Jumat, 19 April 2019

Mick Jagger makes stealthy post-op appearance at girlfriend's Rolling Stones-themed ballet - USA TODAY

NEW YORK – Talk about your “Moves Like Jagger.” The recovering rocker made a stealth appearance at the ballet, slipping backstage to support his partner, Melanie Hamrick, as she presented her new dance based on Rolling Stones songs.

It was Hamrick’s first work as choreographer, with a score arranged by Jagger of three Stones classics: “Sympathy for the Devil,” “She’s a Rainbow,” and “Paint it Black.” Hamrick created the short ballet for the 20th anniversary of Youth America Grand Prix, the world’s largest ballet scholarship competition, in which she performed as a teenager.

Jagger didn’t appear onstage or in the audience. But he did greet the crowd at New York’s Lincoln Center on Thursday night via a backstage mic.

“Hi everybody, this is Mick Jagger here,” he said, congratulating YAGP on its anniversary and adding: “I hope you are going to enjoy this wonderful ballet – and the music of course.”

The 75-year-old rocker recently underwent medical treatment, reportedly for a heart valve issue, forcing postponement of the Stones’ No Filter tour.

'On the mend': Mick Jagger recovering after undergoing reported heart valve replacement surgery

Up and about: Mick Jagger shares first photo since reported heart surgery

Hamrick said later in an interview that Jagger was “doing great. Thank goodness!”

“It was cute,” she said of his visit backstage. “He wanted to watch the piece. It was really special that he was there and able to see it. It feels good (for the dancers) when the choreographer and the person who wrote the music are watching you. It gave everyone an extra special feeling.”

Hamrick, who dances with American Ballet Theater but did not perform herself in the piece, said it had been nerve-wracking presenting her first choreographic effort.

It was Jagger, she said, who encouraged her to take the plunge when the idea came up, from YAGP founder Larissa Saveliev, for Hamrick to do something with Stones music.

“Mick was, ‘Who better than you? You’re a professional ballerina, you come to my concerts,’” she said. “It went from there.”

Hamrick, 31, noted that the scholarship program was responsible for launching her career; though she didn’t win, her performance there led to a contract to perform at ABT’s Studio Company in 2003. She joined the main company in 2004.

It was Hamrick who chose the songs for the ballet, called “Porte Rouge,” or “Red Door” (as in, “I see a red door….”). Jagger arranged the songs to fit.

“We worked together and he said, ‘Just trust your gut … go with what your instincts are, and I’ll help you figure out how to make the cuts.’”

“I picked the songs I felt I connected with the most,” she said, “and I was like, ‘Can you make these work?’ And he took it away. He was very good, he was, ‘You do YOU.’”

The dancers included six from ABT and one from New York City Ballet. But the obvious Jagger “character” appeared to be the Argentine ABT star Herman Cornejo, with even his flowing mop of hair resembling the Stones frontman.

“I feel like they have the same energy,” Hamrick noted.

Another standout dancer in the piece, Calvin Royal III, said he’d particularly enjoyed the experience of “bringing rock ‘n’ roll to ballet.”

“I think it was just such a beautiful relationship that needed to be merged,” said Royal, a soloist with ABT. “It’s so athletic and dynamic, and it was just fun to perform.”

Royal, 30, admitted he hadn’t had much previous experience with Stones music.

“To be honest with you, I hadn’t heard a lot of Rolling Stones music until Melanie approached me about this project, and I went on Spotify and just started listening to a lot of their music,” he said.

He did, though, get to meet Jagger. “It was great to have him on board to support us,” Royal said.

Hamrick noted she’d had to strike a fine line with channeling the essence of the Stones, without imitating those moves like Jagger.

“I studied some videos of his, because I didn’t want to imitate, but I wanted you to feel the essence, and I didn’t want him to tell me what to do, because I wanted it to be original,” she said.

Is there a future for the piece? Hamrick said she’s planning for it to reappear as a longer piece, with more Stones songs. “Hopefully everyone will like it,” she said with a smile.

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/people/2019/04/19/mick-jagger-makes-first-post-op-appearance-rolling-stones-ballet/3519477002/

2019-04-19 15:38:00Z
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Under Chinese censorship, Game of Thrones is a mundane medieval documentary - The Verge

Spoilers ahead for Game of Thrones, season 8, episode 1, “Winterfell.”

Strip Game of Thrones of the sex, violence, and supernatural horror, and what’s left? Chinese fans of the show are finding out, as they’re watching a version of the series that’s been censored by the government. Many say the censored version of Game of Thrones they have ready access to is more like a mundane “medieval documentary” with disjointed plot points.

HBO’s Chinese partner, Tencent, has the rights to distribute Game of Thrones in China, but to respect local laws, it cut nearly six minutes of the season 8 premiere, “Winterfell.” Most of what was cut was pretty standard, including the nudity when Bronn spends time with three women before Qyburn summons him and the violence when Theon rescues his sister Yara.

But one particularly crucial scene was cut from the premiere: when Ned Umber’s body is found pinned to a creepy sigil on the wall that the Night King has left to send a message. There are two potential reasons why the scene was censored: China disproves of undead creatures being shown on-screen, as they’re considered superstitious, and the dismembered body parts used to make the spiral could be considered too violent and gruesome.

Chinese viewers who watched the censored version of the season 8 premiere became confused when they participated in post-episode discussions. Many fans were angry about the censorship because it kept important plot points hidden from them, including the fall of the Last Hearth, the death of Ned Umber, and the Night King’s message. But others simply suggested that pirating the show was a better solution than watching a bowdlerized version. One user wrote a comment half in English and half in Chinese on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like social media platform: “I want my money back, #TencentVideo. I want a refund, I don’t want the censored version of #GameofThrones #EighthSeason.”

Another user noted: “When other people discussed the episode and said a little lord was burned to death, I really had no idea what they were talking about. I’m speechless. In order to censor blood and violence, the entire story has been affected.”

He continued on his rant in a post that was filled with crying emoji and horse emoji. (“Horse” is a homonym for an extremely common Chinese curse word.) “Censoring to the point where the plot is cut down; what’s the point? I was thinking that in the whole episode, I didn’t see a single ghost, and found it so weird. All along it was Tencent that deleted the scene, completely ruining it. So how do I watch the uncensored version?”

Several users responded to his post, looking for the same thing. One user linked to a pirated file, which was subsequently taken down. The user noted that she’d run into a technical issue and couldn’t file-share, but suggested that the first user look around on Weibo. “Everyone is eagerly sharing files, just look around,” she wrote, a day after the season premiere. According to one analytics firm, the season premiere has already been pirated more than 55 million times.

Game of Thrones has long been censored in China. In 2014, one internet user remarked that in the first three seasons, “they’ve cut about a quarter of all the fight scenes, then a quarter of the nude scenes. I guess that’s okay if all you want to watch is a medieval European castle documentary.” Another person said they estimated about 20 minutes were missing from the pilot episode, and the remainder didn’t make much sense. Without all the beheadings, poisonings, and assassinations, Game of Thrones is missing a considerable percentage of its pivotal plot moments.

As Game of Thrones ramps up the action in its final season, viewers are expecting a conclusion to the battles that have been teased in previous seasons, including a final face-off between the two living dragons and the zombie dragon, Cersei Lannister’s army facing off with Daenerys Targaryen’s army, and the Army of the Dead making its bloody descent into the heart of Westeros. But as the bloodshed increases, presumably, so will the censorship in China.

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/19/18411054/game-of-thrones-got-season-8-hbo-final-chinese-censorship-scenes-cut-ned-umber-pirating

2019-04-19 15:23:12Z
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I got a last-minute ticket to Coachella, the festival as famous for its flashy outfits and Instagram-heavy attractions as its music. Here's what it's really like to attend. - Business Insider

Coachella_2019 (49 of 83)It was my first — and probably last — time at Coachella.Harrison Jacobs/Business Insider

  • The Coachella Music & Arts Festival takes place over two weekends in April at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California.
  • I decided to go to Coachella for the first time this year.
  • While I loved the musical performances and felt that the event was well-organized, I probably won't be attending again as it is too much hassle to arrange all the logistics — and too much money to attend the festival.
  • Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories or check out more of our coverage on this year's edition of Coachella.

I'll be honest: I never really thought I'd go to the Coachella Music & Arts Festival.

Living in New York, I never thought it made much sense to ship out to Indio, California, for one of Coachella's two weekends of music and fun.

That's without getting into what Coachella is supposedly about, which, according to varying reports, is both a glittering entertainment-industry party and a bunch of Orange County teenagers skipping school to drink. The weekend has become such an event for social media influencers, models, and celebrities that some have dubbed it the "influencer Olympics."

When Business Insider asked me to cover the festival, I was determined to go in with as little preconceived notions as possible. And, with this year's Coachella lineup featuring Childish Gambino, Anderson .Paak, Janelle Monae, and Tame Impala, some of my favorite artists, it was hard to not get amped up.

By the end of the weekend, I had seen some incredible performances, discovered amazing new artists, found my way into an ultra-exclusive afterparty, danced the night away at a hidden stage, and was convinced I probably wouldn't ever come back.

Here's what it was like:

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https://www.businessinsider.com/coachella-2019-photos-what-its-like-to-go-2019-4

2019-04-19 14:48:21Z
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Wendy Williams: What's at Stake in the Divorce? - The Cheat Sheet

Divorce is never easy. Throw in children, intermingled business relationships, and high personal net worth, and it gets exponentially harder. Add on infidelity and there is the potential for a very messy divorce.

Williams is focused on moving forward and creating the best life possible for her and her son, but her pending divorce puts a lot at stake.

Williams and Hunter did not have a prenup

At the time of their marriage in 1997, Williams was just eight years into her radio hosting position. She was still over a decade away from The Wendy Williams Show. Despite this,  Williams revealed to VladTV in 2013 that at the time she discovered that Hunter was cheating on her the first time (when her son was just one month old) she had already created great personal wealth for herself.

She had money and vacation homes, enough to be able to support herself.

When asked by Howard Stern in 2013 whether she had a prenup, Williams told him no. She even acknowledged her husband’s previous cheating during the discussion and confirmed that she would split everything 50-50. But Hunter had a different take. He told Stern, “I might give her everything, start fresh.”

Williams and Hunter have one child together, Kevin Hunter Jr. Hunter was born three years after the couple was married in 2000. Since their child is over the age of 18, child support and custody will not be an issue that the couple has to worry about.

Their businesses interests overlapped significantly

It may be Williams’ name on the wall, but Hunter has been involved in every facet of the show from the very beginning. Hunter was named executive producer for The Wendy Williams Show in 2011. In 2013, the two formed the production company, Wendy Williams Productions, the production company that runs The Wendy Williams Show.

Hunter has also been Williams’ manager for several years. The business relationship between the two has become so intertwined that it will be difficult to separate. Experts say that the couple may have to sell the production company and assets and split the proceeds.

Show staff say the end is near or already here for Hunter

Hunter has continued to work at The Wendy Williams Show since it was revealed that the couple was getting divorced, despite rumors that he is controlling and that his presence is toxic to the show.  

But according to sources closes to the show, it is only a matter of time until Hunter is shown the exit.

A source told Us Weekly, “…staffers have expressed concern about their safety and Wendy’s safety and do not want to work with him,” adding, “employment at the show no longer makes sense.”

The Wendy Williams Show executive producer recently released a statement, saying in part:

“No matter what the outcome is or what the future holds, we are still The Hunter Family and I will continue to work with and fully support my wife in this business and through any and all obstacles she may face living her new life of sobriety, while I also work on mine.”

Should he wish to stay at the show, as his statement seems to imply, it is uncertain whether he could be forcibly removed.

Williams filed for a no-fault divorce

Williams and Hunter currently live in New Jersey. Unlike many states, New Jersey is a fault state, meaning fault can be assigned during a divorce. This means that if the court finds evidence that one partner was the cause of the divorce, they could grant a judgment that is more favorable to the wronged party.

Surprisingly, Williams has reportedly filed for a no-fault divorce. This means that Hunter’s alleged affair and child will have no bearing on the case, should it go to trial. Williams’ decision to file for a no-fault divorce could mean that the talk show host hopes to settle the divorce out of court, or she may wish to handle the divorce as amicably as possible and does not want to throw mud.

There is also the issue of alimony. Since Williams is the higher earner, she could be ordered to pay alimony to Hunter. Her decision to file for a no-fault divorce could be an olive branch to prevent Hunter from asking for alimony.

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https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/wendy-williams-whats-at-stake-in-the-divorce.html/

2019-04-19 12:26:09Z
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Sir Mick Jagger, 75, appears sprightly as he is seen for FIRST TIME since life-saving heart surgery - Daily Mail

Sir Mick Jagger, 75, is seen for FIRST TIME in public since his heart surgery... before heading to the ballet in NYC to watch girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, dance to his music

  • The Rolling Stones star announced last month he was postponing the group's No Filter North American tour was set to kick off in Miami last week
  • The septuagenarian later revealed the reason he was taking time off was to have life-saving heart surgery earlier this month
  • Mick had heart valve replacement surgery, also known as transcatherter aortic valve replacement, which uses a technique pioneered by a French cardiologist  
  • On Thursday, he was spotted enjoying in New York, where he seemed sprightly 
  • Mick was seen later that day attending the ballet to watch his girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, dance to the music of the Rolling Stones

Rolling Stones front man Sir Mick Jagger was spotted for the first time on Thursday since he underwent life-saving heart surgery earlier this month.

The 75-year-old singer had heart valve replacement surgery using a technique pioneered by a French cardiologist, just weeks before he enjoyed a low-key stroll in New York while looking laid-back and relaxed.  

Mick was seen later in the day heading to the ballet at the Lincoln Centre to watch his girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, dance to the music of the Rolling Stones in a ballet she wrote herself called Port Rouge.  

Shocker: Rolling Stones front man Sir Mick Jagger was spotted for the first time on Thursday since he underwent life-saving heart surgery earlier this month

Shocker: Rolling Stones front man Sir Mick Jagger was spotted for the first time on Thursday since he underwent life-saving heart surgery earlier this month

Clad in a casual ensemble, Mick was heading through the park while pulling a baseball cap low over his face and keeping out the chill in a bomber jacket. 

Mick's walk was followed by the ballet trip, in which he dressed up for the occasion wearing grey trousers, a white patterned shirt and a blue velvet blazer. 

His surgery method, transcatherter aortic valve replacement, or TAVR, allows surgeons to swap a patient's cardiac valves without resorting to open heart surgery and cracking open their chests.  As a result, recovery times are far quicker. 

The technique used by medics in New York was pioneered by Professor Alain Cribier. He said: 'I am not especially a fan of the Rolling Stones but I am pleased with the outcome. What is moving is to think about all the patients who have benefited from the procedure.' 

Heading out: The 75-year-old singer had heart valve replacement surgery using a technique pioneered by a French cardiologist, just weeks before he enjoyed a low-key stroll in New York while looking laid-back and relaxed

Heading out: The 75-year-old singer had heart valve replacement surgery using a technique pioneered by a French cardiologist, just weeks before he enjoyed a low-key stroll in New York while looking laid-back and relaxed

Suited: Mick was seen later in the day heading to the ballet at the Lincoln Centre to watch his girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, dance to the music of the Rolling Stones in a ballet she wrote

Suited: Mick was seen later in the day heading to the ballet at the Lincoln Centre to watch his girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, dance to the music of the Rolling Stones in a ballet she wrote

Weighing his words carefully, the soft-spoken cardiologist who pioneered the technique in 2002 doesn't have the allure of a rock star.

But in his field, many colleagues see him that way. The most common - and serious - of valve diseases, age-related aortic stenosis occurs when the valve narrows and hardens with calcium deposits.

Valve replacement has historically been done by opening the chest surgically, stopping the heart, and placing the patient on a heart and lung blood machine - all, of course, under general anaesthesia.

Dressed up: Mick's walk was followed by the ballet trip, in which he dressed up for the occasion wearing grey trousers, a white patterned shirt and a blue velvet blazer
Dressed up: Mick's walk was followed by the ballet trip, in which he dressed up for the occasion wearing grey trousers, a white patterned shirt and a blue velvet blazer

Dressed up: Mick's walk was followed by the ballet trip, in which he dressed up for the occasion wearing grey trousers, a white patterned shirt and a blue velvet blazer

Details: He finished his look with a pair of black trainers and a blue belt

Details: He finished his look with a pair of black trainers and a blue belt 

His love: Mick pictured with girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, in February

His love: Mick pictured with girlfriend Melanie Hamrick, 32, in February

On the up: Mick took to social media last week to share his first image since the surgery, in which stood next to a tree. He added a caption: 'A walk in the park!'

On the up: Mick took to social media last week to share his first image since the surgery, in which stood next to a tree. He added a caption: 'A walk in the park!'

More than 200,000 such procedures are performed every year worldwide, according to NewHeartValve, in Britain.  

Cribier's technique, done under local anaesthesia, is minimally invasive by comparison and has far shorter recovery times.

A surgeon or cardiologist accesses the femoral artery with an incision near the groin to insert a catheter fitted with a replacement valve inside a collapsed stent, and a balloon for inflating it.

The new heart valve, once expanded, pushes the old one out of the way and takes over the job of regulating blood flow. 'It has revolutionised patient care in this area,' Montpellier-based cardiologist Stephane Cade told AFP.

Not for now... The Rolling Stones star announced last month he was postponing the group's No Filter North American tour was set to kick off in Miami last week (pictured in June last year)

Not for now... The Rolling Stones star announced last month he was postponing the group's No Filter North American tour was set to kick off in Miami last week (pictured in June last year)

Since first performing the surgery in 2002, Cribier had trained dozens of doctors around the world. At first, TAVR was reserved for patients too weak or old to undergo open-heart surgery.

But over the last decade, its use has been expanded to those for whom the traditional approach poses an 'intermediate risk'. Since 2009, 400,000 patients in 65 countries have undergone the procedure, Cribier said.

Mick took to social media last week to share his first image since the surgery, in which stood next to a tree. He added a caption: 'A walk in the park!' 

The star, following the surgery, thanked his many fans for the messages of good will. He wrote: 'I'm feeling much better now and on the mend.'

The show goes on: He was deeply aplogetic to fans about the turn of events (pictured in October 2017)

The show goes on: He was deeply aplogetic to fans about the turn of events (pictured in October 2017)

During their postponement announcement in March, a statement from his management read: 'Unfortunately today the Rolling Stones have had to announce the postponement of their upcoming US/Canda tour dates... 

'We apologise for any inconvenience this causes those who have tickets to shows but wish to reassure fans to hold onto these existing tickets, as they will be valid for the rescheduled dates, which will be announced shortly...

'Mick has been advised by doctors that he cannot go on tour at this time, as he needs medical treatment. The doctors have advised Mick that he is expected to make a complete recovery so that he can get back on stage as soon as possible.'

His son Lucas, 19, wrote under his statement: 'Love you Dadda. You will back fast!' MailOnline has contacted representatives for Mick for comment.

Rock on: Mick Jagger has postponed the Rolling Stones' forthcoming US tour due to a mystery illness (pictured at a Paris concert in June last year)

Rock on: Mick Jagger has postponed the Rolling Stones' forthcoming US tour due to a mystery illness (pictured at a Paris concert in June last year)

In 2014, Mick was diagnosed with acute traumatic stress disorder in the wake of L’Wren Scott’s death, court papers revealed.

The band's frontman had been largely silent about his feelings after his girlfriend of 13 years hanged herself in March of that year.

But privately he was left so upset that he was told by a doctor not to perform for a month, according to papers filed in an £8million battle between the band and their insurers.

The Stones were forced to postpone the Australia and New Zealand leg of their world tour when L’Wren died – but their insurers refused to pay out, saying their policy did not cover suicide.

Tough times: In 2014, Mick was diagnosed with acute traumatic stress disorder in the wake of L’Wren Scott’s death, court papers revealed (pictured in 2006)

Tough times: In 2014, Mick was diagnosed with acute traumatic stress disorder in the wake of L’Wren Scott’s death, court papers revealed (pictured in 2006)

Acute traumatic stress disorder can cause flashbacks, nightmares, feelings of guilt and emotional numbness.

If these symptoms continue for more than a month it becomes post-traumatic stress disorder, often associated with soldiers returning from war zones.

In a High Court filing as part of the fight with their insurers, the band state: ‘Upon learning of Miss Scott’s death, Sir Mick Jagger became stricken with grief.

‘Following examination by his physicians, Sir Mick Jagger was diagnosed as suffering from acute traumatic stress disorder. His physicians advised [him] not to perform for at least 30 days.’

Happier times: The band's frontman had been largely silent about his feelings after his girlfriend of 13 years hanged herself in March of that year (pictured together in May 2010)

Happier times: The band's frontman had been largely silent about his feelings after his girlfriend of 13 years hanged herself in March of that year (pictured together in May 2010)

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-6939781/Sir-Mick-Jagger-75-appears-sprightly-seen-TIME-life-saving-heart-surgery.html

2019-04-19 11:00:28Z
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HBO Condemns Trump's Use Of 'Game Of Thrones' Imagery — Again - Hill Reporter

In response to the release of the Russia investigation report compiled under the direction of special counsel Robert Mueller, President Donald Trump tweeted out a meme on Thursday of himself using imagery from the popular HBO program “Game of Thrones.”

HBO appeared none-too-happy about it on Thursday, per reporting from The Verge.

Trump’s tweet came moments after Attorney General William Barr concluded a controversial press conference discussing Mueller’s report, which was released about an hour later. The wording in the image that featured Trump stated, “No Collusion. No Obstruction. For the haters and the radical left Democrats — Game Over.”

Lest there was any confusion over what show the Trump team was trying to emulate, the font of the words was written in the same typeface as used on “Game of Thrones.”

After the meme was produced, it seemed that HBO took notice — and took Trump to task for misusing the style from their show.

“Though we can understand the enthusiasm for Game of Thrones now that the final season has arrived, we still prefer our intellectual property not be used for political purposes,” a spokesperson from HBO said.

This is not the first time that HBO has responded to Trump misusing their property, as the president’s social media team had previously created another meme referencing “Game of Thrones” last year. Trump, in November, tweeted an image that read “Sanctions are Coming,” a reference to the popular phrase “Winter is Coming” from the program, but directed by Trump toward Iran over their nuclear program.

HBO responded then by issuing a tweet of their own, asking: “How do you say trademark misuse in Dothraki?” per reporting from Hollywood Reporter.

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https://hillreporter.com/hbo-condemns-trumps-use-of-game-of-thrones-imagery-again-31903

2019-04-19 10:10:34Z
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On Game of Thrones, humanity has plot armor. - Slate

Jon Snow battles White Walkers in Game of Thrones.

Jon Snow et al. face impossible odds, and yet …

HBO

I can’t tell you how Game of Thrones ends, but I’m pretty sure I can tell you how it doesn’t. From the beginning, the series has depicted a world in which attempting to appeal to others’ sense of a higher purpose is the quickest way to get yourself killed. (Just ask Ned Stark’s severed head.) Viewers have known from the beginning that humanity is facing an existential threat from the army of undead known as the White Walkers, but the show’s characters have discovered the looming crisis only gradually, and they’ve been slow to reckon with the little they do know. Now, with the Night King’s masses marching south from the sundered Wall, there’s no doubt that the threat is real. And yet, with only five episodes of Game of Thrones remaining, the human race is resolutely failing to rise to the occasion. Jon Snow’s attempt to form an alliance with Daenerys Targaryen has created dissension instead of unity, with some northern houses deserting the cause and others, like poor little Lord Umber’s, left unprepared and undersupplied. Despite having pledged her troops, Cersei is merely lying in wait, hoping that the rival armies weaken each other enough for her to conquer whatever remains.

There is only one plausible conclusion to this saga, and it’s that humanity does not survive. Westeros’ various factions either never get it together at all, or they realize, too late, that even the divisions between them that have lasted for centuries pale next to the gulf between the living and the dead. In the first season, Cersei explained the struggle for power to Ned Stark—who, at that point, still had his head—as one in which “you win or you die,” and the years that followed have uncovered little evidence of a third option. No one’s negotiating peace with the Night King.

The facts on the ground in Westeros are different than those in our world, but human nature is constant across universes, and what we’ve seen of Game of Thrones’ take on it is unsparingly pessimistic—and entirely warranted. The series’ utility as an allegory of climate change can be overplayed, but to the extent that it reflects our ability to band together in the face of looming catastrophe, it’s all too accurate. Last year, a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned that irreversible changes could set in as early as 2030 and that preventing them would require a massive and unprecedented transformation of the global economy. Faced with a clear deadline and overwhelming scientific consensus, we’ve done … “nothing” seems not too strong a word. There’s nothing remotely approaching the kind of unshakable public resolve that would move politicians and industry to prompt, decisive action. Some of us are pretty upset about the whole thing, but others are either too flush with fossil-fuel cash or too busy drinking from Liberal Tears mugs to admit the problem exists. (As I am currently writing about a popular television program rather than chaining myself to the doors of the Environmental Protection Agency, on a global level I’m not accomplishing much more.)

What little we know about Game of Thrones’ final season suggests the series will at least flirt with the possibility of mass extinction. The episode-length Battle of Winterfell will likely fall in the season’s third episode, directed by Miguel Sapochnik, who’s directed the series’ previous blowouts. (Given that the troops are already assembled, it seems unlikely the show would wait until the fifth episode, also directed by Sapochnik, to play that card.) That means the human armies will make a do-or-die stand at Winterfell, and unless the series plans to spend three full episodes on the comparatively unimportant question of who ascends to the Iron Throne after the Night King’s defeat, my guess is that humanity will lose that battle. And since every human killed is not just a loss for one side but an undead addition to the other, that ought to be the ballgame. As a viewer, I’m rooting for Jon Snow and co. But if I were an Essos gambler laying a bet, I know whom I’d put my money on.

There’s just one problem. The show that became famous for its willingness to kill off seemingly essential figures has grown less and less likely to do so. Even before Jon Snow came back from the dead, viewers had begun to develop a sense of which characters were essential to the series’ endgame, and thus impossible to kill off. You didn’t need Ramsay Bolton or even Littlefinger to tie up the story’s loose ends, but it’s impossible to imagine Dany or Jon getting axed for shock value. There was no chance the High Sparrow would dethrone Cersei for good or that Arya would fail the Faceless Men’s tests. The show’s core characters had acquired what fans call “plot armor,” which meant that any time the odds seemed truly hopeless, when they were backed against a wall and there seemed to be no way out, we knew the question wasn’t if they’d escape but only how.

Now that the series is almost over, individual characters are finally losing their invulnerability. (For all we know, any of those essential figures could buy it in Episode 2.) But there’s still one suit of plot armor left, and it’s the biggest and clankiest of all. I don’t know which humans will survive till the end of Game of Thrones, but I feel certain humanity will—that the series will end in a Westeros in which the Night King has at least been beaten back, if not wholly defeated. The logical endgame to the precepts Game of Thrones has espoused is the Night King grinning on the Iron Throne, surrounded by his army of the dead, but HBO hasn’t invested close to a billion dollars to tell a story whose moral is that humanity is screwed. Victory will come at a cost, but that cost will be paid; life, of one sort or another, will go on. There are, unfortunately, no such guarantees in our world. We might lose our battle, and there will be no one left to appreciate the plot twist.

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https://slate.com/culture/2019/04/game-of-thrones-finale-humanity-plot-armor-climate-change.html

2019-04-19 09:45:00Z
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