help that our camping trip had ended on the sour note of an odd dispute about therapy. Apparently, everybody now believes that everybody should have a therapist. The idea is that therapy is not just for troubled souls; therapy is for all souls. In fact, it’s a little weird if you don’t go to therapy. It seems the true virtue of therapy – never mind whether it’s helpful, whether it’s necessary, whether or not it’s a racket – is that it’s a perfectly normal thing to do. And that’s what I want to talk about: not therapy per se, which can be good or bad, and might in some sense be what we most urgently need, as Mike Sauter has argued. Psychotherapist Art Kusserow emphasizes that therapy at its best is “not an echo chamber in which the therapist simply reflects upon and reinforces ingrained but unhealthy behaviors, ideas, and patterns of communication within relationships.” Here I’m more interested in therapy at its worst, which is therapy as a culture – a culture that not only reinforces but normalizes those unhealthy patterns.

If you go to the website for Occult Mental Health, you’ll find little talk of Peorian normalcy. The homepage is a variation on the billboard, although instead of your demons, you’re only required to embrace your weirdness: “Step into a world where your quirks are celebrated and understood. We offer mental healthcare for everyone, because we are all a little weird.” (“$300 off Mood Infusion Series.”)

I guess it’s true that we’re all a little weird. When he heard about somebody being eccentric, my grandpa would always say that “it wouldn’t do for us all to be alike” (sometimes adding “otherwise everybody’d be in love with my wife”). And it’s good to celebrate the fact, as FPR often does. A world of eccentrics is better than a world of conformists, and celebrating eccentricity helps us resist pressures to conform. “Keep Portland Weird,” as they say in the West Coast city we called home for a few years. They even put it on their billboards.

Some people would like to Make Peoria Weird. Last year the New York Times profiled a local booster named Angie Ostaszewski who uses social media to attract new residents by showing them the houses they could buy for cheap. It’s a good idea. Ten years ago in Boston we rented an ugly, cramped little apartment above a noisy plumber’s shop for $1000 a month, which is only a little less than our mortgage payment here in Dubuque, where we live in a nice roomy house on nearly an acre. We were the kind of person this TikTok “influencer” is appealing to, and she’s brought in hundreds of them from the big cities on both coasts.

But the newcomers need certain reassurances that their bigger-city eccentricities will be welcomed by the locals. “What’s novel about Ms. Ostaszewski’s posts is not that she’s highlighting a midsize, Midwestern city as an affordable place to live, but also as a place where a diverse, inclusive community can be formed.” Because the transplants are women of color, they are black and trans, they are artists. They are weird. One of them, a Ms. Damon, “worried about acceptance. ‘Being Black and queer, I’m very wary about places that I go, because you just never know if you’re going to be welcome or not,’ said Ms. Damon . . . But she was pleasantly surprised by the progressive community she found. ‘They’re very big on making sure people feel included, making sure queer people and people of color have their spaces.’”

Normalcy is a weird term. On the one hand, it’s just a word for what most people do: “most people go to therapy.” On the other hand, most people do what they do because it’s normal. “Normal” describes and prescribes at the same time: “everybody should go to therapy.” Normal is a reason for doing this, not that. People live this way, not that way, because this way is normal, and that way is weird. People conform to expectations.

Of course, American people are different: we are individualists. We’re pioneers, we’re trailblazers, we’re Henry David Thoreau on Walden Pond. “The greater part of what my neighbors call good, I know in my heart to be bad,” said Thoreau. We’re non-conformists. Our natural heroes are the motley crew of outcasts and underdogs, the rainbow coalition, the lovable team of misfits, the beleaguered allies. Our natural enemies are jackbooted locksteppers in gray uniforms with numbers in place of names. This guy is our guy.

Noting the illogic is the simplest move you can make here: if your reason for being an “individualist” is that everybody’s an individualist, then you’re not an individualist. Thus when they’re not harping on the straightforward conformism of the small town or the suburb, or suggesting that beneath that boredom dark secrets lie buried, workaday critics of American dreams will make hay from the obvious contradiction. Sartre wrote a good essay about it. “It is in displaying his conformism that [the American] feels freest.”

Clever critics like a good if/then statement; it lets them paint a big picture of “society” without having to know anything about this or that person. It’s true that if your reason for being an individualist is that everybody is, then you’re not one. But the question is whether that’s your reason, or whether, unlike “society,” you have a better one. If you are an individualist not because you want to keep it weird, but because you have convictions, and because you don’t take someone else’s assumption that you’re just keeping it weird as a reason to adjust those convictions – well then, you genuinely aren’t an individualist. You’re an honest-to-god individual.

Of course, the critic’s real idea is often that honest-to-god individuality is impossible, that it’s conformity all the way down, nothing but adjustment to the norm. In which case, the critic isn’t actually criticizing the American. He’s excusing him – maybe even admiring him, as Sartre almost seems to. Everyone conforms, but American conformity is more sophisticated. Our individualism, because it’s an ism, means our left hand doesn’t have to watch what our right hand is doing. Unlike the less civilized cultures, we Americans adjust without friction.

Maybe that’s because we have so much professional help. The official line is that we don’t have enough of it, but official lines make me reach for my gun. When the APA tells me there’s a mental health crisis, and that part of the crisis is the shortage of mental health providers, it sounds a bit like those bankers who shed a lot of tears about the “unbanked.” Still, the part about the mental health crisis seems right, if we change the phrase “mental health” to something less serviceable to the self-interest of the mental health providers. “Mental health” (and now “brain health”) is supposed to be sciency and respectable in a way that “cultural decay” or “spiritual degradation” is not, but the latter terms have the advantage of including a possibility that will always escape every provider of professional services, which is that the providers and the services might be part of the crisis. “Psychoanalysis is the disease of which it believes itself to be the cure,” said Karl Kraus, who could have been talking about any number of contemporary institutions.

The fact that the official-line-writers at the APA are now celebrating “mental health apps” as an elegant solution certainly bolsters my suspicions: “[I]nnovators are exploring interventions that diverge from traditional therapy models. The creative approaches include forms of support that require less time commitment from individuals, can be offered through digital devices, or both.” I don’t know if it’s mentally healthy to spend less time with other people and more time on screens, but doing so will certainly make you more normal, and being normal feels good, so I guess they’re on to something. Freud himself said the point of therapy wasn’t to make people happy, it was to make them ok with being unhappy. Happiness isn’t normal; unhappiness is. Some people don’t accept this, and those people turn weird. The only kind of “happiness” we can have is the kind we get from being normal, and being normal means being unhappy in that ho-hum sort of way that comes from being content with civilization’s discontents. You have to learn to stop worrying and love the Internet. For Freud, therapy was the management (dare I say “repression”?) of malcontentment. But these days there’s an app for that. Do you worry you might be spending too much time on your device? Download TalkSpace and you can text a therapist about it.

Of course, most therapists today aren’t Freudians, and Freud’s books are consigned to the philosophy shelf, “philosophy” being a polite term for speculation and pseudoscience. (Where is this “id” you speak of? Can I see it on an MRI machine?) More to the point, most therapists today certainly aren’t conservatives, and they’d hate to think they might share the fundamentally conservative aim of Freud’s project. Today’s therapists do not repress: they liberate people from repression. Therapy today is self-consciously progressive, doing its part to bend that arc.

But politics these days is pretty weird (which is probably why some politicians promise to make America “great again,” as in, “before the weirdos took over,” while their opponents want to “restore normalcy”). Today’s progressives obviously are today’s conservatives. They’re coded as left-wing, but true leftists do not individualize social problems (they’d rather socialize individual problems). Progressives love to individualize social problems. Progressives will talk about the “social determinants of health” (including mental health), but the social determinants that most interest them are always the ones that they have a private interest in managing. The solution is always to expand the provision of services by a licensing cartel to the individuals suffering from the social problems. Hence the tell-tale talk of “access,” which sometimes seems to be the only tool in the progressive toolbox. “‘The lack of access to mental health care is an equity issue,” said Martyn Whittingham, PhD, a licensed psychologist in Ohio who developed a brief group therapy intervention. ‘Too often people from marginalized communities struggle to access quality psychotherapy, and these innovative strategies can provide support to many more people.’” Martyn Whittingham obviously knows the official line.

The leftist thinks the system is the problem (which is why I get along so well with leftists). The progressive thinks the problem is insufficient access to the system they run. For the progressive, the system’s reach must expand: this is called “diversity. The system eliminates unfair advantages and rebalances the social equation: this is called “equity.” People who have been left out of the system (because they are too diverse) must be brought in: this is called “inclusion.”

Where’s a hippie when you need one? We’re talking about the System, with a capital ‘S’! We’re talking about the Man, man. But the Man has learned: now the Man wears the tie-dye (straightened out to make a rainbow, of course) and shouts “you do you,” and all the young kids who should be marching on the Man start chanting his lines like charms against an evil spell. If anyone who lives differently challenges them to live differently, the system is there to validate their hardwon identity as one face in a crowd that now comes in multiple colors and therefore represents Progress. “You must change your life,” says Holderlin. “No thanks,” say the kids. They feel way too included for that.

In the warm light of the System, it makes sense to link therapy with the occult, as in Occult Mental Health. There’s a real complementarity between occult or New Age spirituality and progressive politics, something Tara Burton explores in Strange Rites (where she also examines the equally real complementarity between occult spirituality and the online Neitzscheans of the post-Christian right: a topic for another day). After all, the occult is devoted to making contact with what’s weird, with what’s out-there, with the uncanny edge of the real. Occult practice is all about flipping the relation between the center and the margin – a practice that fits naturally with the progressive project of “centering marginalized voices” by decentering the other ones. The witch uses magic to center the margin and dreams of a little tarot shop to call her own, while the progressive thinks “science is real” and envisions a full-blown therapeutic state (as Thomas Szasz called it). So yes, there are differences (I’d rather hang out with the witch). But if it’s hard to imagine a practicing witch who believes marriage is between a man and a woman (let alone that men can’t become women), that might be because witches tend to share this inversive sensibility that draws power from the process of normalizing the abnormal – a magic ritual that is the official business of therapists in particular, though most of the other professions are just as happy to share in this general “triumph of the therapeutic.” To normalize therapy is to normalize normalization.

It’s important to understand why this process works. Many a defender of normalcy scoffs at the progressive doctrine of social construction and dismisses “wokeness” as intellectual chicanery, as sophistry. To be sure, much of it is. But the process works because “normal” really is an unstable category: it derives its meaning from its opposite. Normal is whatever is not abnormal; abnormal is whatever is not normal. It’s relative, it changes over time. What’s more, normalcy really does confer benefits on those who fit in its bounds, while those seen as “abnormal” really do suffer from stigma, or worse. I have a student whose killer argument against the progressive extreme is just “because it’s weird.” (I’m looking at you, Grant.) There’s something refreshing about that. It cuts to the chase and captures an intuition. But I still have to remind him that it’s not an argument. At my house, we eat sardines for breakfast and sleep on the floor. That’s pretty weird, too. Are we part of this problem?

Just as some people would like to Make Peoria Weird, others would like to go back to Peoria – back to the before-times, when the old normal reigned, and nobody went to therapy. It won’t work. You can’t oppose the normalization of weird with an appeal to normalcy: the whole point is that weird is the new normal. Both the old and the new are in their time “normal.” One is not more “normal” than the other. You have to have some higher standard. The question isn’t “what’s normal”? The question is “what ought to be normal?”

This, I think, is where many conservatives who oppose progressives by appealing to “tradition” go wrong. By “tradition” they often mean nothing more than “normalcy,” by which they just mean “what most people (used to) do.” Tradition is something more robust; if it’s really going to be tradition, it’s got to make contact with the permanent things, even if it gives them a particular form. The problem with therapy culture is not that it’s normalizing “weirdness,” it’s that the weirdness it normalizes is a rejection, not of what happens to have been normal, but of any suggestion that some things are permanent things. It’s a rejection of the idea that some things ought to be normal and others not, and that the distinction can be made. (The war on stigma always ends up as a war against such distinctions. “Being Black and queer,” Ms. Damon has to worry about whether she’ll be welcomed. But I’d like to insist that “Black” ought to be normal, and that if Black wouldn’t play in the old Peoria, so much the worse for Peoria; while at the same time I’d suggest that “queer” ought not to be normal. I might be wrong about the latter, but that’s not the point. What do these two things have to do with each other? Mainly it’s the morally irrelevant fact that both have at some point been stigmatized. But in therapy culture, stigma is the only morally relevant fact.)

The better response, which may or may not be accurately called a “conservative” response, is in this context going to look pretty weird. It’s going to look weird to live like an individual, according to strange convictions about those permanent things that transcend individual preferences. In a lot of cases it’s going to look like you’re being weird for the sake of being weird. One thing that might set you apart is that you’re not going to be very interested in normalizing your weirdness, in “fighting the stigma” by joining some anti-stigma movement (are there any movements these days that aren’t about fighting stigma?) But in general you can’t be too concerned with normalizing it or not normalizing it, with fighting some culture war aimed at producing a Peoria where you’ll be “welcomed” and “included,” where you’ll have your own “spaces.” You have to be mainly concerned with just living it.

There’s a question worth debating here. Sure, maybe it’s not about what is or isn’t normal, it’s about what ought to be normal. Maybe you should pursue that ought whether or not it’s normal to do so: “normal” is different from “moral” (which is why the phrase “moral norms” always annoys me: seems like an oxymoron). Still, don’t we all want to live in a world where what’s moral is also what’s normal, where what’s normal is also what’s good? Staring at your phone is normal, for example, and I’d like to live in a world where staring at your phone is abnormal. That would make it easier for me to avoid staring at my phone. Everybody would look at me funny, and that would help me stop doing it. Don’t we even have some kind of moral and political obligation to try to build that world?

The idea that we do have such a duty is one of the healthier reasons for fighting a culture war. Presumably we all have an interest in the culture we have to live in, because culture – our shared habits of thinking and feeling and acting, our shared sense of normal – can make it easier or harder to be moral. Therapy culture starts with the opposite intuition, which is that we all have an interest in making it easier – by making it more normal – to be weird. “Step into a world where your quirks are celebrated and understood.” In other words: step into a world where there is no shared sense of “normal” (except therapy itself: therapy is normal!), precisely because there is no shared sense of moral,” precisely because there is no sense of “moral” to share. It’s all norms, all the way down. It’s “anti-culture,” as Philip Rieff termed it. A culture of no-culture.

I do think culture matters. (And I think that if it matters enough to fight for, it matters enough to fight in the right way). But I think there’s a limit to this logic, a tension that’s probably ineliminable. Suppose Peoria got it all right: everything that once played in Peoria was what ought to have played in Peoria. That doesn’t mean the Peorians were doing what they ought to do. The more normal it is to be a good person, the harder it might get to actually be a good person: you can just do what everybody else does, and get by. At the same time, being surrounded by good people might make it easier to become good. So building a good culture is tricky. It can make it easier to be good, but it can also make it easier to merely look good. And looking good is something else. Being good might look good, or it might look bad, depending on the circumstances.

Good culture or bad culture, old normal or new normal, “individuals” will always have to struggle to become individuals. It’s only the obstacle that changes. You don’t have to be normal. You don’t have to be weird. You just have to be a person – which is a moral ideal, not a fact of nature – and let the chips fall.

The kicker is that you can only really be a person if you’ve got other people to be a person with. (No man is an island; were you raised by wolves?) And of course, when people get together, they make a culture, which brings us back to that debatable question. The main localist insight here is that it’s easier to become a real person when the group is the right size, which means, not too big. Sure, a small group full of small people causes its own problems for its members. But localists think that by and large, small groups are more likely to grow big souls who love what’s good whether or not it’s what’s normal. So it’s no accident that the mass age is an age of therapy culture. I won’t say all, but I will say that many people today need therapists because many people don’t have people. “We offer mental health care for everyone, because we are all a little weird.” If being weird is something to be celebrated, why do you need therapy for it? I think what they really mean is: we offer mental health care for everyone, because everyone is a little lonely. But if you’re just lonely, you don’t need a therapist. You need a friend. Friends don’t charge you any money.

At the same time, there are going to be times when some people have to go off into the wilderness in order to bring back a prophetic word that cuts through the bullshit (and I mean bullshit, in the technical sense, because that’s mostly what we’ve got now: not so much “fake news” and “real news” as a lot of fake concern about the difference). You need other people to become a person; you also need solitude. That’s another localist insight, too, or at least it should be. Solitude requires a place; in the mass age, places become “spaces,” and there’s no solitude in space, because there’s no you in space: it’s a vacuum, and you can’t survive in a vacuum. So solitude is another thing that’s missing from therapy culture: time and space to be alone, time and space to learn to enjoy being alone. If you can enjoy being alone, you probably don’t need a therapist, because you’re friends with yourself. You don’t charge yourself any money, either.

I’m not saying people today don’t need therapy. Some people do; maybe a lot of people do. I’m saying a lot of people today need therapy because we live in a therapy culture, where everything is valid but none of it matters, where all the professional sturm und drang goes into normalizing what’s weird, and there’s no passion left for participating in what’s good, regardless of whether it plays in Peoria.

Image via Flickr

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Coty lowers sales outlook for the first quarter

Coty lowers sales outlook for the first quarter

CoverGirl parent Coty, opening a new filing Monday, estimated like-for-like sales growth in the first quarter was below previous guidance due to a slowdown in the U.S., causing shares to fall 6% in after-hours trading.

The cosmetics maker forecast like-for-like sales growth (LFL) of between 4% and 5% for the three months to September, compared with 6% previously. Coty said very strict order and inventory management by retailers had led to weakness in certain markets such as the US, Australia and China.

The company and its competitors, including Estee Lauder (opens new registry) and L’Oreal (opens new registry), signaled tight consumer spending on beauty and cosmetics products, which are widely viewed as affordable luxuries and recession-proof.

Coty now expects LFL sales to grow moderately in the second quarter, with some acceleration in the second half of the year.

The company said it would again accelerate its cost-cutting efforts to achieve savings well above its initial target of about $75 million in fiscal 2025 in anticipation of “a more uncertain demand environment, including cautious retailer behavior and a complex macroeconomic environment.”

The company, which maintained its annual core profit target, will report its first-quarter results on November 6.

By Aishwarya Venugopal and Neil J Kanatt.

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Coty misses revenue estimates due to cautious retail orders and Lacoste license sale

Coty’s net sales rose nearly 1 percent to $1.36 billion in the fourth quarter, missing LSEG estimates of $1.38 billion.

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Halloween by Scary Jim is open on County Line Road in Germantown, WI

Halloween by Scary Jim is open on County Line Road in Germantown, WI

Germantown, WI – Halloween by Scary Jim is open at N96W18768 County Line Road, Germantown, WI.

Scary Jim’s Halloween features over 7,000 costumes, tons of animatronic displays, and a wide variety of items to help you create your own costume from scratch.

“We have a great selection of horror decorations with every costume and accessory imaginable, plus we have a new selection of fantasy upholstered weapons that will blow your mind,” said Jim.

Halloween

Be sure to register for the “Survive till Dawn” event, where two adults are allowed to sleep in a hearse. One entry to the store per person per day. Click HERE register.

cast iron

Trade fair park

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3 Unstoppable Stocks to Buy When the Dow is at an All-Time High

3 Unstoppable Stocks to Buy When the Dow is at an All-Time High

The Dow can rise – and so can these great Dow stocks.

All the best belatedly, bull market. A new bull market began on October 12, 2022. Tech stocks led the way then and continue to do so today, driven by increasing demand for all things artificial intelligence (AI).

However, the venerable one Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI 0.47%) holds up. The Dow is up nearly 47% since the start of the bull market. Are there still some Dow stocks worth buying? Absolutely. Here are three unstoppable stocks to buy when the Dow Jones is at an all-time high.

1. Amazon

Amazon (AMZN -0.68%) is a relatively new member of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The e-commerce and cloud services giant has been replaced Walgreens Boots Alliance in February 2024. Amazon has been a great addition to the Dow so far, outperforming many other stocks in the index this year.

Perhaps the best indicator of Amazon’s strength is its rapidly improving free cash flow. The company generated free cash flow of $53 billion in the trailing twelve months ended June 30, 2024, compared to $7.9 billion in the trailing twelve months ended June 30, 2023.

Amazon’s cloud business, Amazon Web Services (AWS), continues to be the company’s key growth driver. Organizations around the world are migrating to the cloud. AI, particularly generative AI, is accelerating this trend. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said in August that AWS remained “customers’ first choice” largely because of its broad functionality.

But Amazon is always looking for new growth opportunities. The company found one through advertising. In the second quarter of 2024, advertising services revenue increased 20% year-over-year (excluding foreign exchange rates), slightly higher than AWS revenue growth. Jassy said on the second-quarter earnings call that Amazon is “at the very beginning of what’s possible in our video advertising.”

2. The Home Depot

The Home Depot (HD 0.85%) is not a newcomer to the Dow like Amazon. The leading home improvement retailer was added to the index on November 1, 1999. Home Depot has since more than quadrupled the Dow’s total return and continues to outperform the index in 2024.

Based on Q2 results, you might think that Home Depot doesn’t seem unstoppable. The company’s revenue increased just 0.6% year-over-year and would have declined 3.3% without the acquisition of SRS Distribution. However, this preliminary snapshot doesn’t tell the whole story about Home Depot’s prospects.

At Home Depot, notice one number: 42. That’s the average age of homes in the U.S., according to Statista. Given the large number of older homes, demand for home improvement supplies is likely to remain high in the coming years.

Home Depot also has another long-term tailwind. The United States continues to face a severe housing shortage. Zillow It is estimated that the country needs an additional 4.5 million homes. Home Depot should have a significant opportunity to provide materials to professionals building new homes over the next decade and beyond.

3. Visa

visa (v 1.02%) joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average on September 23, 2013. Since then, the payments technology company has nearly doubled the Dow’s total return.

Granted, Visa has underperformed the Dow in 2024. This underperformance is primarily due to regulatory issues. In June, a federal judge rejected a settlement between Visa, MasterCardand retailers via swipe fees. In September, the U.S. Department of Justice filed an antitrust lawsuit alleging that Visa monopolizes the debit network markets.

I’m not sure how these regulatory challenges will play out. Regardless of the results, however, Visa should remain a dominant force in the payments market.

And this market should continue to grow. Cash is on the way to the dinosaurs as people increasingly use digital payment methods. Visa could have a particularly big growth opportunity as the middle class expands in developing countries.

John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Keith Speights has positions at Amazon and Mastercard. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Home Depot, Mastercard, Visa and Zillow Group. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long $370 January 2025 calls on Mastercard and short $380 January 2025 calls on Mastercard. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Free wellness program for exercise, mindfulness and more

Free wellness program for exercise, mindfulness and more

“The majority of those who responded to our first employee wellness survey requested free physical wellness programs, and it was also important that the offerings were available both live and on-demand,” said Teresa Guglielmo, employee wellness -Program Manager at UC San Diego. “Bright Breaks can be accessed almost anywhere, anytime via a computer or smartphone, and optional wellness challenges provide an extra bit of community, fun and support.”

There are Bright Breaks for every interest—from facial yoga to high-intensity training—where faculty and staff can take a break to move, breathe, stretch and learn how to eat better. Guglielmo noted that her team of wellness ambassadors tested the program for a week and the feedback was overwhelmingly positive. Pilot testers particularly liked the variety of course formats and instructors, the easy navigation of the website, and the ability to link to Outlook calendars to book breaks in advance.

Most sessions take place live and during the working week, Monday to Friday from 5am to 7pm. A full library of hundreds of on-demand sessions is also available. For those interested in a little more responsibility, social connection or friendly competition, wellness challenges are part of the program. Teams can participate in challenges together or meet as a group for specific sessions.

“We believe this program is excellent at meeting employee wellness program needs, and I think it could have a significant impact,” Guglielmo said. “We would like to see people taking more breaks, moving more, tackling wellbeing challenges and taking action to improve their health.”

Subscribe now to benefit from this new source of wellness support.

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China Unicom monetizes 5G through live streaming innovation

China Unicom monetizes 5G through live streaming innovation

Sponsored by:

China Unicom monetizes 5G through live streaming innovation

Regional operator China Unicom Guangdong is monetizing 5G by offering hyper-personalized live streaming experiences to both business and residential customers. Read the case study to find out how the company successfully delivers these products using new 5G and 5G Advanced techniques and intelligent operational technologies, including the ability to identify customers who would benefit from the packages.

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Cooper Koch answers everyone’s biggest question about his monsters’ nude scene

Cooper Koch answers everyone’s biggest question about his monsters’ nude scene

Cooper Koch at the Monsters premiere last month via Associated Press

Monster star Cooper Koch has cleared up speculation surrounding his nude scene in the hit Netflix show.

Season two of Ryan MurphyNetflix’s true crime anthology series was at number one on the most-watched Netflix charts for about three weeks in a row and also divided opinions down the middle.

One of the many criticisms that some critics expressed about the series was the homoerotic portrayal of the Menéndez brothers, who are currently serving a life sentence for the murder of their parents in the late 1980s.

An example of this would be a scene depicting Cooper as Erik Menéndez in the shower, which the actor was asked about during an interview with Andy Cohen See what’s happening live.

Cooper Koch as Erik Menéndez in MonstersCooper Koch as Erik Menéndez in Monsters

Cooper Koch as Erik Menéndez in Monsters Netflix

Just saying, mine isn’t a prosthetic,” Cooper remarked during a countdown of iconic nude scenes, to which the host responded, “Congratulations, Cooper! You are very blessed, aren’t you?”

“Well hung,” he then replied.

Elsewhere in the interview, Cooper said he had no problems with his full-frontal scene until the water temperature in the shower dropped.

“It’s not scary, I would say it’s just uncomfortable at first,” he admitted. “It’s just cold, especially in the shower.”

Last month, Cooper spoke to Variety about another of the most controversial aspects of Monsters and shared his thoughts on itScenes suggesting that Erik and Lyle Menéndez may have been involved in a sexual relationship at some point.

“You have to put it in the context of the situation and make sure that we are painting a picture based on another person’s perspective,” he emphasized.

“It’s not necessarily the truth of what happened. That’s exactly what Dominick Dunne is [the journalist, portrayed in the show by Nathan Lane] thinks, and I think there are other places in history where it’s sort of designed to give people all these different perspectives…”

“I think the goal of the show is to bring all of these perspectives together and make the audience the judges,” he added. “And at the end of the show, you just make your decision about what you believe.

“And I think it’s a really interesting way to tell the story and tell stories in general.”

Cooper – who visited the Menéndez brothers in prison last month – further made it clear that he personally does not believe this version of events actually took place.

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Victims of Maine’s deadliest shooting begin lawsuit against the Army

Victims of Maine’s deadliest shooting begin lawsuit against the Army

LEWISTON, Maine – Lawyers representing 100 survivors and family members of victims of the deadliest shooting in Maine’s history have begun formal proceedings to sue the Army and an Army hospital for failing to stop the reservist responsible for the tragedy, lawyers announced announced on Tuesday.

The individual claim notices say the Army was aware of the reservist’s deteriorating mental health, which caused him to become paranoid, delusional and express homicidal thoughts, and created a “hit list” of those he would attack wanted.

“It is difficult to imagine a case in which Army personnel would have more warning signs and opportunities to intervene to prevent a service member from committing a mass shooting than was the case in the case of Army reservist Robert Card,” attorneys wrote in their notices will be sent by post on Friday.

The lawsuit notices from four law firms are a necessary step in suing the federal government. The army has six months to decide whether to respond. A lawsuit can then be filed.

Eighteen people died when Card, 40, opened fire on October 25, 2023, at two locations he was visiting – a bowling alley and a cornhole league bar and grill. Another 13 people were injured. Card was found dead two days later from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

An independent commission appointed by the governor of Maine concluded that both civilian law enforcement and the army had numerous opportunities to intervene. Currently, advocates for victims and family and friends who have suffered losses are focused on the army, rather than a private hospital that handles cards or civilian law enforcement.

The Department of Defense, the U.S. Army and Army Keller Hospital “broke their promises, failed to act sensibly, violated their own policies and procedures, and disregarded instructions and orders,” the lawsuit says.

In September 2023, when Card threatened to “shoot up” an armory and his friend warned of “a mass shooting,” the Army failed to provide critical information about two doctors who denied Card access to weapons when they The officials asked local law enforcement to check his health and even downplayed the threat, undermining the credibility of the soldier who issued the warning and refusing to share any information he had, the claims say.

Cynthia Young, whose husband William and 14-year-old son Aaron were killed at the bowling alley, said in a statement that pain and trauma never go away. “As horrific as the shooting was, it is even more tragic that there were many opportunities to prevent it and they were not used,” she added.

The filing says there may have been a time when mass shootings were so rare that they couldn’t be predicted, but “that hasn’t been true in America for decades.”

“Mass shootings like what happened in Lewiston are an epidemic in America. “Therefore, those in positions of responsibility and authority must recognize the warning signs and behaviors that indicate the risk of mass violence, take them seriously and take action to prevent them from occurring,” the claims say.

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GTA 6 new “gameplay leak” roasted by fans

GTA 6 new “gameplay leak” roasted by fans

It’s almost convincing

An alleged “leak” from GTA VI has popped up on TikTok and while you could be fooled – which some have been – it’s clearly fake and fans are making fun of the attempt.

The footage, which randomly appeared on the social media platform, shows some of Vice City’s side streets, including several vehicles and graffiti thrown across the walls.

It’s Halloween GTA Online and it brings millions of players back for a spooky season

If you were to take a quick look at the video you might be convinced that it is the original, but upon closer inspection it is clearly a fake.

Not only were cars modeled after real-life models – something Rockstar Games wouldn’t do, but a parody of the Amazon delivery truck just doesn’t lean close enough to the concept.

Perhaps the most striking detail is the use of Unreal Engine 5 assets.

Not only are they fundamental assets – Rockstar Games makes pretty much everything in-house – but also GTA VI isn’t even done on UE5.

You don’t have to look too far into the TikTok comments to find fans mocking this fool’s attempt.

One user immediately spotted the real-world cars and commented: “It’s not real, they wouldn’t put three Ford Raptors in the same 10 second clip.”

A Twitter user quickly spoke up and explained this fake: “There’s no way this is GTA 6 lmafooo.”

I’m never sure what people get out of creating something like that. Is it about influence? Some random internet points?

The footage was debunked so quickly that the work couldn’t have been worth it, right?

One fan pointed out on Twitter that not even the graffiti was an original work: “An off-the-shelf font was used as graffiti.”

Nothing gets past that GTA VI Fans however, as one noted: “Oh yeah, that’s a fake, looks nothing like the real leaks from before.”

Nice internet person, I’d like to say you’ve convinced us, but I’d be lying.

Featured Image Source: Rockstar Games

Topics: GTA 6, GTA, Grand Theft Auto, GTA Online, GTA 5

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Here comes the Holodeck – the AI ​​breakthrough allows you to play a game from a picture

Here comes the Holodeck – the AI ​​breakthrough allows you to play a game from a picture

If you’ve ever thought to yourself, “This would make a great multiplayer map” (and I can’t have been the only one), then your time has come.

New AI-generated world models allow users to generate playable worlds from image prompts. So you can create a platformer based at your local soft play center or a sci-fi shooter based at your local gym. We even saw Google recreate Doom in real time using AI image generation.