Billie Eilish Surprises Fans By Revealing A Tattoo She Once Promised Would Stay Private

Billie Eilish Surprises Fans By Revealing A Tattoo She Once Promised Would Stay Private

The ‘Bad Guy’ singer once said she’d only get tattoos ‘barely anyone can see’.
Tattoos hold a lot of meaning for people, whether it’s about personal expression, commemorating a moment, or just because it’s fun. Celebrities are no different when it comes to inked skin.
Lady Gaga, for instance, has numerous tattoos honoring her music and artistic partnerships, while Post Malone openly admitted he got his face tattoos to cover up insecurities about his appearance.

Another star who embraces body art is Billie Eilish, who has her fair share of tattoos.

Billie Eilish has multiple tattoosInstagram/@billieeilish
The ‘Bad Guy’ singer is known to have five tattoos, although she’s hinted that there are more pieces she keeps hidden from public view.

At just 22 years old, Billie has spoken about her preference for keeping some of her tattoos private, a sentiment that stands in contrast to Post Malone’s bold facial ink.

In a 2017 interview with Vanity Fair, Billie shared her thoughts on tattoos, stating: “The only tattoos I wanna get are the ones that barely anyone can see.”

Three years after that interview, Billie took the plunge and got her first tattoo. At just 18, the singer decided to mark a special occasion—the day after her Grammy Awards triumph—with a permanent design.
“I did get a tattoo, but you won’t ever see it,” she said, adding an air of mystery to her decision.

By 2021, she gave fans an update, revealing that she’d added two more tattoos to her collection. The singer was slowly building a portfolio of meaningful ink.

The singer has hinted at keeping her body art under-wraps in the pastInstagram/@billieeilish
While Billie initially intended to keep her tattoos out of sight, she didn’t stick entirely to that plan.

One of her tattoos, located on the side of her hand, is visible and features a charming fairy design inspired by her childhood favorite book, Fairyopolis.

Explaining her connection to the artwork, she said: “They’re like my little guardian angel fairies,”

Among her tattoos is what she refers to as her “big boy,” a bold dragon design on her waist that she proudly showed off on Instagram.

However, it was her first tattoo that remained the most mysterious, as Billie had vowed to keep it hidden from view.

Years later, she opened up about the piece, revealing that it’s placed in the middle of her ribcage and reads “Eilish” in an elegant script.

“Yes, I love myself,” she declared, fully embracing her individuality.

Because of its location, the tattoo is typically hidden under clothing, making it easy for her to keep it private.
Fans rarely catch a glimpse of it, which adds to the intrigue surrounding this personal piece.

However, Billie’s tattoo didn’t stay entirely secret.
Her friend Annabel Zimmer, the daughter of renowned composer Hans Zimmer, once posted a photo that unintentionally revealed a peek of the design.

The picture showed Billie relaxing in the sun, her hair tied back and sunglasses on. She was smiling in a bikini, and just below the string, the tattoo was faintly visible.

Eilish vowed that fans would never see the inkInstagram/@annabelzimmer
While sharper images of the tattoo exist online, fans seem content with the glimpses they’ve managed to see so far.

Rolling Stone once described the design as featuring an ornate, gothic font, which matches Billie’s edgy aesthetic perfectly.

The star’s tattoo was pictured by her friendInstagram/@billieeilish
If you look closely, you can just make out the pointed black letters spelling her name across her ribcage.

In October 2023, Billie revealed her latest tattoo, an abstract design that runs down the center of her back, adding to her evolving collection of body art.

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Megan Fox Rejected A Rose From A Young Fan And Was Never Able To Make Up For It After He Was Identifiedcopy sharing button

Megan Fox Rejected A Rose From A Young Fan And Was Never Able To Make Up For It After He Was Identifiedcopy sharing button

The lad who was once the saddest boy in the world is about to become the luckiest.

Megan Fox has issued an apology to the boy she accidentally snubbed at the London premiere of Transformers.

If you ever happen to be in the peculiar situation of purchasing flowers for Megan Fox, it’s advisable to avoid selecting a bouquet of roses.

Alberto Tamargo/Getty Images for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit

The 37-year-old actress once disregarded a heartfelt gesture from one of her dedicated young fans who attempted to present her with a token of affection.

This incident unfolded in the presence of a crowd of paparazzi who, unsurprisingly, captured the entire episode through their cameras.

At the age of 11, Harvey Kindlon, hailing from London, was among the countless fans who showed up to express their support for Megan during her time in the UK, where she was promoting Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.

Megan’s portrayal of Mikaela Banes, the girlfriend of Shia LaBeouf’s character Sam Witwicky in the sci-fi action franchise, catapulted her to stardom.

This led to a scenario where, wherever she went, she found men figuratively falling at her feet and swarms of young lads aspiring to win her favor.

Will/GC Images

During Megan’s visit to London in June 2009, Harvey took a chance to make his move.

The now-infamous pictures capture him making a desperate attempt to approach Machine Gun Kelly’s fiancée while she was being escorted by security.

Harvey appeared extremely eager to present Megan with his gift, thrusting it within inches of her face.

However, despite his efforts, she seemed to ignore the young fan and continued on past him, wearing a rather disgusted expression

The images capturing the unsuccessful encounter rapidly gained international attention, triggering a wave of sympathy for the 11-year-old, who became known as ‘Rose Boy’ on the internet.

Even in the school playground, Harvey found himself teased about the chilly reception he faced, with the story gaining increasing traction, as he later shared with UNILAD.

Megan Fox, then 23 years old, became aware of the controversy during a press junket for Transformers.

Getty Images

In response, she offered a sincere and public apology to the boy, acknowledging the incident and expressing her regret.

She explained: “There were, like, 80 million people everywhere. It was dark, all I see are flashes. Everyone’s yelling different things… and I didn’t know that was happening.

“It breaks my heart. I feel so sad for him. That’s so terrible. That kills me.”

Megan added: “I’m sorry sweet boy, I would never do that to you. I would gladly accept your rose if ever see you again.

“Paparazzi would not let you to me. I’m so embarrassed.”

Getty Images

The narrative took an unexpected turn when Kodak intervened, announcing a reward for anyone who could assist in locating Harvey.

In a generous gesture, the photography company also pledged $5,000 to help fulfill the boy’s dream of meeting the star.

Leslie Dance, Vice President of Kodak’s Worldwide Brand Marketing & Communications, told PerezHilton.com:

“It’s amazing how just a photograph can connect and change the lives of two complete strangers.

“If this photo is any indication, this boy was really hoping to meet Megan Fox and give her that rose, and we’d love to help make his fantastical wish come true.”

Getty images
The power of the internet swiftly came into play, and Harvey was successfully located.

His cousin, Holly Bramley, later confirmed that the devoted fan would be flying to New York to meet Megan in person.

The initial plan was for the two to reunite during Megan’s stay in New York for a TV appearance.

Unfortunately, their highly anticipated meeting was thwarted when the show got canceled due to the sudden death of Michael Jackson.

Youtube/ ABC News

Megan returned to LA, and Harvey found himself snubbed for a second time.

Reports suggested that the organization of the meeting was poorly executed, lacking a definitive date and time for the 11-year-old to meet his idol.

Nevertheless, Harvey made the most of his newfound fame with a couch appearance on Good Morning America, enjoying his 15 minutes in the spotlight.

Interestingly, it turned out that the rose Harvey attempted to give Megan wasn’t even his; it belonged to his cousin Cassie. Cassie, a fan of the actor herself, had found a yellow rose to offer to Megan as she walked past.

The saying “never meet your heroes” takes on a new meaning in Harvey’s case, with the double rejection perhaps serving as a cautionary sign for him to take heed.

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Jim Carrey has spoken out about why he reversed retirement announcement in 2022

Jim Carrey has spoken out about why he reversed retirement announcement in 2022

Jim Carrey has spoken out about why he reversed retirement announcement in 2022

The actor reversed his decision

Jim Carrey has broken his silence about why he walked back an announcement he was going to retire made in 2022.

Carrey, 62, has slowed down the number of projects he has starred in recent years.

The legendary comedic actor starred in only seven major projects from 2015-2022, before announcing he was retiring.

Sonic the Hedgehog was actually his first role in a major studio film since 2014’s Dumb and Dumber To.

Carrey stars as Dr Robotnik (Paramount)

Carrey stars as Dr Robotnik (Paramount)

He said in 2022, after reprising his role as Dr Robotnik in Sonic the Hedgehog 2: “Well, I’m retiring. Yeah, probably. I’m being fairly serious.”

He said this to Access Hollywood on the press tour for the sequel to the live action version of the Sega classic series.

He went on to say: “It depends. If the angels bring some sort of script that’s written in gold ink that says to me that it’s going to be really important for people to see, I might continue down the road, but I’m taking a break.

“I really like my quiet life and I really like putting paint on canvas and I really love my spiritual life and I feel like —and this is something you might never hear another celebrity say as long as time exists — I have enough.

“I’ve done enough. I am enough.”

Jim Carrey is starring in Sonic 3 (Axelle / Bauer-Griffin via Getty Images)

Jim Carrey is starring in Sonic 3 (Axelle / Bauer-Griffin via Getty Images)

Clearly the script written in gold ink was, in actual fact, another Sonic film, as he is set to star in Sonic the Hedgehog 3, alongside Idris Elba, Keanu Reeves, Ben Schwartz, Krysten Ritter, and James Marsden.

Discussing why he decided to overturn his retirement to star in the threequel, Carrey addressed the idea that he would only return for a script written in gold ink, saying: “That might’ve been hyperbole, yeah.

“I came back to this universe because I get to play a genius, which is a bit of a stretch. And you know, I bought a lot of stuff and I need the money, frankly.”

The third film in the series has added a huge name in Keanu Reeves, after adding Idris Elba in the second film and debuting with Jim Carrey from the very first movie.

Elba, Carrey, and Reeves (Dave Bennet via Getty Images)

Elba, Carrey, and Reeves (Dave Bennet via Getty Images)

Reeves is set to play Shadow the Hedgehog, a role he prepared for ‘intensely’.

He said: “For 50 years, Shadow has been in a state of suspended animation.

“He’s coming out of it seeking revenge. It was really the internal journey to get to the anger and the emotion. It was intense.

Sonic 3 and playing Shadow… it’s really on another level.”

Discussing Keanu Reeves joining the cast, Carrey said: “When I heard that Keanu Reeves wanted to play Shadow I went, ‘Oh alright’.

“Shadow has that sympathetic, brooding kind of darkness that Keanu has mastered so brilliantly.”

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Unexpected Findings in “Little” Big Bang Experiment Leaves Physicists Baffled

Unexpected Findings in “Little” Big Bang Experiment Leaves Physicists Baffled

Particle Collision Neutrino Concept
Scientists conducted ultra-hot experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, recreating temperatures not seen since the Big Bang. The unexpected results stunned physicists.

A temperature not seen since the first microsecond of the birth of the universe has been recreated by scientists, and they discovered that the event did not unfold quite the way they expected. The interaction of energy, matter, and the strong nuclear force in the ultra-hot experiments conducted at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) was thought to be well understood. However, a detailed investigation has revealed that physicists are missing something in their model of how the universe works. A recent paper detailing the findings appears in the journal Physical Review Letters.

“It’s the things you weren’t expecting that are really trying to tell you something in science,” says Steven Manly, associate professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Rochester and co-author of the paper. “The basic nature of the interactions within the hot, dense medium, or at least the manifestation of it, changes depending on the angle at which it’s viewed. We don’t know why. We’ve been handed some new pieces to the puzzle and we’re just trying to figure out how this new picture fits together.”

“They said, ‘This can’t be. You’re violating boost invariance.’ But we’ve gone over our results for more than a year, and it checks out.” Steven Manly

Manly and his collaborators on the PHOBOS experiment at RHIC in Brookhaven, New York wanted to probe the nature of the strong nuclear force that helps bind atoms together. They smashed two atoms of gold together at velocities near the speed of light in an attempt to create what’s called a “quark-gluon plasma.” This is a very brief state where the temperature is tens of thousands of times higher than the cores of the hottest stars.

Particles in this hot-soup plasma stream out, but not without bumping into other particles in the soup. It’s a bit like trying to race out of a crowded room—the more people in your way, the more difficult to escape. The strength of the interactions between particles in the soup is determined by the strong force, so carefully watching particles stream out could reveal much about how the strong force operates at such high temperatures.

To simplify their observations, the researchers collided the circular gold atoms slightly off-center so that the area of impact would not be round, but shaped rather like a football—pointed at each end. This would force any streaming particles that headed out one of the tips of the football to pass through more of the hot soup than a particle exiting the side would. Differences in the number of particles escaping out the tip versus the side of the hot matter could reveal something of the nature of that hot matter, and maybe something about the strong force itself.

But a surprise was in store. Right where the gold atoms had collided, particles did indeed take longer to stream out the tips of the football than the sides, but farther from the exact point of collision, that difference evaporated. That defied a treasured theory called boost invariance.

“It may be that we have an actual clue here that something fundamental is different—something we just don’t understand.” Steven Manly

“When we first presented this at a conference in Stony Brook, the audience couldn’t believe it,” says Manly. “They said, ‘This can’t be. You’re violating boost invariance.’ But we’ve gone over our results for more than a year, and it checks out.”

Aside from revealing that scientists are missing a piece of the physics puzzle, the findings mean that understanding these collisions fully will be much more difficult than expected. No longer can physicists measure only the sweet spot where the atoms initially collided—they now must measure the entire length of the plasma, effectively making what was a two-dimensional problem into a three-dimensional one. As Manly says, this “dramatically increases the computing complexity” of any model researchers try to devise.

Modeling and understanding such collisions are extremely important because the way that the plasma cools—condensing like steam turning into water against a shower door—might shed some light on the mechanism that gives matter its very mass. Where mass itself comes from has been one of physicists chief conundrums for decades. Manly hopes that if we can understand exactly why the quark-gluon plasma behaves as it does, we might gain an insight into some of the rudiments of the world we live in.

“Understanding all the dynamics of the collision is really critical for actually trying to get the information we want,” says Manly. “It may be that we have an actual clue here that something fundamental is different—something we just don’t understand.” Smiling, he adds, “Yet.”

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Taylor Swift fans spot cute detail in Travis Kelce’s suite during NFL game

Taylor Swift fans spot cute detail in Travis Kelce’s suite during NFL game

Travis Kelce cute gesture to Taylor Swift during NFL game
Travis Kelce cute gesture to Taylor Swift during NFL game

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, who have been dating for more than a year, delighted fans with a sweet gesture.

The So High School singer who was in Vancouver preforming her history making Eras Tour finale, made a subtle appearance at the Kansas City Chiefs game on Sunday.

During the game, fans noticed a pair of cute figurines ahead of Christmas that resembled Mr and Mrs Claus in Kelce’s suite, which looked like the couple.

Taylor Swift fans spot cute detail in Travis Kelce’s suite during NFL game

After noticing the detail, Swifties took to X (formerly Twitter) to share their excitement with fellow fans.

One user exclaimed, “Why is this so cute?!” while one said, “Taylor and Travis are spreading holiday cheers.”

Another chimed in, “They’re officially THAT couple.”

“I feel like Taylor herself made them. Funniest couple ever, confirmed,” claimed one more.

Even though Swift couldn’t attend the game, the festive touch ensured her presence there.

In another news, reported by The Sun, two writers are hoping to bring Swift’s love story with Kelce to Broadway.

However, the plan is subject to the couple’s permission. If approved, the play will debut in New York before premiering in theatres across the world.

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Your daily cup of coffee could get more expensive because of climate change

Your daily cup of coffee could get more expensive because of climate change

Unpredictable climate events are blamed for spiking the price of Arabica beans to record levels.

APHOTOGRAFIA/Getty Images
Detail of roasted coffee beans during the sixth edition of the international event of the Producer and Roasters Forum (PRF)at Nuevo Cuscatlán on March 16, 2023 in La Libertad, El Salvador.

Coffee lovers and café dwellers will likely be seeing the price of a cup of joe increase soon, experts warn.

That follows this month’s skyrocketing price of Arabica coffee beans, the high-quality beans found in most restaurants and shops, which recently jumped to $3.50 a pound.

That’s up 70% this year, which has seen the highest prices for the crop since 1977.

When adjusted for inflation, $3.50 would be about $0.66 in 1977.

The reason for the price increase back then was a frost that killed more than a billion coffee bean trees.

And today, experts say, climate change is to blame.

“We’ve seen significant drought in some of the key coffe-growing areas in the world, places like Brazil, which is the largest coffee exporter in the world,” said David Ortega, a professor of food economics and policy at Michigan State University.

Ortega studies the supply chain and how ingredients move from farmers to the grocery store.

He said droughts, frost, floods, high temperatures and other unpredictable weather played a role in diminished crop yield in both Brazil and Vietnam, another major coffee exporter.

Vietnam grows robusta beans, slightly lower quality and used for products including instant coffee.

“We’re going to see these types of [climate] events just get more frequent into the future. And so we have to start taking this seriously and make investments in agricultural research and development to be able to mitigate and tackle the impacts of climate change on our agricultural production and agricultural system,” Ortega said.

“One impact of this is a rise in cost, which then gets translated to a rise in price for consumers,” he added.

Consumers will be feeling the increase, but so will the roasters and distributors who get them their pick-me-up cup.

“Climate change is the No. 1 factor on the increase and change in prices in the coffee market. It puts a lot of stress on the market. The supply is down and the demand is up,” said Jackie Newman, vice president of World of Coffee Inc..

World of Coffee Inc. is a family-owned business that processes raw green coffee beans and packages them for private labels, food services and coffee shops.

Newman says the company’s products are served to thousands of customers across the country every day.

“We’re going to try to be as fair as possible and eat as much of the cost as we can. Obviously, people still need their cup of coffee in the morning,” Newman said. “But we also have to make sure that we’re accounting for all of our costs, not just the increase in coffee, but also the increase in packaging and labor costs as well.”

She anticipates that coffee prices could increase anywhere from 50 cents to $1 in the coming days.

“People are very reactive to coffee prices and this affects everyone down the chain. The farmers are impacted because they have very low supply. The green coffee sellers are affected because they don’t have that much coffee to sell and the demand is high,” she said.

“Roasters are extremely affected because the price is so high and we still have our customers that we have to fill orders for. That does trickle down the chain and affects the everyday consumer,” Newman added.

“There is just simply not enough coffee to go around.”

The forecast for other crops could follow a similar trend.

“If we look at the recent floods in Europe, for example, that impacted the Valencia region, a key agricultural producing region in that country, it had some pretty detrimental effects on things like oranges,” Ortega said.

“If you look back, not that long ago, two years ago, we had a mega drought out West in places like California, where a lot of our specialty crops are grown. Things like lettuce that saw a significant rise in price a couple of years ago, even beef production was impacted by that mega drought. And we’re feeling the effects on beef prices at the moment.” he added.

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‘I tell her it's fireworks': How DC shootings affected 564 of 566 schools

‘I tell her it’s fireworks’: How DC shootings affected 564 of 566 schools

Gunfire has affected almost every D.C. school over the past decade, risking profound and lasting impacts on children, an investigation by the News4 I-Team and The Trace Gun Violence Data Hub found

Gun violence is now the leading cause of death for all children and youth in the United States. In D.C., children were twice as likely to be victims or witnesses of violence compared to the national average, a study by the DC Policy Center found.

‘It's heart-wrenching': How DC shootings affected 564 of 566 schools
Community gun violence has affected almost every D.C. school over the past decade, risking profound and lasting impacts on children, an investigation by the News4 I-Team and The Trace Gun Violence Data Hub found. News4’s Ted Oberg reports.

Gunfire affects nearly every school in D.C. Just two of the District’s 566 public and charter schools went 10 years without a single shooting nearby, a joint investigation by the News4 I-Team and The Trace Gun Violence Data Hub found. Science and residents’ own lived experience show the violence young people see, hear and have to cope with is taking a toll.

A 5-year-old girl named Shilo is in kindergarten at Ketcham Elementary School in the Anacostia neighborhood. Her mom, Sam, picks her up every day, then she only plays indoors. When the kindergartener and her mom hear gunshots, “I tell her it’s fireworks,” her mom said.

“I don’t want her to feel afraid,” she said.

An analysis of every shooting in D.C. from 2014 to 2023 by The Trace’s Gun Violence Data Hub calculated how close each shooting was to D.C.’s public and charter schools. The I-Team and the Trace examined shootings within 500 yards of a school, which is about four blocks in any direction.

The Trace’s analysis led the I-Team to the neighborhood around Ketcham Elementary, at Marion Barry Avenue and 15th Street. No school in D.C. had more shootings nearby in that time period than Ketcham Elementary, with 195 shootings from 2014 to 2023.

A little more than a third of these shootings occurred during daytime hours.

That’s 195 times that children studying, playing, eating or sleeping likely heard gunshots. Maybe they walked past a crime scene. Maybe they asked their mom a nervous question. Or they just swallowed the uncertainty and didn’t say a thing.

Encounters with gun violence are familiar to many D.C. children, said Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Jamila White, who represents the area around Ketcham Elementary.

“They notice the police activity. They notice everything that’s happening. They have to walk through it. They have to drive through it. They have to experience it,” she said.

How shootings affect almost every DC school

Gun violence might be easier to try to solve if it just affected one part of D.C. or one group of children. But virtually every school and family is affected.

There are 566 D.C. public and public charter schools in the data the I-Team examined with The Trace.

Only two schools went 10 years without a single shooting nearby: Key Elementary School in the Palisades and Stoddert Elementary School in Glover Park. Just two out of 566 campuses.

“It’s a citywide issue that everyone is dealing with,” said White.

How shootings uniquely affect DC school communities

Data from The Trace shows shootings near schools increased in D.C. in recent years even as they fell in similar cities.

School shootings graphic

Gun crimes are down this year in D.C. compared to last year, but there still have been hundreds of shootings.

Virginia experienced about three school-adjacent shootings per 100,000 residents. Maryland had about nine school-adjacent shootings. In D.C., that number was 90 shootings per 100,000 residents.

Use this map from The Trace Gun Violence Data Hub to look up shootings near any school in the United States.

‘We should be upset’ by the effects shootings have on kids, pediatrician says

Studies show kids who see, hear or live near chronic violence have more anxiety, more health issues and lower math and reading scores. Proximity to violence in a community disrupts learning, a 2010 study by three Johns Hopkins University professors found.

“Increasing neighborhood violence was associated with statistically significant decreases from 4.2% to 8.7% in math and reading achievement, the researchers found.

School shootings graphic

Children coping with gun violence also can be faced with depression, anxiety, trouble sleeping, a feeling of hyper vigilance and an inability to trust people, said Jo Richardson, a gun violence researcher at the University of Maryland’s PROGRESS Center.

Pediatrician Dr. Woodie Kessel is Richardson’s research partner at UMD. He said he also has seen the profound effects gun violence has on children.

“It’s showing up in just the basic concerns about not retaining things, their cognitive ability, their attention spans,” he said.

News4 asked him, should we be surprised by that?

“We should be upset by it,” he replied.

The I-Team reached out to DC Public Schools numerous times asking for interviews with experts who could talk about how the school district handles the issues community violence creates for students. DCPS never agreed to an interview.

But gun violence isn’t a problem schools can handle alone, Richardson said.

“The school is not responsible for all the social problems that impact this community. It’s part of the fabric and DNA in this community,” he said.

A lack of investment to improve the community and a lack of follow-through by the adults in charge of cutting crime are hurting D.C. kids and changing daily life, White said.

“There’s so many parents who drop their kids off and it’s like, you live two blocks away. But they know that you’re not guaranteed to make it those two blocks,” she said.

How DC gun violence unequally affects school communities

The I-Team and The Trace found shootings near schools don’t affect every D.C. community equally. The 10 schools with the most shootings nearby account for 25% of all shootings in the time we examined. Nine of the 10 schools are Southeast D.C. Eight of the schools are east of the Anacostia River, in a burden these communities shoulder more than others.

“Communities are suffering from harm that could have been prevented,” said Richardson.

Nationally, 1 in 20 white students experienced at least one shooting near their schools in the 2022-2023 school year, The Trace found. One in four Black students experienced a shooting near their school in that period.

Searching for solutions

We know how to reduce the gun violence that has lasting effects on children, Richardson said.

“We understand the problems. There are so many people who are social scientists, behavioral scientists in the city, policymakers. We get it. And that’s what makes it so violent, is that we totally understand the problem to prevent it,” he said. “We’re responsible. We’re culpable in that.”

Five-year-old Shilo and thousands of other kids are growing up with the impacts of problems adults still haven’t solved.

“Sometimes when you’re sleeping, do you hear fireworks?” her mom asked her.

She nodded yes in response.

“A lot of them?” her mom asked.

“Yeah,” she replied.

“It’s heart-wrenching,” Shiloh’s mom told the I-Team. “But, you know, what can you do?”

Advocates call for investments in curbing gun violence amid shootings near schools
Almost every public and charter school in D.C. has been affected by gun violence nearby in the past decade. “It’s the whole community that’s going to take on this problem,” a pediatrician focused on gun violence told News4’s Ted Oberg.

When White recently asked middle school students for their biggest wish, the answer was heartbreaking.

“The number one answer from the youth was to stop the killings and kidnappings,” she said.

That plea came from 12-year-olds growing up in a part of D.C. too familiar with gun violence. White said Ward 8 kids notice a “lack of investment” in their community.

“They notice the lack of food. They notice people in need, people whose basic needs aren’t being met. People who are using substances to help cope,” she said.

Like White, Richardson also called for renewed investment in communities.

“We need to create an infrastructure where kids feel safe both within school, outside of school and within their households. But if we continue to engage in disinvestment, pulling back the resources, this will be the outcome,” he said.

When the I-Team reached out to the city for this story, a spokesperson for the city administrator said in an email: “The Bowser Administration is committed to building safe communities in all eight wards. That’s why we have invested historic funding levels for Anacostia and Ward 8 focusing on public safety, creating jobs, making housing more affordable, and building pathways of opportunity for our residents.”

Without greater investment in communities in crisis, residents and researchers worry we’ll be telling the same story again.

The I-Team asked White, how confident are you that if we have this conversation in 10 years, we’ll look back and say we got it right?

“I’m not very confident,” she replied.

Methodology

The Trace used data from the Gun Violence Archive and National Center for Education Statistics EDGE geographic datasets to perform the analyses that led to the findings. The Trace also used population estimates from 2010-2023 US Census Bureau data and D.C. public school profiles for school demographics.

The Gun Violence Archive tracks shootings through media and police reports, meaning the data provided likely underestimates the number of school-adjacent shootings that took place over the past decade. Nonfatal shootings are especially likely to be missed by GVA.

More than 30% of incidents do not include a time of day. Of those that do, most occurred late at night, between 6 PM and 2 AM. But the evidence of gun violence lingers long-term. Crime scene tape, blood, bullet holes, and other remnants of late-night shootings affect the emotional well-being of schoolchildren, Trace reporting found.

The project required intensive data cleaning because there is no standard format for how districts record school names. The Trace worked to clean the dataset and standardize all school names, but some schools may still appear with more than one name.

 

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SHARON STONE THE MOST ICONIC LEG-CROSSING IN HISTORY

SHARON STONE THE MOST ICONIC LEG-CROSSING IN HISTORY

Sharon Stone’s iconic leg-crossing scene in Basic Instinct (1992) remains one of the most provocative and memorable moments in cinematic history. As Catherine Tramell, a seductive and manipulative crime novelist, Stone exudes control and confidence, captivating both the characters on-screen and the audience. The brief, tantalizing glimpse during her interrogation not only shocked viewers but also cemented her status as a cultural icon. This scene, masterfully combining allure and audacity, exemplifies the power of suggestion and the charisma Stone brought to the role, transforming a fleeting moment into a legendary piece of Hollywood lore.

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A New Formula for Pi Is Here. And It’s Pushing Scientific Boundaries.

A New Formula for Pi Is Here. And It’s Pushing Scientific Boundaries.

the greek letter pi the symbol of the mathematical constant

blackdovfx//Getty Images
  • While building a simpler model for particle interactions, scientists made a sleek new pi.
  • Representations of pi help scientists use values close to real life without storing a million digits.
  • The making of the new pi involved using a series, which is a structured set of terms that either converge to one expression or diverge.

In new research, physicists uses principles from quantum mechanics to build a new model of the abstract concept of pi. Or, more accurately, they built a new model that happens to include a great new representation of pi. But what does that mean, and why do we need different representations of pi?

Because quantum mechanics looks at the tiniest particles, one at a time, even simple questions can have complex answers that require massive computing power. Rendering high-tech video games and movies like Avatar can take days or more, and that’s still not at the level of reality. In this new paper, published in the peer-reviewed journal Physical Review Letters, physicists Arnab Priya Saha and Aninda Sinha describe their new version of a quantum model that reduces complexity but maintains accuracy.

As detailed in their paper, Saha and Sinha combined two existing ideas from math and science: the Feynman diagram of particle scattering and the Euler beta function for scattering in string theory. What results is a series—something represented in math by the Greek letter Σ surrounded by parameters.

Series can end up generalizing into overall equations or expressions, but they don’t have to. And while some series diverge—meaning that the terms continue to alternate away from each other—others converge on one approximate, concrete result. That’s where pi comes in. The digits of pi extend into infinity, and pi is itself an irrational number, meaning it can’t be truly represented by an integer fraction (the one we often learn in school, 22/7, is not very accurate by 2024 standards).

But it can be represented pretty quickly and well by a series. That’s because a series can continue to build out values well into the tiniest digits. If a mathematician compiles a series’ terms, they can use the resulting abstraction to do math that isn’t possible with an approximation of pi that’s cut off at 10 digits by a standard desk calculator. A sophisticated approximation enables the kind of nanoscopic particle work that inspired these scientists in the first place.

“In the early 1970s,” Sinha said in a statement from the Indian Institute of Science, “scientists briefly examined this line of research, but quickly abandoned it since it was too complicated.”


But math analysis like this has come a long way since the 1970s. Today, Sinha and Saha are able to analyze an existing model and remodel it with altered terms. They’re able to build a sequence and see that it converges on the value of pi within far fewer terms than expected, making it easier for scientists to run the series and then use that for further work.

All of that requires decades of foundational work in the field and large bodies of work showing that certain mathematical moves work where other ones don’t. It’s a comment on the ongoing and collaborative nature of math theory, even when what results is a working model that might help scientists. Our ability to meaningfully approximate has grown in tandem with our ability to solve complex problems outright.

“Doing this kind of work, although it may not see an immediate application in daily life, gives the pure pleasure of doing theory for the sake of doing it,” Sinha said in the statement.

A New Formula for Pi Is Here. And It’s Pushing Scientific Boundaries. Read More
Tesla and the Coming Service Economy: The Robot that Brings Other Robots

Tesla and the Coming Service Economy: The Robot that Brings Other Robots

Someday in the next decade a car will pull up in front of your home, a humanoid robot will hop out, open the trunk, pull out a stack of pizzas, and walk to the front door.

The robot (an autonomous vehicle) brought a robot (a humanoid) which brings everything as a service (it can bring specialized robots with it).

Need your garden weeded? Your windows or solar system cleaned? Your floor vacuumed? Your groceries ordered? Your laundry folded? Your home secured? All that, and more, will be offered to you as a service.

It’s why Figure AI’s founder, that just landed $675 million to build its humanoid robot, says the total addressable market is “the largest on the planet.”

Long before it shows up on your doorstep, though, the humanoid robots will take over many tasks inside factories, offices, stores, and other businesses. Why there first? Well, workers will put up with a weird movement or two and the business will see a business need to fork over the $100k or more to buy the first ones. Most consumers can’t afford more than $200 a month for a robot. Not to mention payments for a $100,000 robot! So consumers will need to wait until manufacturing scales up to a point where the price can be reduced to less than $25,000 per robot.

Figure’s Figure 01 robot

Even in the factory it will bring a new kind of service. Say they are being used in an auto repair shop, we could see a “SnapOn Service.” Your humanoid robot could bring you any tool you need from SnapOn. The most common ones kept in a tool chest in the shop, like they are today, but less common ones, a robot ride away.

If a rare car comes in for, say, a new transmission, your robot could prepare the shop for the new job by driving to a distribution center and picking up some rarer tools. Most jobs are like this, if you know a radical change is coming you can prepare for it ahead of time like if a music festival is coming with 150,000 attendees like Coachella does. There Uber prepared for the festival by building a parking lot ahead of time to deal with the 3,000 vehicles it moved to the Palm Springs area to serve the festival goers. A rare vehicle coming into your repair shop is the same kind of change: an unexpected, and rare, event.

Now that Apple has killed its autonomous vehicle project, we are taking a fresh look at the robotics industry and we see that Tesla is uniquely positioned to succeed here. Why?

Tesla

Consumers trust and love Tesla. Its customers are fanatical about the company. It makes batteries, electric motors, and AI computer hardware and AI software itself. At scale! Few other companies can match it in manufacturing expertise. No one else in the humanoid robot business can make vehicle-sized things at scale (in the millions) the way Tesla can. Nor do they have the financial ability to support a sizable R&D effort for years. That’s an exclusive club with members like Apple, Google, Meta and Nvidia. If you have $100 Billion in your pocket, you can play! But none other than Tesla has the distribution advantages of an existing car fleet.  And they definitely don’t have the data advantage that fleet brings. And only Tesla and Apple have the brands it would take to bring a robot into peoples’ homes worldwide.

Apple

Apple is one of those few and would have been the only other company that could compete, but they found out the hard way consumer electronics isn’t the same as heavy manufacturing.

Apple, while they kill it when it comes to personal computing and phones, has fallen behind when it comes to its crown jewel: Siri. Most folks wouldn’t consider Siri to be Apple’s crown jewel. Most would say the iPhone. We say different. Siri is what links all Apple’s products together. But it’s been neglected!  Siri was cutting edge once. It isn’t now. And Apple hasn’t made any major stride in consumer AI for 5-10 years. No one looks to them for what is to come in AI. That will change at WWDC come June. A new multi-modal and multi-model Siri arrives in June. Apple may get some ground back from ChatGPT, but it’s not enough to match Musk in the race to build the best AI robotics.

Grok 

When we host or join X’s audio spaces we hear this over and over again: that consumers would welcome a Tesla robot into their homes, while they don’t feel that warmly to other potential companies. Which brings up another reason to believe in Tesla’s robot: Elon’s other companies. X, for example (formerly known as Twitter) is about to turn on a sizeable update to its AI, Grok.

If we did have a humanoid robot, it will be Grok that you talk to, even if it’s called something else. Plus, once in your home, the robot will need to continue the conversation with you, which includes topics consumers care about like news, sports, entertainment.

But it is the voice data that Elon Musk has from X Spaces that will take X’s Grok to be competitive with OpenAI’s Whisper API, which does voice to text and back again. Whisper will be hard to beat. We tested it in many noisy places including a loud dance floor at a wedding, and it’s the best at understanding humans that we’ve seen so far.

The winner in AI is usually the one with the most data. Tesla, along with X, has the most data of human audio conversations. It will lead to a robot that will understand humans better than others, which means acceptance in more homes.

It is Tesla’s coming Robotaxi network that we see as a huge advantage over others. Why? Because, as we laid out in our book, “The Infinite Retina,” having a humanless-vehicle network will dramatically lower the price to move these robots around town, which means a few customers might be able to share a humanoid robot since the price will be high at first.

But we see the Robotaxi network itself as the way that Optimus, Tesla’s humanoid, will be introduced to the world. One day you will be picked up by a Tesla to take you to the airport. In the driver’s seat is an Optimus, which can get out, help you with your bags, or your wheelchair/strollers, and then help the car drive you to the airport.

Tesla’s Optimus

Help drive?

Yes, Optimus will have eyes that are better than most of the cameras in its fleet as of early 2024, and can provide redundancy, which will greatly increase safety. It can also look into spots where the existing cameras have a tough time seeing, like around a blind turn.

Tesla is training its robot to drive, we learned from a Tesla employee, which makes sense, right, since it’s based on the same digital twin the car is driving on.

Many customers will try a Tesla the first time this way, getting a ride at an airport, or home from a bar, like they do with Uber/Lyft today. But the robot will behave like a human, can high five you, and talk with you.

These customers who meet Optimus will see how competent it is at helping them with luggage, or driving a car. It will increase their love of, and trust of, the Tesla brand. To the point they will look into getting one for their home, or be much more accepting of it bringing a stack of pizzas to your front door.

Most people today can’t see inviting such a contraption into their homes. Worries about privacy, safety, security frequently are mentioned by consumers we talk to in doing our research. But Tesla owners already say they would invite Optimus into their homes. That’s a way to introduce millions of people to a humanoid robot.

This ability to “distribute” the humanoid robot to businesses and then homes, and having the trust to be accepted inside, even bragged about to others, is a large moat we don’t see others getting across.

See, once the humanoid robot gets accepted inside the home, maybe to set the table at first for your pizza party, but later to do things like dishes, clothes, general repairs and upkeep, security, and entertainment, the first robot inside the home brings other of these specialized robots.

Housekeeper robot of the future

Already there are specialized robots that vacuum, clean windows, blow snow, pick weeds, and more but these come with new troubles for humans. The window washing robots, for instance, need to be manually moved from one window to the next. Many homes have dozens of pieces of glass, so that’s quite a chore. One that a humanoid robot would be happy to do for a fee.

Window washing as a service just arrived in that home.

Because the humanoid is a generalized robot it should be able to turn literally everything else in the home into a service:

Groceries as a service.
Laundry as a service.
Meals as a service. (And a lot cheaper and more consistent than the ones where a human delivers).
Gardening as a service.
Security as a service.

It gets better for Tesla. As it is asked to perform laundry as a service it will quickly know what your favorite brand of detergent is for washing your clothes. What if the bottle of Tide is empty? Well, you asked the robot to wash your clothes and fold them for, say, $100 a month. That means the robot gets to replace your Tide with a brand it prefers. Or, gets to bulk buy Tide which changes the economics for Procter and Gamble. And not in a good way.

The competitors:

  1. Amazon, which bought Zoox, and has millions of robots inside its warehouses already.
  2. Figure, which just raised $675 million for its humanoid.
  3. Waymo/Google. Now expanding into more of California’s population centers.

We consider competitors as:

  1. Have enough cash flow to have a sustained R&D effort to complete not just a humanoid robot, but the infrastructure to enable a robot to be directed into people’s homes and keep track of tasks/services provided.
  2. Have a fleet of vehicles or a plausible ability to get such within three years (millions of vehicles).
  3. Have consumer-ready brand/trust to be welcomed into the home.

To get a better understanding of the everything-as-a-service market, we visited Electric Sheep, a Silicon Valley-based company that is making a variety of robots to do landscaping work. It bought a landscaping company to get the customers and employees to train the robots. Unlike other grass-cutting robots, theirs are generalizable. That means they don’t need a wire around the lawn to show the robot where it can and can’t go: it learns that by “seeing” the lawn, just like a human.

Humans are still needed to get the robot off the truck and to do other tasks that their robots can’t yet do (which are, for now, mostly focused on cutting grass, even though there are many other things that their landscaping company does).

Electric Sheep already is doing “lawn mowing as a service” and is prepared for when humanoids get good enough to do the other jobs. Founder, Naganand Murty told us that he sees a humanoid robot that’s good enough for his tasks to be a decade away. He decided to make a two-wheeled robot that can push around specialized tools, which they introduced last week, named “Verdie.” He says the AI job of training such a robot is a lot easier than building a humanoid and can do lawn care tasks better than a humanoid will be able to do for years.

Others, like Eric Jang, founder of 1X Technologies, another humanoid robot manufacturer, said on a post on X that all AI roads lead to robotics. and that the industry could get there a lot faster than that.

It is the ability to bring other robots to your businesses or homes (like Electric Sheep’s Verdie) that unlocks the huge total addressable market and brings us all into everything as a service that has both us, as well as many investors, excited.

Just Three Things

According to Scoble and Cronin, the top three relevant happenings last week

Humanoid robotics startup Figure receives $675M in Series B funding, valued at $2.6B

Figure received funding from Microsoft, OpenAI Startup Fund, NVIDIA, Bezos Expeditions, Parkway Venture Capital, Intel Capital, Align Ventures, and ARK Invest. Its humanoid robot, called Figure 01, has already been employed by BMW for an automotive manufacturing facility and is designed to mitigate workforce shortages and manage tasks that are too dangerous for human workers. Figure is facing competition from Tesla with their Optimus robot and Boston Dynamics. Ars Technica

Smart glasses from Apple? A possibility

According to an article from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple is mulling whether or not to offer smart glasses like those from Meta and Amazon. It’s also considering designing a fitness ring and AirPods with cameras. We think that Apple producing smart glasses will serve as a bridge to their Apple glasses that may be offered around 2028. Bloomberg

Google announces Genie which can transform a single image into a virtual game

Google has developed something extraordinary with Genie. It’s in research preview mode and illustrates playable worlds could be generated from a single image, sketch or text prompt. Although it’s wonderful, it’s still quite crude looking. It’ll take more time to develop into a more elegant and easily orchestrated tool. Tom’s Guide.

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