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Friday, December 31, 2021

B.C. reduces COVID-19 self-isolation to five days with no symptoms - Energeticcity.ca

It doesn’t mean that every single person will be through their infectious period within five days, Henry said, but the “vast majority of people” will be.

“If you continue to feel unwell after five days, or you still have a fever, then you must continue to self-isolate until your symptoms resolve,” she said.

People who haven’t been vaccinated are still required to self-isolate for 10 days. Previously, vaccinated people were required to isolate for seven days. 

The decision to reduce the self-isolation requirement comes as cases of the Omicron variant surge across the province, causing a higher number of health-care workers to stay home from work due to illness, Henry said.

The variant appears to have a shorter incubation period, which means people are infectious earlier and that the illness tends to resolve more quickly, she said.

Henry cautioned that people who have recently left self-isolation must be careful not to visit long-term care facilities or attend gatherings for the following five days.

Starting Saturday, visits to long-term care and assisted living facilities will also be limited to essential visitors in response to recent outbreaks. Henry said the restriction will be re-evaluated on Jan. 18, when other COVID-19 rules are set to expire, and it will be in place for the shortest possible period of time.

Henry discouraged New Year’s Eve parties, which are prohibited under public health orders,saying it’s “inevitable that somebody that you are with is incubating or is able to spread this virus and may not even realize it themselves.”

The B.C. government is also aiming to speed up the rollout of booster doses of COVID-19 vaccines after initially prioritizing people at higher risk of severe illness.

People aged 18 to 59 who received their second dose of vaccine at least six months beforehand will soon start receiving invitations to book their third shot, said Dr. Penny Ballem, executive lead of B.C.’s COVID-19 immunization program.

The province has been working with health authorities to build immunization capacity to address a backlog of about 800,000 people under the age of 60 who have already passed the six-month mark, Ballem told the news conference.

“Our first priority in the next few days is to address that group,” she said.

While immunity fades after six months, Ballem said many people infected with Omicron after receiving two doses have experienced a brief, milder illness.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 31, 2021.

The Canadian Press

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Ramblings: Five Points for Huberdeau, Pacioretty Out, Laine Returns (Dec 31) - dobberhockey.com

After a week off, let's see if I remember how to do this. Setting a fantasy lineup in these times of the omicron variant has been more about finding players that fit the following criteria: 1) Their team is playing today, and 2) The player is not injured or on COVID protocol. There. That's it. I guess I can wrap up today's article with that little bit of sage advice, right?

Okay, I need to come up with a little more than that. So let's go.

A good place to start might be that Sunshine State battle between Florida and Tampa Bay. While players run through the revolving door known as COVID protocol, we're witnessing some crazy scores. 8-7 between San Jose and Arizona two nights ago? How about the defending Stanley Cup champions giving up nine goals because both their first- and second-string goalies are on the COVID list?

NHL COVID-19 Tracker: Monitoring outbreaks across the league

Maxime Lagace started for the Lightning for the second consecutive game, allowing six goals to the Panthers in two periods before being pulled. Lagace has allowed at least four goals in each of his two games with Tampa since his callup. Despite playing for one of the league's top teams, he only appears to be a matchup-based start at best. It's possible that Hugo Alnefelt (Dobber Prospects profile) could make his first NHL start against the Rangers tonight (Friday) if Andrei Vasilevskiy isn't ready to return from COVID protocol. Alnefelt took over in the third period of Thursday's game from Lagace, allowing three goals of his own. Just an awful night for Lightning goalies. Vasilevskiy can't come back soon enough.

Victor Hedman was a minus-6 in this game, by far the worst on the Lightning. Even if you don't look highly upon plus/minus, you have to admit that's not a number you'd expect from Hedman. Consider it an anomaly.

The Jonathan HuberdeauAnthony Duclair unit did the most damage for the Panthers. Duclair scored twice and added an assist, while Huberdeau scored a goal and piled up four helpers while finishing with a plus-4. Duclair has scored goals in back-to-back games since the pause. Meanwhile, Huberdeau's 1.23 PTS/GP pace is the best of his career. If Huby can keep up that pace, he will be in for his first 100-point season. He's currently the best player on one of my fantasy teams.  

One of those four assists looked pretty damn impressive.

Let's talk about five-point games for a bit. Huberdeau is quite familiar with them.

Frank Vatrano scored a goal and added an assist, ending a 10-game goalless slide. He had recorded just one assist over that span.

Not all Panthers could bump the slump, though. Patric Hornqvist was the only Panthers forward who failed to record a point, which means that he has been without a point for five consecutive games. What's more concerning is that his icetime has been dropping. Hornqvist was held to just under 13 minutes on Wednesday, and he skated just 11:01 on Thursday. The good news is that he has taken at least three shots in each of those five games, averaging just over five spots over that span. He's still receiving some power-play time, so you can continue to be patient if you are in a deeper format.  

It hasn't been all bad for the Bolts either. Steven Stamkos scored one of the Lightning's goals, which gives him points in 14 of his last 15 games. He has 19 points (6 G, 13 A) over that span.

Brendan Gallagher left Thursday's game with a lower-body injury, which will make the Canadiens forward lines even more unrecognizable if he misses time. Only a diehard Habs fan would recognize some of the names below from Thursday's line combinations.

RYAN POEHLING – RAFAEL HARVEY-PINARD – COLE CAUFIELD

BRENDAN GALLAGHER – NICK SUZUKI – LUKAS VEJDEMO

JAKE EVANS – JESSE YLONEN – ALEX BELZILE

CEDRIC PAQUETTE – JAKE EVANS – JESSE YLONEN

CEDRIC PAQUETTE – BRANDON BADDOCK – MICHAEL PEZZETTA

Early daily fantasy tip: stock up on Panthers for Saturday's matchup against the Habs in South Florida.

With Frederik Andersen just clearing COVID protocol, Antti Raanta was a nice spot start for me on Thursday. Raanta stopped 26 shots in pitching a 4-0 shutout over those same Habs. This was Raanta's first shutout as a Hurricane, and he has posted three consecutive quality starts. Expect Andersen to continue to carry the load, but Raanta could help you earn a W as a short-term add whenever he starts.

Teuvo Teravainen scored two goals while firing six shots. He has scored power-play goals in back-to-back games and has 11 points in nine games this month.

Sebastian Aho, who assisted on both of Turbo's goals, now has six straight multipoint games. That's 14 points over those six games. Aho was playing in his first game since December 11, but it goes without saying that he should be in your lineup every time he plays.

Jaccob Slavin chipped in three assists, giving him points in back-to-back games.

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The Vegas Golden Knights were getting healthy, but now they're getting injured again. Max Pacioretty is expected to be out indefinitely following wrist surgery. That's an entire first line that's not active at the moment. Mark Stone is on IR again, while Jack Eichel has yet to make his Vegas debut. The plan might be a Tampa Bay Lightning-like salary cap maneuver, but the Golden Knights first have to ensure their scoring doesn't run dry to the point that they can't secure a playoff spot. Regardless, they currently sit atop the Pacific Division.

If you try to pay attention to recent line combinations but don't stay up too late, you may want to keep Vinni Lettieri on your watch list. Not only was Lettieri on the Anaheim first line with Troy Terry and Ryan Getzlaf on Wednesday, but he was also on the first-unit power play. Trevor Zegras will likely bump Lettieri from the first-unit power play once he returns from COVID protocol, and Sam Steel may do the same on the top line. Yet COVID protocol is putting a lot of teams in flux, which makes players like the 26-year-old AHL veteran Lettieri cheap short-term adds. He's also available in just about every Yahoo league (0% rostered, which doesn't mean he hasn't been added anywhere… just that the number is closer to 0% than 1%).

Mathew Barzal returned from COVID protocol with a bang, scoring a goal while adding two assists and firing eight shots. If you ignore the break while he was sidelined, Barzal has at least a point in each of his last seven games. For the month of December, that's 12 points in seven games. The Islanders haven't had a whole lot of hot skaters this season, but Barzal has been the exception this month.

After injury and a slow start, Semyon Varlamov is finally finding his game. With 36 saves in the 4-1 win over Buffalo, Varlamov has allowed just one goal in each of his last two games. Those two games constitute his only two wins of the season.

Patrik Laine returned to the Blue Jackets lineup on Thursday, having been out since early November. The sniping winger managed to do what he does best, which is score a goal while firing seven shots. It's a small sample size, but Laine has 11 points in 10 games this season. Perhaps he is primed to be that bounce-back player some of us expected, although he's missed the majority of the season with an oblique injury.

Adam Boqvist also returned to the Columbus lineup, having been out since early December. Boqvist recorded an assist.

Wouldn't you know it… Mark Giordano scored three points in his first game against his former team. Giordano scored a first-period goal, then later added two assists for his first multiple-point game as a member of the Kraken. Gio entered the game without a point in his previous four games and without a goal since November 6 (13 games), so getting picked by Seattle in the expansion draft hasn't really helped the 38-year-old's fantasy stock, which is on the decline. With the Kraken currently sitting at the bottom of the Pacific, it's quite possible they move their captain at the deadline, since he's on the final year of his contract.

In the end, Giordano's old team prevailed 6-4. Johnny Gaudreau and Matthew Tkachuk also each recorded three points. Gaudreau scored two goals while taking five shots, and he was even on the ice in the final minute to help protect the lead. The Darryl Sutter hiring last season was thought to spell the end of Gaudreau in Calgary, but Johnny Hockey is scoring at over a point per game for the first time in three seasons. There's still the matter of trying to sign him before he becomes a free agent this offseason, but it seems like Gaudreau and Sutter can make it work together in Cowtown.

For those of you who play the Tim's Hockey Challenge game, I specifically picked Bo Horvat to score a goal on Thursday. He did everything but score on Wednesday, taking six shots and getting open for numerous scoring chances. He came through on Thursday, scoring the game-tying goal on the power play in the third period. Horvat now has four goals in his last four games and has taken six shots in three of his last five games. He's another player who has benefitted under the new Bruce Boudreau system in Vancouver.

With the assist on the Horvat goal, J.T. Miller now has an eight-game point streak. That's points in all eight games under Boudreau. The Canucks are in a conundrum with Miller, who has been their best player under Boudreau and arguably further back than that. If the Canucks continue to accrue points and climb back into the playoff race, then they need to keep Miller. But if they fall back to earth, then they have to consider trading Miller and his team-friendly ($5.25 million) contract that expires at the end of next season. Imagine a team on a seven-game win streak (now eight games with at least a point) discussing trading their best scorer.

Cal Petersen's last game was on December 6. Even with the COVID-extended holiday break and with Petersen in COVID protocol for part of that time, that was eight games ago. We might have been a year too early on the "Jonathan Quick is ready to give up the net" take. Quick was hardly tested by a weary Canucks team on Thursday, making 17 saves in a 2-1 shootout win. Quick had allowed five goals in his previous two starts. So it seems like Todd McLellan is committed to the veteran, at least for now.

Tomas Hertl scored the overtime winner and added an assist on Thursday, extending his point streak to eight games. Hertl has been red hot with eight goals and 12 points over those eight games.

In his NHL debut, Felix Sandstrom (Dobber Prospects profile) probably deserved better. Sandstrom made 43 saves for the Flyers but could not pick up the win in a game that was 31 seconds away from a shootout. Sandstrom received the start because Carter Hart is currently in COVID protocol and Martin Jones started the previous night. Assuming Hart returns soon, I don't know that we'll see much more of Sandstrom this season.

Sean Couturier has officially been placed on IR. He is currently week-to-week with an upper-body injury.

Happy New Year! Even if your celebration is more subdued, I'll still have a Ramblings for you tomorrow. For more fantasy hockey discussion, follow me on Twitter @Ian_Gooding

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Posthaste: Five market predictions in the wake of the 'hottest year in Canadian real estate history' - Financial Post

Happy New Year (somewhere) !

The last day of 2021 seems a good time to look back on what some call “the hottest year in Canadian real estate history,” and ponder what’s in store for the coming year.

In a new report, online realtor Zoocasa makes five market predictions after an extraordinary year that will be remembered for record-breaking sales and price gains of over 20%.

1) Low housing supply is not a quick fix

Low inventory of homes for sale proved a major driver of prices in 2021. Zoocasa said the Canadian Real Estate Association cites only four times in history when the national total months of inventory on the market dropped below two months, and they were all in 2021.

When there were quieter months in the market this past year it was not because of waning demand but because there were fewer homes for sale.

“Put simply, we are seeing record-breaking low levels of inventory, where there are significantly more buyers in the market than there are properties to buy,” said Zoocasa CEO Lauren Haw.

“Supply will be a critical metric to watch heading into the new year – especially knowing that we may see a hotter January and February than usual, as buyers look to lock in a mortgage rate before next year’s anticipated increases.”

Nor do housing experts expect this to change anytime soon.

“The fact is that the supply issues we faced going into 2020, which became much worse heading into 2021, are even tighter as we move into 2022,” said Shaun Cathcart, CREA’s senior economist.

2) Mortgage rate hikes may not be so bad this time

Interest rate hikes, signalled by the Bank of Canada to come in mid-2022, are on the minds of home buyers and home owners alike.

But how bad will it be?

To find out Zoocasa looked back to the last time Bank of Canada rates rose in 2018. That year there were three hikes and real estate activity did slow, with prices falling 4.9% year over year and sales down 19%.

But housing experts say the decline was mostly brought on that year by the introduction of the stress test, which cut affordability for the average home buyers by 20%, said Zoocasa.

“Although the last time interest rates rose we saw sales activity cool down, it’s important to remember that this change went hand in hand with the implementation of the mortgage stress test, which dramatically impacted the amount that prospective buyers could qualify for,” said Haw. “And, because Canadians have been stress tested to qualify for their mortgages at rates upwards of 5%, we have been prepared as best as possible to weather an increase in rates.”

Under current stress test rules, fixed mortgage rates would have to rise to 3.25% for the amount buyers are qualifying for to change, she said.

3) Home prices will keep going up

The race to beat mortgage rate hikes, continuing COVID restrictions and the low supply of homes on the market are expected to keep driving prices higher in the new year.

CREA predicts national prices will rise 7.6% by the end of the year. Realtors’ forecasts aim higher, with RE/MAX predicting a 9.2 per cent increase and Royal LePage, 10.5%.

Zoocasa said, judging by the 2018 experience, it will be the more affordable homes, like condos and townhouses, that will see the most price growth, as interest rates rise.

In 2018, the prices for condo townhomes and apartments in Toronto rose by 9% and 10% respectively while detached home prices decreased by 4% year over year.

Royal LePage also predicts that in 2022 condo prices will lead growth in Toronto with a 12% rise.

4) Virtual home hunting is here to stay

Even after COVID-19 restrictions eased in the second half of the year and open houses resumed, virtual home hunting has remained popular, said Zoocasa. With access to online tours and able to browse listings on real estate apps, buyers “aren’t necessarily in a rush to go back to the old way of buying houses.”

5) Housing will be an election issue — again

Housing affordability was a big issue in this year’s Federal election, but Ontario voters can expect to hear more promises in provincial and municipal elections slated for 2022.

Voters might want to pay attention because much of the policy that actually affects housing, such as planning and zoning laws, is managed at provincial or municipal levels.

Posthaste would like to wish all our readers a very happy new year. We’ll be back Jan. 5 after the holiday.

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Posthaste: Five market predictions in the wake of the 'hottest year in Canadian real estate history' - Financial Post
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Thursday, December 30, 2021

Province's minimum of five paid sick days starts Jan. 1 - Energeticcity.ca

All workers covered by the Province’s Employment Standards Act, including part-time workers, will benefit from the change. More than one million workers in B.C. don’t have paid sick leave, mostly those in low-wage jobs who are often women or racialized workers, according to the ministry.

“Experiences in other jurisdictions that have mandated paid sick leave have shown cost increases for most companies were less than expected. They also experienced significant benefits, including increased productivity and retention of trained staff, reduced risks of injury, improved morale and increased labour force participation,” said a release.

The ministry says a government consultation period gathering feedback on sick leave options of three, five or 10 days generated 60,000 responses.

With files from the Canadian Press

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Hazel Technologies marks five years with Brooks Tropicals – Produce Blue Book - Produce Blue Book

Hazel Tech and Brooks Tropicals continue collaboration to provide top quality in the tropical category with items such as starfruit

CHICAGO, IL (December 30, 2021) – Hazel Technologies, Inc., a USDA-funded technology company delivering new solutions for fresh produce to extend shelf-life, increase sales, and fight food waste announces five years of quality protection collaboration with Homestead, FL-based Brooks Tropicals BB #:110555, a grower/packer/shipper of over a dozen tropical commodities including starfruit, SlimCado avocados, Caribbean Red papayas, limes, passion fruit, and dragon fruit.

Founded in the early 1900s, Brooks Tropicals started as a father-son duo growing avocados, grapefruit, limes, and mangos. The company continued to expand when the farm started transporting avocados to New York City in 1928. Since their inception, Brooks Tropicals has become one of the largest importers of tropical produce to the East Coast of the United States.

Brooks Tropicals was the first grower to utilize Hazel Tech® products to extend the shelf-life of fresh produce. They wanted to explore Hazel’s options in quality advancements for their extensive tropical fruit portfolio and found that starfruit in particular greatly benefited from the technology.

Brooks Tropicals trialed Hazel’s flagship technology, Hazel 100™ and found that, when incorporating Hazel’s products into their supply chain, eight days of shelf-life were added to their starfruit as well as overall retention of the exterior and interior color of the fruit.

The success of Hazel’s starfruit trial with Brooks Tropical has led to additional academic studies, including the Department of Horticultural Science at the University of Florida who completed extensive research with Hazel products on seven different tropical fruit commodities during the past year.

“Over the last five years, we have seen consistent results with Hazel on our starfruit,” commented Peter Leifermann, Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Brooks Tropicals. “The additional week added to the fruit’s shelf-life has allowed us to ship and sell our starfruit to more consumers across the United States.”

“As the first company to partner with Hazel Tech, Brooks Tropicals was, in essence, one of the first believers in Hazel Technologies and our mission to reduce food waste,” commented Aidan Mouat CEO, Hazel Technologies, “They have continued grow alongside Hazel and their trust in our product speaks volumes on Hazel’s abilities and its reliability when it comes to enhancing the quality of fresh produce.”

About Hazel Technologies, Inc.:
Hazel Technologies, Inc. is a USDA-funded startup company that develops new solutions to extend the quality shelf life of fresh produce and reduce food waste. Founded in 2015, Hazel Tech services over 250 of the world’s largest fresh produce packers, shippers, and retailers. Selected as a Finalist for Fast Company’s 2020 World Changing Ideas and winner of “Best Sustainable Packaging” at the 2020 World Food Innovation Awards, the company’s patent-pending technologies have been tested by top academic research programs.
For more information, visit https://ift.tt/2dFKjsN.

About Brooks Tropical:

Brooks Tropical is a grower/packer/shipper based in Homestead, FL. Founded in the 1900s, the company has grown from a family-run farm in Florida to one of the largest shippers of tropical produce to the East Coast of the United States. A grower of over a dozen commodities, including tropical avocados, starfruit, papayas, limes, and dragon fruit, Brooks Tropicals’ operations have farms throughout Florida, the Caribbean, and Central and South America.
For more information, visit https://ift.tt/3mJDbSt.

For more information contact:
Jaime Kedrowski
559-321-2146
jaime@hazeltechnologiesinc.com

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Canadiens at Hurricanes: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette

Goalie Cayden Primeau entered the COVID-19 protocol, so Sam Montembeault will get the call with Michael McNiven as the backup.

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Here are five things you should know about the Canadiens-Hurricanes game at PNC Arena Thursday (7 p.m., TSN2, RDS, TSN 690 Radio, 98.5 FM):

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The matchup:  This is the second of three meetings between these teams and the Hurricanes have a 1-0 edge after beating the Canadiens 4-1 at the Bell Centre on Oct. 21. The Canadiens are coming off a 5-4 overtime loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning Tuesday. They have collected three of a possible four points in the their last two starts, but remain in the Atlantic Division cellar with a 7-21-4 record. The Hurricanes will be looking for their third consecutive win and they have a 21-7-1 record. That’s good or a .741 winning percentage — the second-best in the NHL behind Tampa Bay’s .742.

The goalies:  Cayden Primeau was scheduled to start for the Canadiens, but the team announced Wednesday that Primeau and Paul Byron are the latest players to enter the COVID-19 protocol. That means Sam Montembeault will get the call with Michael McNiven as the backup. Montembeault is coming off the OT loss in Tampa, where he gave up five goals on 37 shots. He has a 1-4-2 record with a 3.83 goals-against average and an .892 save percentage. Carolina’s Freddy Andersen has some of the best numbers in the NHL, with a 16-5 record and a 1.93 GAA, but he’s in the COVID protocol and Montreal will face Antti Raanta, who has a 4-2-1 record with a 2.37 GAA.

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Big guns are silent:  Some of the Canadiens’ young prospects came up big in Tampa. Rafael Harvey-Pinard scored in his first NHL game and defenceman Corey Schueneman had an assist in his debut. Rookie Lukas Vejdemo scored and defenceman Kale Clague picked up his first NHL goal. Ryan Poehling had an assist a won better than 50 per cent of his faceoffs. But the top line of Jonathan Drouin, Nick Suzuki and Brendan Gallagher failed to produce. Suzuki is the Canadiens’ top scorer, but he has gone five games without a point, while Drouin has one goal and one assist in that span. Gallagher, who was coming back after missing seven games in the COVID protocol, did find the back of the net, but he was robbed after the on-ice official and the war room in Toronto ruled that he was guilty of goaltender interference.

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Protocol changes won’t help Canadiens: The NHL and the NHLPA made changes in the COVID protocol Wednesday, reducing the isolation period following a positive test from 10 days to five. But Canadiens head coach Dominique Ducharme said the changes won’t affect the Canadiens because they are still bound by provincial and federal health mandates. Montreal added Primeau and forward Paul Byron to the COVID protocol Wednesday, bringing the number of Canadiens players on the list to 11.

Hurricanes return to health: Speaking of COVID, Carolina is missing Andersen in goal, but Sebastian Aho, Andrei Svechnikov and Jordan Staal are among the Hurricanes returning from the protocol. Aho is Carolina’s leading scorer with 15 goals and 17 assists in 26 games. Teuvo Teravainen has 23 points, including seven goals, and Svechnikov has nine goals and 21 points. And let’s not forget former Canadien Jesperi Kotkaniemi. He was lured away from Montreal with an offer sheet worth US$6.1 million. That’s a lot more than he’s worth, but the Finn does have seven goals — that’s as many as Canadiens leader Josh Anderson — and he has added six assists. And you have to remember he’s only 21.

phickey@postmedia.com

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  1. Montreal Canadiens' Cayden Primeau takes a shot off his shoulder during second period at the Bell Centre on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021.

    Habs' Paul Byron, Cayden Primeau added to the NHL's COVID-19 list

  2. Lightning goalie Maxime Lagace makes a save behind Canadiens' Brendan Gallagher, in his usual spot in front of the net Tuesday night in Tampa.

    In the Habs' Room: Disallowed Gallagher goal frustrates coach Ducharme

  3. United States' Red Savage (20) and Finland's Juuso MĆ enpĆ Ć  (19) battle for the puck during second period IIHF World Junior Hockey Championship exhibition action in Edmonton on Thursday, December 23, 2021.

    IIHF cancels world junior tournament following trio of forfeitures

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    ‘The Amazing Race’ Finally Returns After Its COVID Hiatus: Watch the First Five Minutes of New Episode (EXCLUSIVE) - Variety

    The Amazing Race” returns for its 33rd edition on Wednesday, January 5, at 8 p.m. ET, kicking off with a disclaimer from host Phil Keoghan about this most unusual season. Variety has an exclusive first look at the opening five minutes of the two-hour premiere episode, (watch above, or scroll down to see more) set to air next week on CBS.

    “It’s so good to be back,” Keoghan says at the start of the episode. “We know how much you have missed ‘The Amazing Race,’ and believe me, we have missed making it for you. Tonight’s episode was filmed before the outbreak of COVID-19, which prompted us to suspend shooting at the end of the third leg. I am excited to tell you that after a long break, we did finish shooting this season and once again, the world is waiting for you.”

    The show then opens in the pre-pandemic times, with 11 teams at their homes across the country, saying goodbye to their families and scrambling out the door as Keoghan kicks off the race via a video message on their phones. From their residences, the teams are tasked with flying to London and finding the next clue in Trafalgar Square. There, contestants they must find “The Queen” and “Boris Johnson” having a nosh. They later travel to Scotland, where a nearly 20-month pitstop began.

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    Phil Keoghan, “The Amazing Race” CBS

    This season of “The Amazing Race” began production in February 2020, but was forced to pause due to COVID-19 concerns. With no real way to shoot “Amazing Race” in a bubble, the producers had to wait more than a year to call back the crew and contestants and resume production — what the show is now dubbing “the longest pitstop in ‘Amazing Race’ history.” Finally this fall, executive producers Bertram van Munster and Elise Doganieri and their team had conceived a new way to return to the race; read Variety‘s full report on how “The Amazing Race” finally resumed production here.

    Among the answers viewers will see when “The Amazing Race” returns next week on CBS: A chartered 757 jet, complete with “The Amazing Race” logo on the side, was brought in to shuttle contestants and crew from place to place without having to enter crowded airports. And van Munster drew up an abbreviated course that took the show through Mediterranean countries where infection rates were low. Once on the ground, contestants didn’t use public transportation, and only interacted with locals who had been tested and vaccinated.

    Additionally, when the race resumed, not all contestants could make their way back. Two pairs fell out, but seven teams managed to return.

    Lazy loaded image

    Pictured: Top Row, L-R: Connie and Sam Greiner, Anthony Sadler and Spencer Stone, Arun and Natalia Kumar, Taylor and Isaiah Green-Jones; Middle Row, L-R: Michael Norwood and Moe Badger, Lulu and Lala Gonzalez, Caro Viehweg and Ray Gantt, Raquel Moore and Cayla Platt, Ryan Ferguson and Dusty Harris; Bottom Row, L-R: Akbar and Sheri Cook, Kim and Penn Holderness CBS

    Here is a round-up of this season’s contestants:

    Akbar Cook Sr. (45) and Sheridan Cook (44)
    Married educators from Martinsville, N.J.

    Anthony Sadler (29) and Spencer Stone (29)
    Childhood friends from Sacramento, Calif.

    Arun Kumar (56) and Natalie Kumar (28)
    Father and daughter from Detroit, Mich.

    Caro Viehweg (23) and Ray Gantt (25)
    Dating from Los Angeles and Toms River, N.J., respectively.

    Connie (37) and Sam (39) Greiner
    Married couple from Charlotte, N.C.

    Kim (45) and Penn (47) Holderness
    Internet personalities from Raleigh, N.C.

    Marianela “Lulu” (37) and Marissa “Lala” (37) Gonzalez
    Twins and radio hosts from North Bergen, N.J.

    Michael Norwood (36) and Armonde “Moe” Badger (42)
    Singing police officers from Buffalo, N.Y.

    Raquel Moore (31) and Cayla Platt (30)
    Flight attendants from Chicago, Ill. and Gulf Breeze, Fla., respectively.

    Ryan Ferguson (37) and Dusty Harris (38)
    Best friends from Columbia, Mo.

    Taylor Green-Jones (38) and Isaiah Green-Jones (31)
    YouTube personalities from Portland, Ore.

    Here’s the five-minute open to the Season 33 premiere:

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    Wednesday, December 29, 2021

    Five points for Peterborough Petes' Mason McTavish in first two games with Canada - ThePeterboroughExaminer.com

    Peterborough Petes centre Mason McTavish had three goals and two assists for Team Canada in the first two games of the world junior championship heading into Canada’s third pool game against Germany on Wednesday night.

    That left him tied for second in scoring in the tournament with teammates Connor Bedard and Owen Power at five points apiece. Cole Perfetti, of Whitby, was leading with six points after two games.

    McTavish scored twice and had an assist in Canada’s 11-2 romp over Austria on Tuesday night.

    He also had a goal and an assist in a 6-3 opening win over Czechia on Sunday night.

    McTavish also made a statement with two goals and an assist in a 6-4 exhibition win over Russia on Thursday night.

    Canada concludes the preliminary round on New Year’s Eve against the Finns, provided the men’s under-20 tournament isn’t further derailed by the COVID-19 virus.

    The Canada-Austria matchup was the only game played Tuesday. Two American players testing positive had the U.S. forfeiting a Pool B game to Switzerland with the entire team in mandatory quarantine.

    The quarter-finals are scheduled for Sunday followed by the Jan. 4 semifinals and Jan. 5 medal games in Edmonton.

    McTavish, who was born in Switzerland and grew up in Carp, Ont., started the season with the NHL’s Anaheim Ducks, who picked him third overall in the first round of the NHL draft in July.

    After playing nine games as a winger, the Ducks assigned McTavish to the Petes in late November so that he can concentrate on playing in his natural centre position. He picked up a hat trick in his return debut with the Petes.

    He was then named to Canada’s world junior roster earlier this month.

    Bowmanville’s Ryan O’Rourke of the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds and Courtice’s Jack Thompson of the Sudbury Wolves also playing for Canada on defence.

    — with files from The Canadian Press

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    Five points for Peterborough Petes' Mason McTavish in first two games with Canada - ThePeterboroughExaminer.com
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    Tuesday, December 28, 2021

    Canadiens at Lightning: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette

    Lightning have best record in NHL (20-6-4), while Habs rank 31st in overall standings (7-21-3), three points ahead of last-place Arizona.

    Article content

    Here are five things you should know about Tuesday’s game between the Canadiens (7-21-3) and the Lightning (20-6-4) at Amalie Arena in Tampa (7 p.m., TSN2, RDS, TSN 690 Radio, 98.5 FM).

    Article content

    Stanley Cup rematch: This will be the second game this season between the Stanley Cup finalists from last season after the Lightning beat the Canadiens 3-2 on Dec. 7 at the Bell Centre. Former Canadien Corey Perry scored in that game and has 6-6-12 totals in 30 games this season with Tampa. The Lightning have the best record in the NHL, while the Canadiens rank 31st in the overall standings, three points ahead of the last-place Arizona Coyotes (6-21-2), who hold two games in hand. The Canadiens, who beat the Philadelphia Flyers 3-2 in a shootout in their last game on Dec. 16, will be looking to win two games in a row for the first time this season.

    Stamkos leads Lightning: Captain Steven Stamkos leads the Lightning in scoring with 14-21-35 totals and ranks sixth in the NHL scoring race. The Lightning’s Victor Hedman ranks first among NHL defencemen in scoring with 7-24-31 totals. Montreal native Alex Killorn ranks third on the Lightning in scoring with 9-16-25 totals. Nick Suzuki leads the Canadiens with 6-12-18 totals, which has him tied for 123rd in NHL scoring. Chris Wideman leads Canadiens defencemen with 2-7-9 totals, which has him tied for 83rd among NHL defencemen.

    Article content

    Back on Point: Lightning forward Brayden Point will return to the lineup against the Canadiens after missing 14 games with an upper-body injury. “Getting close, feeling pretty good,” Point said Monday. “I’m still a little rusty, obviously, but I think everyone is coming off that Christmas break. I’m excited to be taking full reps in practice and I’m really looking forward to getting back playing.” Point had 7-6-13 totals in 16 games before being injured. The Lightning had an 11-2-1 record without him. “When the team is winning it makes it easier,” Point said. The Lightning are still missing forward Nikita Kucherov, who had surgery on Oct. 26 for a lower-body injury.

    Goalie problems: Goalie Jake Allen was one of five players the Canadiens placed on the NHL’s COVID-19 protocol list Monday, along with defencemen Ben Chiarot, Joel Edmundson, Jeff Petry and Chris Wideman. Those five players join forwards Laurent Dauphin, Mike Hoffman, Artturi Lehkonen and Tyler Toffoli, who were already on the list. The Canadiens called up goalie Cayden Primeau from the AHL’s Laval Rocket to take Allen’s spot on the roster and also called up goalie Michael McNiven, who was placed on the taxi squad. Samuel Montembeault will start in goal against the Lightning. Both Lightning goalies — Andrei Vasilevskiy and Brian Elliott — are on the COVID-19 protocol list, along with forwards Anthony Cirelli and Pierre-Edouard Bellemare, and defencemen Mikhail Sergachev and Andrej Sustr. Maxime Lagace, who has been playing for the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch, will start in goal against the Canadiens. Lagace has a 3-3-0 record with a 3.86 goals-against average and a .861 save percentage in the AHL.

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    Canadiens at Lightning: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette
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    How Les Emmerson and the Five Man Electrical Band changed my mother's life - CBC.ca

    This First Person article is the experience of Heather Morrison, a theatre artist, CBC producer and mom in Saskatoon. For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please see the FAQ.

    This month the world learned the sad news that Canadian musician Les Emmerson, composer of anti-establishment anthem Signs, had died.

    My mom, Linda Holmes, doesn't remember how she met Les. She says it was probably after one of his concerts, back when he was still performing with The Staccatos. 

    This was the mid-1960s and my then-16-year-old mom wouldn't often hear rock music on local Ottawa stations. Instead, she would lie awake at night with a transistor radio glued to her ear, trying to pick up the music she loved so much on American radio.

    Linda Holmes, right, met legendary Ottawa musician Les Emmerson, left, in the 1960s. (Submitted by Heather Morrison)

    She decided to create what she called the Canadian Staccatos Promoters Club, an informal group whose only job was to make sure everyone knew how great The Staccatos' music was. 

    When Les and the group went to Los Angeles for the first time to record, my mom arranged a telegram wishing them good luck. She says she got nearly 500 people — including the mayor of Ottawa at the time, Don Reid — to pay a nickel to sign it — although I've never seen a copy of this amazing telegram.

    The Staccato plays at Laurentian High School in Ottawa, which closed in 2005. (Five Man Electrical Band/Facebook)

    She says she was trying to make sure the recording studio knew Canada was behind them. 

    My mom followed Emmerson as a friend and as a fan as The Staccatos eventually became the Five Man Electrical Band and its single Signs sold more than 1.5 million copies.

    On July 1, 1967 for the Centennial celebration of Canada, Les and his band performed for Queen Elizabeth II at Ottawa's Lansdowne Park. The Queen is pictured here earlier in the day cutting a 10-metre-tall cake during Centennial celebrations on Parliament Hill. (Library and Archives Canada/C-024559)

    Emmerson's music impacted the music world and beyond, celebrated by long-haired freaky people everywhere. 

    He also changed my mother's life — thanks to his own mother.

    Heather Morrison, right, called Les' mom 'Grandma Olive' because of the role she played in her mom's life. (Submitted by Heather Morrison)

    In 1965, while waiting at a bus stop on Baseline Road in Ottawa, my mom spotted Les' mom, Olive, who she recognized from his concerts.

    My mom called out, "Are you Mrs. Emmerson?" It was the beginning of a friendship that would see my mom through some of her darkest times.

    Heather Morrison, left, says she regrets not thanking Les Emmerson for taking care of her mom Linda Holmes, right, before Emmerson died. (Submitted by Heather Morrison)

    Seven months later, my mom's mom, Anne Elizabeth Holmes, died by suicide.

    Suicide was still very stigmatized in the '60s. Instead of being surrounded by the support she needed, most people in her life did not even acknowledge my mother's loss. 

    My teenage mom and her sister were moved from their family home to a small apartment where they were mostly on their own. She says it was a very isolating time.

    Thankfully, my mom wasn't alone. Olive heard what happened and started checking in.

    When my mom felt lonely after school — as she often did — she would phone Olive. Sometimes, when she was having a really bad day, she would go over for supper.

    The connection lasted for decades. Through long phone conversations, letter writing, and visits, Olive filled an important gap in my mom's life. 

    My sisters and I came to know her as "Grandma Olive." She was always offering a kind word announcing, "God love ya," or trying to shove $20 in your car window as you drove away.

    'Grandma Olive', left, with the first of Linda Holmes' nine grandchildren. (Submitted by Heather Morrison)

    After Olive's death in 2015, my mom remained close to Les' family, particularly his sister Darlene, who is as sweet and generous as her mom. She's always ready to give anyone a free ice cream from the Dairy Queen she owns.

    I feel sad when I think back to what happened to my mom when she was just 16, but I also feel grateful for the Emmersons.

    I think of Olive's love like the American radio waves reaching my mom in the dead of night. Even when she was the most alone, she was never alone.

    After he died, my mom says she regrets not telling Les he was part of her generation's great music. 

    I regret not thanking him for his family's care for my mom.

    Les didn't just give long-haired freaky people a place to belong. He gave my mom the same.

    Heather Morrison, middle, pictured here with her son Judah, right, and her mother Linda Holmes, left, says the Emmersons helped her family through some of the darkest hours. (Submitted by Heather Morrison)

    Do you have a compelling personal story that can bring understanding or help others? We want to hear from you. Email us with your story.

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    How Les Emmerson and the Five Man Electrical Band changed my mother's life - CBC.ca
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    Monday, December 27, 2021

    Five headlines for Monday morning - moosejawtoday.com

    Here are 5 stories we are highlighting this morning.

    1. Desmond Tutu, South Africa's moral conscience, dies at 90

    2. Another COVID Christmas brings anxiety, but also optimism

    3. Why Canada gets less for more when it comes to building transit

    4. Flood disaster takes bite out of B.C. economy, sends infrastructure wake-up call

    5. Love, Garland score 22 as Cavs rout depleted Raptors 144-99

    For all the latest national and international news, as well as sports, keep visiting MooseJawToday.com and scroll down our page for the headlines.

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    Sunday, December 26, 2021

    Five headlines for Sunday morning - moosejawtoday.com

    Here are 5 stories we are highlighting this morning.

    1. Ontario reports more than 10,000 daily cases of COVID-19 for the first time

    2. Dreams of white Christmas come true in Vancouver, while cold grips Prairies

    3. Ghislaine Maxwell turns 60 behind bars as verdict looms

    4. Influential Bluegrass musician J.D. Crowe has died

    5. Toronto Raptors add three more players to health and safety protocol

    For all the latest national and international news, as well as sports, keep visiting MooseJawToday.com and scroll down our page for the headlines.

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    After five seasons, 'Insecure' leaves behind a long-lasting legacy - CNN

    (CNN)For the last five years, many Sunday scaries have been staved off by one thing: "Insecure."

    The hit HBO show, chronicling the lives of Issa Dee, played by star and creator Issa Rae, and her friends has become something of a television phenomenon. For hours on Sunday evening, as the show runs, Twitter is filled with hot takes and reactions to plotlines, jokes and outfits. The next day, websites buzz with recaps -- everyone from podcasters to your favorite group chat picks apart the episode's events, and even Michelle Obama keeps up with the shenanigans. (HBO and CNN are both part of WarnerMedia.)
    And the fanbase is notoriously dedicated. Actor Jay Ellis, who plays Lawrence, Issa's polarizing on-again off-again love interest, told Essence in 2018 that fans have cursed him out, chased him down and physically punched him over the show's events.
    In the saturated world of television and streaming, "Insecure" has cut through the noise, transcending to levels of cultural sensationalism. And on Sunday -- after a five-season run -- the show will come to an end.

    What made 'Insecure' so special

    At its core, "Insecure" is about a group of Black millennials trying to figure life out -- their love lives, their friendships, their careers, things to which any young adult can relate. The beauty of the show is, in part, its mundanity. These are regular people, dealing with regular things.
    "We feel like we're watching our friends," said writer Luvvie Ajayi Jones, who has written recaps of the show since its start in 2016.
    Of course, "Insecure" is not the first of its kind. "Julia," a 1968 NBC sitcom, is notable for being the first show to center a Black woman in a well-rounded role and, around that same time, shows like "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" focused on the life of a single woman trying to work on her career. Though not a sitcom, "Insecure" -- in its centering of a Black women friend group -- is part of those lineages, said Naeemah Clark, professor of cinema and television arts at Elon University.
    The cast of "Insecure" in the first episode of Season 5.
    But what made "Insecure" so interesting, Clark said, is that it shows the deeper, more holistic connections between Black women. Rae and the team behind the show don't shy away from showing how Molly (played by Yvonne Orji) felt used in her White law firm, or how Issa felt tokenized and disillusioned at work.
    "There's this understanding of knowledge and support that you don't get from White friends necessarily. No matter how 'woke' the White friends are, it is the other Black women and women of color that understand that navigation," Clark explained. "And I think 'Insecure' did that really well. It relied on the same structure and tropes from shows of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, but there is this element of today's world, where the Black woman stands culturally."
    These moments are speckled throughout the show's five seasons. When Lawrence gets pulled over by a police officer. When Issa's neighborhood becomes increasingly gentrified. When Molly discovers her White male coworkers are making more than her.
    "Issa said in the writers' room at one point: 'When you're white, racism is a period. Like, 'This is wrong, this needs to stop, period.' But when you're Black, it's a comma,'" Prentice Penny, showrunner of "Insecure," told the New York Times at the start of the fifth season. "It's like, this racist thing happened to me, but I still have to go pay bills, still have to drive and go home and see my kids. Yes, this thing happened, but how are you going to deal with it?"
    The dealing with it is what "Insecure" showed so well.
    "With 'Insecure,' there's something about the everyday-ness and the moments of mundanity and the parts of people's lives that don't necessarily spark a sense of spectacle, that can be relatable to audiences," said Francesca Sobande, lecturer in digital media at Cardiff University.
    Shows like "Living Single" in the 1990s and "Girlfriends" in the early 2000s also played in that space -- depicting the lives of a group of Black friends. With "Insecure," though, its platform on HBO offered the opportunity for a different, more nuanced, dive, Clark said.
    "Living Single," starring Erika Alexander, Queen Latifah, Kim Fields and Kim Coles aired from 1993 to 1998.
    "Issa Rae is not afraid to call a thing a thing, and I think that's what makes the show watchable," she explained. "A lot of it is looking at self, figuring out, 'Who am I, what mistakes did I make?' Issa is not a perfect character."
    "Insecure" displays that imperfection honestly. In one episode during Season 2, Issa and a colleague attend a predominately Hispanic school to help tutor the kids, but soon realize the Black principal of the school is racist against the Hispanic students and only highlights their services to the other Black kids. At first, Issa brushes off her colleague's worries that they are participating in that discrimination.
    "Sometimes there is a bias in the African American community, too, and she's shining a light on that (in that episode)," Clark said. "And you very rarely see that."
    Other episodes showed the effects of undiagnosed bipolar disorder on relationships, something Clark said is hardly ever shown on TV, especially with Black characters. It's this mapping of the previously uncharted that sets "Insecure" apart from its predecessors.
    But it's also, frankly, the quality of the show: the lighting, the writing, the outfits, the soundtrack (Solange Knowles served as a music consultant). All of it made "Insecure" a joy. You wanted to get lost in this South LA world, with its shades of blue and gold set to hip-hop beats. Who wouldn't?

    The digital phenomenon of 'Insecure'

    You can't talk about the art of "Insecure" without also talking about the significance of Black digital culture. Every Sunday, cast members would tweet and react to the episode right along with the fans -- a culture of live-tweeting across living rooms around the world that previously became prominent with "Scandal," another Black woman-led show. For Black people on Twitter, or just online in general, "Insecure" became an event that was impossible to miss. Regardless of whether someone watched the show or not, many engaged with it, even if only through using Natasha Rothwell's "growth" GIF.
    Before "Insecure," Rae first rose to fame in 2011 for her web series "The Mis-Adventures of Awkward Black Girl," in which she starred. It was that show that gave her the footing to create "Insecure." That's significant, Sobande said.
    She broke it down like this: It is rare for shows starring a dark-skinned Black woman, like Rae, to be created in the first place. On top of that, mainstream media tends to overlook web series and these nontraditional avenues of art and content creation.
    All of "Insecure" -- from its roots in Rae's first web series to its current social media prowess -- speaks to the elevation and engagement of Black digital culture, Sobande said. And that relationship with Black digital culture is a key part of the show's legacy.
    Rae, who plays Issa Dee in the show, in season 5.
    "It's like the show is in conversation with the audience," Sobande said.
    Sometimes, that conversation is quite literal: Aside from the live-tweeting, costume designer Shiona Turini posts where certain outfits came from after each airing.
    And for those who have been watching Rae since her "Mis-Adventures" web series, there's also a sense of nostalgia, in seeing the ways that both Rae and the media landscape has changed since then. For many of the cast members, their characters on "Insecure" were one of their first major television roles, and members of the team have gone on to be involved in other ways as well. Stars Rothwell and Ellis, for example, made their directorial debuts on the show, as did cinematographer Ava Berkofsky.
    "For me, it's been incredible to witness the journey of the show and also its creators," Sobande said. "It's been as exciting to watch that pan out, as it's been to engage with the show itself."

    What 'Insecure' leaves behind

    Then there's the timing of the show, and not just because it aired at a point where social media use is at an all-time high. (Without social media, "Insecure" could have been a very different show, noted Sobande.)
    The very first episode of the show aired in October 2016 -- at the height of the presidential election in the US. About a month later, in the middle of its first season, President Donald Trump would be elected.
    "It was a difficult time for people of color, who felt 'Oh my gosh, we are in these next four years, there is an administration who doesn't care about us. Even worse, actually creates problems for us,'" Clark said.
    A television show doesn't change policies or politics , but "Insecure" always framed the Black experience as a valuable one, Clark said. And getting lost in the fluffier plotlines -- who should date who, etc -- was a nice distraction. That reprieve is part of the show's legacy, too.
    "It was like a little hug on Sunday," she said.
    In her recap of Season 1, Ajayi Jones predicted that the success of "Insecure" would open doors for others down the lane. Looking back now, she says she was right. Because of its success, other shows are filming Black people in more flattering ways than ever, she said, and it debunked the idea that people don't watch Black stories.
    "I think 'Insecure' peer-pressured other people to step up their game," Ajayi Jones said. "I don't think we'll know the true depth of 'Insecure''s impact for a while."
    Still, some of that impact is already perceivable. Ajayi Jones pointed to Amazon Prime's "Harlem," as one example -- a show that exhibits a similar premise to "Insecure," while being based in New York. Though not a comedy, Clark used Michaela Coel's "I May Destroy You" as another example of a Black woman portraying an authentic story, just as "Insecure" did.
    Michaela Coel in 'I May Destroy You' also portrays an authentic Black woman-led story, like "Insecure" did, Clark said.
    Rae's impact runs deeper, though. Her journey has shown everyone, but especially young women of color, that they can create art while still being true to themselves, Clark said.
    "(Rae) knew who she was. And she knew what she was going to be able to do, and she stuck with it," Clark said. "I think in that way, it has changed the playing field, it has shown content creators that there isn't one way to be."
    Still, the success of a show like "Insecure" doesn't necessarily mean that the media landscape is suddenly democratized, Sobande said. Previous issues that may have stonewalled a show like "Insecure" still exist. Yet the work of Rae and everyone behind "Insecure" can still serve as inspiration, she said.
    From a web series, all the way to an Emmy-nominated hit on HBO -- this is how far Rae and the "Insecure" team have come. When it ends on December 26, it will be a sad day for many fans -- the nostalgia many have and will have for the show is strong, Sobande said.
    The promise of "Insecure" means there's more coming: from Rae, who has signed an estimated $40 million deal with WarnerMedia, and from younger creators following her wave. "Insecure" might be over, but its legacy -- its ripples -- live on.

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    After five seasons, 'Insecure' leaves behind a long-lasting legacy - CNN
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    Take Five: The last surviving dove - Financial Post

    Breadcrumb Trail Links PMN Technology PMN Business Author of the article: Article content Of all the central banks which unt...