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Jennifer Lopez’s $42.5 million mansion has a movie theater lined with posters from her hits and Ben Affleck’s movies. Take a look inside.

The front door of Jennifer Lopez's Bel Air estate with a stone facade and a large wooden door

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

  • Jennifer Lopez is selling her 9-bedroom, 13-bathroom Bel Air estate for $42.5 million.
  • The home sits on more than 7 acres and is one of the largest lots in the exclusive neighborhood. 
  • The property includes a private beach, a 100-person amphitheater, and an organic vegetable garden.
Jennifer Lopez has left her “Jenny from the Block” days behind, and is ready to do the same with her 14,000-square-foot Bel Air home that has 9 bedrooms and 13 bathrooms.An aerial view of Jennifer Lopez's Bel Air estate with a circular driveway and several trees surrounding the 12,000 square foot home

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

The home was designed by architect Samuel Marx and built in 1940.One of the outdoor patios at Jennifer Lopez's house includes a view of palm trees and a fire pit

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

It has undergone a renovation in the French Country style, according to the listing, and features Provençal touches like a stone facade and wood accents.

The estate sits on more than 7 acres, a massive property for Los Angeles’s Bel Air neighborhood. 

If it sells for the $42.5 million asking price, it will be one of the pricier transactions in Bel Air in recent years. Data from Zillow shows that there have been six homes in the neighborhood that sold for at least $40 million since 2020. 

A nearby 105,000-square-foot megamansion known as The One sold at auction for $141 million, including fees and commission, in 2022.

Lopez’s estate includes a guest house, a gym, a large kitchen with a built-in breakfast bar, and a 30-seat movie theater, according to the listing agent, Brett Lawyer of Carolwood Estates.Jennifer Lopez's kitchen includes a built-in breakfast bar, vaulted ceilings, and a stone facade

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

The entertainer bought the home from actress Sela Ward in 2016 for just over $28 million, Mansion Global reported.Jennifer Lopez's living room includes a large chandelier

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

Lopez has earned a reputation as a savvy real estate investor since her star-making turn on the silver screen playing Selena Quintanilla in the singer’s 1997 biopic, Selena.

In 2000, Lopez bought her first luxury property, a 7-bedroom home in a community called The Summit that overlooks Beverly Hills and Studio City. 

Lopez put the property on the market after owning it for just four years and earned about $8 million in profit from the sale, according to Love Property.

The main level of the Bel Air home includes high ceilings, a steel fireplace, and extensive views of the surrounding natural landscape.Jennifer Lopez's living room includes large bay windows that look out at the private garden

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

Upstairs are a gym, a large library, a massage parlor, and a guest room.Jennifer Lopez's gym includes several modern machines including a power rack and a smith machine

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

The lower level of the home includes a 30-person theater adorned with posters of Jennifer Lopez and her husband Ben Affleck from films they’ve starred in including “Monster In Law” and “Hollywoodland.”Jennifer Lopez's theatre has purple walls and includes some posters from her features such as Monster In Law

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

Lopez has more than 125 film credits as an actress and has starred in movies such as “Hustlers,” “Ice Age,” and “Jersey Girl,” according to IMDB.

She has also appeared in well-known television series including “How I Met Your Mother” and “In Living Color.”

The home’s primary suite includes dual dressing rooms and opens onto private landscaped terraces.The primary suite of Jennifer Lopez's estate includes a canopy bed and a private terrace that looks out at the garden

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

Outside, the property includes a 100-person amphitheater, an entertaining kitchen, a private lake, and a sandy beach with an outdoor shower.A view of the private beach at Jennifer Lopez's estate

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

Unlike many homes in Bel Air, Lopez’s estate is surrounded by a huge lawn, an organic vegetable garden, and tall trees that give it a little more privacy than most nearby mansions.The exterior of Jennifer Lopez's Bel Air estate includes an infinity-edge pool and a well-manicured landscape

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

The listing notes that the property’s future owner could reasonably add more rooms to the home, or another structure to the property if desired.An aerial view of Jennifer Lopez's estate

Courtesy of Carolwood Estates

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There’s a big macro shift taking place that could erase the bulk of this year’s stock market gains

Traders NYSE

(Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)

  • The stock market is on the verge of undergoing a significant macro shift that could threaten its recent gains in the short term.
  • That’s according to a Wednesday note from Fairlead Strategies cofounder Katie Stockton.
  • She warned a rise in the US dollar and interest rates could put a lid on further market advances.

The stock market is undergoing a macro shift that could threaten its recent gains, according to a Wednesday note from Fairlead Strategies cofounder Katie Stockton.

Around the same exact time the stock market found its bottom in October, the US dollar was topping out at its highest level since 2002. From there, the US dollar fell 12% while the S&P 500 rallied as much as 20%.

But now the US dollar is showing signs of moving higher, and that could put a lid on further stock market upside and even lead to some downside, according to Stockton. The US dollar index has rallied 2.5% over the past week, while the S&P 500 has declined 2%.

Interest rates are another threat to stocks, as yields for the 10-year US Treasury bond have jumped 20 basis points to 3.65% since the Federal Reserve signaled that a resilient jobs market could lead to further interest rate hikes. Stockton thinks the 10-year yield could jump further to 3.87%, a resistance level that if broken would give way to further upside at about 4.34%. 

A higher dollar, combined with rising interest rates represents “a macro shift” from the trends that were in place in recent months and supportive of stocks, according to the note. And that shift could lead to a downturn in the stock market.

“Our indicators support several weeks of upside follow-through [in the US dollar and interest rates], which is likely to impact the extremely bullish sentiment that characterizes the equity market,” Stockton said.

The technical analyst pointed to yesterday’s “Extreme Greed” reading seen in CNN’s Fear & Greed Index as evidence that investor sentiment is overly bullish and due for a shakeout.

“The over-bought reading in the Fear & Greed Index puts us on guard for a loss of short-term momentum,” Stockton explained.

From a fundamental perspective, higher interest rates and a higher US dollar could have a negative impact on corporate profits. That’s because high rates can lead to reduced consumption for big-ticket items that often require a loan, like a car or a house. And a higher US dollar is a negative for companies that sell goods overseas as they are forced to convert weaker foreign currencies into a strong US dollar, resulting in fewer dollars being gained.

A sector rotation could be afoot in the near-term, with Stockton pointing out that defensive sectors like consumer staples, healthcare, and utilities could see demand from investors at the expense of mega-cap technology stocks.

Year-to-date, mega-cap tech giants like Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet are up 20%, 13%, and 13% year-to-date, respectively.

But some of those gains are already deteriorating, with Alphabet plunging 9% and erasing more than $120 billion in market value on Wednesday after President Joe Biden took aim at big tech in his State of the Union address on Tuesday, and as investor concerns grow about its ability to compete against ChatGPT. 

If the weakness in mega-cap stocks continues, Stockton’s forecast for further choppiness in the near-term could prove correct. 

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AI stocks are soaring in a meme-like frenzy. Here’s why investors won’t have to rely on Reddit enthusiasm to sustain the rally.

Artificial intelligence stocks have seen a spike in investor interest, like meme-stocks did in 2021.The rise of ChatGPT has sparked a boom in AI-related stocks and chip-makers.

NurPhoto/Getty Images; Phil Rosen/Insider

  • Following a brutal year for tech, the rise of ChatGPT has sparked a boom in AI stocks and chip-makers.
  • Shares of both well-known and obscure companies have skyrocketed on even small updates related to AI. 
  • The frenzy bears some resemblance to the meme stock craze, but AI’s foundation is stronger, experts say. 

On the heels of a brutal year for Big Tech, the meteoric rise of OpenAI’s ChatGPT is providing a boost to some of the hardest hit names of 2022, with small firms and tech giants alike rallying on announcements related to the seemingly endless potential of artificial intelligence. 

The boom is reminiscent of the meme-stock craze that sent shares of companies like GameStop, AMC Entertainment, and Bed Bath & Beyond to the moon in 2021 — but this time, investors won’t have to rely on the enthusiasm of retail investors on social media to keep the rally going. 

Two years ago, institutional investors had taken large short positions in a handful of struggling companies, and retail investors — largely organized on Reddit’s Wall Street Bets forum — took it upon themselves to drive share prices higher with something akin to a community-wide buying spree.

The moves sparked a short-squeeze that crushed returns at a number of hedge funds with large short bets. 

But to Chris Natividad, the chief investment officer and co-founder of Equbot, which has an ETF powered by IBM’s supercomputer Watson, the comparisons between the meme-stock movement and AI hype fall short because the fundamentals driving each trend aren’t comparable.

“Retail investor and media response sentiment is similar, but the financial strength of the underlying AI companies and broad application of AI solutions as a whole suggests there is more upside to come,” Natividad told Insider.

While much of the meme-stock bandwagon stemmed from speculation and a sense of solidarity among retail traders, the companies they were targeting didn’t have particularly strong balance sheets or fundamentals. 

Meme-stock darling Bed Bath & Beyond, for instance, has started the year on the brink of bankruptcy, and one analyst this week described its fundraising efforts as a last gasp with shares heading to $0. 

Alternatively, companies caught in the AI hype are riding a wave of enthusiasm around the innovative potential of tools like ChatGPT, even if that potential remains a ways away from being reached. Chip-makers like Nvidia and Ambarella have seen significant gains year-to-date, and their products could be poised to bring in revenue for years to come. 

“AI stocks and AI solutions will continue to benefit from machine learning while the majority of meme stocks will not,” Natividad noted.

Shark Tank investor Kevin O’Leary echoed the sentiment, telling Insider that AI as an investment sector has vast potential. He’s currently in talks to take an equity position in ChatGPT creator, OpenAI.

Bot competition looks poised to grow, with Google, Microsoft, and Chinese tech giant Baidu each making strides with their respective AI tools.

“AI’s sort of the new, hot kid on the block,” O’Leary said. “Like the internet was 20 years ago. This is the next thing.”

Improving macro conditions for tech

It isn’t just company-specific news that’s driving AI names higher. The wider macro picture for tech could be shifting after a terrible showing for the sector in 2022. 

The Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate campaign last year weighed on growth names as investors flocked to less risky corners of the market. But with signs of easing monetary policy ahead, the sector could find its legs once more, according to Fundstrat.

Technical indicators have also improved, and skepticism around tech’s recent strength has led to an uptick in short positions, which could end up fueling more gains. With 20% of tech stocks still more than 75% off their highs, Fundstrat noted that a recovery is still in the early stages.

The Nasdaq “closed above the 200-day [moving average] for the first time since April 2022,” strategists said. “The technical picture has flipped positive.”

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Researcher compromised the Toyota Supplier Management Network

The infrastructure of Toyota was compromised again, this time its global supplier management network was hacked by a researcher.

The security researcher Eaton Zveare has exploited a vulnerability in Toyota’s Global Supplier Preparation Information Management System (GSPIMS) to achieve system admin access to Toyota’s global supplier management network.

The GSPIMS portal allows employees and suppliers to access to ongoing projects, surveys, information on purchases.

A JSON Web Token (JWT) is a sort of session token that represents a user’s valid authenticated session on a website. A user can usually get a JWT after logging into a website using his email and password

The analysis of the GSPIMS app allowed the researcher to discover a function named “GenerataJWT” that allows to generate a JWT based on a provided valid email address without providing any password.

The researcher pointed out that Corporate Toyota emails are easy to guess because use a predictable format (firstname.lastname@toyota.com) in North America. It was easy for the expert to find Toyota employees with Google queries, he also focused on the research of employees registered in the GSPIMS system. Once discovered the employee, Zveare was able to a createJWT HTTP request that returned a valid JWT.

The expert used the JWT to access the GSPIMS portal and after gaining access to the platform he discovered an account with system administrator privileges.

“Checking the managers of the managers, etc. made it easy to find accounts that had elevated access to the system. Eventually I found a North America Regional Admin. That gave me access to the User Administration section. I then poked around more and found users with even higher access, such as Supplier Admin, Global Admin, and finally, System Admin.” reads a post published by the expert. “In the GSPIMS settings, the tabs that appear are dependent on your role. There’s Regional Settings for Regional Admins, Global Settings for Global Admins, and System Admin Settings for System Admins. System Admins can access all the tabs.”

The researcher was able to obtain access to a system admin account that gave him full access to the system. The expert gained access to information on over 14,000 user accounts, information related to all available projects, surveys, and classified documents.

“I discovered what was essentially a backdoor login mechanism in the Toyota GSPIMS website/application that allowed me to log in as any corporate Toyota user or supplier just by knowing their email. I eventually uncovered a system administrator email and was able to log in to their account. Once that was done, I had full control over the entire global system.” concludes the expert.

Toyota

Zveare reported the flaw to Toyota on November 3, 2022, and the company confirmed the vulnerability was fixed on November 23, 2022.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Toyota)

The post Researcher compromised the Toyota Supplier Management Network appeared first on Security Affairs.

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“An Irreversible Injustice”: Missouri Executes Leonard “Raheem” Taylor Despite Doubts Over His Guilt

Tricia Rojo Bushnell was on hold with the prison in Bonne Terre, Missouri, waiting to talk to Leonard “Raheem” Taylor. Executive director of the Midwest Innocence Project, Rojo Bushnell was calling to update Taylor on litigation related to his execution, which was scheduled for 6 p.m. on Tuesday. Taylor had been in a holding cell, the prison official told Rojo Bushnell, but now she couldn’t get through. Rojo Bushnell could hear someone talking in the background just before the prison official came back on the line “and said, ‘I’m sorry, ma’am. It’s done.’ And I said, ‘Done?’ And she said yes. And I clarified, ‘You mean the execution process is done?’ And she said yes.”

Rojo Bushnell was sitting in a Huddle House diner down the street from the prison. She’d been there all day with Megan Crane, co-director of the MacArthur Justice Center’s Missouri office, working on Taylor’s case. Rojo Bushnell realized that as she was waiting on hold, the execution was already underway. At 6:16 p.m. Taylor was pronounced dead.

Taylor was executed for the 2004 murder of his girlfriend, Angela Rowe, and her three young children in Jennings, a suburb of St. Louis. Taylor had always maintained his innocence. He was nearly 2,000 miles away when the bodies were found inside the home he shared with Rowe, shot in the head. Police seized on Taylor as their sole suspect, pursuing witnesses to confirm their theory of the crime while ignoring evidence to the contrary. At Taylor’s trial, the prosecution relied on a dubious statement provided by Taylor’s brother, Perry — a statement Perry had vociferously recanted — and on testimony from a medical examiner who dramatically changed his estimated time of death in order to implicate Taylor.

Despite lingering questions over Taylor’s guilt, his innocence claim was never fully investigated nor considered by any court. St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell declined to avail himself of a Missouri law that allows prosecutors to reopen possible wrongful convictions, saying there were no facts “to support a credible claim of innocence” in Taylor’s case. The office maintained its stance even as Taylor’s daughter, Deja, flew to St. Louis days before the execution to share crucial information supporting her father’s alibi, which could have confirmed that the victims were still alive several days after Taylor had left the state.

“They know that people have other avenues to vindicate their rights, but it doesn’t matter to them.”

As Taylor’s execution loomed, attorneys sought to stop it, asking Gov. Mike Parson to convene a Board of Inquiry: an independent panel tasked with vetting Taylor’s innocence claim. The governor declined to do so. As it became clear the execution would likely proceed, attorneys learned that the state was denying Taylor’s request to have a spiritual adviser and two witnesses, Rojo Bushnell and Crane, present during the execution.

After the Missouri Supreme Court and the federal district court in St. Louis declined to intervene, Rojo Bushnell and Crane were sitting in the diner working on an appeal to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court. Rojo Bushnell was calling to tell Taylor about the appeal when she was informed that it was too late.

It is not the first time that Missouri has executed a person in the face of a compelling claim of innocence, nor is it the first time the state has executed someone while litigation was still pending. “I think that’s something we were all thinking about,” Rojo Bushnell said. “They know that people are continuing to litigate; they know that people have other avenues to vindicate their rights, but it doesn’t matter to them.”

During her last visit with Taylor on Tuesday morning, Rojo Bushnell talked to him about his love of music. His favorite song, he told her, was The O’Jays’ “Family Reunion.” Rojo Bushnell and Crane listened to the song as they drove from Bonne Terre back to St. Louis after the execution. Taylor, a devout Muslim, “accepted his fate, that whatever was Allah’s will was Allah’s will,” Rojo Bushnell said. “He was positive up to the last time I talked to him.”

Missourians to Abolish the Death Penalty held rallies in support of Taylor across the state on Tuesday, from Kansas City to Bonne Terre. “One day the truth will be uncovered, and Raheem Taylor will be vindicated and posthumously exonerated,” the organization’s co-director Michelle Smith said.

“This is an undeniable and irreversible injustice,” Crane said. “But in the words of Raheem, he will ‘live eternally in the hearts of family and friends.’”

The post “An Irreversible Injustice”: Missouri Executes Leonard “Raheem” Taylor Despite Doubts Over His Guilt appeared first on The Intercept.

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How President Biden beat House Republicans at their own game

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President Joe Biden gave a State of the Union address last night that at times was often gleeful, and at times almost gleefully combative. He sounded like a winner celebrating a victory over a defeated and unpopular opponent – and that’s because he was.

If your approval rating is around 40%, it means you’ve got a lot of people in the middle who don’t like you, and you’ve got to find a way to win them over. You’ve got work to do, and you have to be humble about it. Perceived arrogance will only make them dislike you even more. But the 202 midterm results suggested Biden’s approval has actually been in the fifties the whole time. He now knows he’s popular and on track for reelection in 2024, and he can act like it. So he did.

Biden is obviously far more popular than the Republican House, and he used that to his advantage. But last night was about more than that. House Republicans have no leadership, no cohesion, no sense of strategy, and no political savvy. They had already decided that they were going to heckle President Biden during his speech, and Biden knew it going in, so he used their predictability against them. If they had any smarts, they’d have known they were walking into a trap. If they had any leader, they’d have been hushed on the spot. Instead they simply got played.


Even though most of the media coverage of President Biden’s speech has been positive, most of it has treated the speech as some kind of shocking display of political savvy on Biden’s part. Of course this is the same mainstream media that’s spent the past two years pretending Biden’s strong economy is weak, pretending Biden’s strong approval rating is in the thirties, and pretending Biden is too old to be able to do the job. But in the real world, Biden has been absolutely nailing it for the past two years.

After the media saw the midterm results, it was always going to have to revise its take on Biden’s presidency. After all, the American people clearly think Biden is doing far better than the media has been claiming. The question was when and how the media would begin to revise its approach. More than anything, last night’s speech feels like the inflection point at which the mainstream media may finally be ready to admit that Biden is indeed kicking ass. Now if only they hadn’t first wasted two years of our time.

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‘We have to leave our comfort zone’: Cautious but determined, Israeli expats protest Netanyahu’s government

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Benny Chukrun, speaking in Hebrew on a wind-whipped day outside the Israeli embassy in the U.S. capital, had a message for his fellow protesters.

“We have a special role in Washington. We have access to the Jewish opinion leaders in the United States,” he said at a rally on Sunday opposing far-reaching changes planned by the new government in Israel, including a proposal to limit the power of the country’s judiciary. “We have to leave our comfort zone and act.”

Israeli expatriates have been coming together in cities worldwide in solidarity with the tens of thousands who have gathered every Saturday night in Tel Aviv and elsewhere to protest Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government. Rallies have taken place in New York City, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Toronto, Los Angeles, Miami, Vancouver, Sydney, Berlin, Paris and London, drawing crowds ranging in size from 50 to 200. This weekend, the protests in North America took place on Sunday to accommodate demonstrators who observe Shabbat. 

It’s new and at times intimidating territory for Israeli expatriates. Israelis in America  were once known to keep a low profile in Jewish communities due to a stigma associated with leaving Israel. That sense of shame has faded as growing numbers of Israelis have relocated to the United States for work in the tech sector or other fields. Overseas travel and communication have also grown far easier. More recently, Israeli political activists in the United States have become best known for supporting their country publicly via organizations such as the Israeli-American Council.

The group organizing many of the rallies, UnXeptable, formed in 2020 to demonstrate in solidarity with Israeli protests against Netanyahu. Now, the mandate has broadened to oppose the actions of the Israeli government. That change has sparked familiar anxieties among Israelis in the United States: Are they harming Israel’s public image? Do they have a right to criticize their home country now that they have moved outside of its borders?

These questions populated multiple WhatsApp groups ahead of this weekend’s protests, said Kathy Goldberg, 57, an Israeli American who helped organize the solidarity protest in Evanston, Illinois, a Chicago suburb.

“There were fears of it looking, ‘anti-Israel,’ fears of antisemitism, that it will look like we’re piling on Israel and giving them more ammunition, when in fact these are people who love Israel and believe that right now this is the most pro-Israeli thing we can do, to help protect Israel as a democracy,’” she told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

What helped Goldberg and other Israelis overcome those fears was the role that they feel Israelis living abroad can play in explaining to Jewish communities why it’s OK, this time, to come out and protest. At the rally outside of the Israeli embassy, Chukrun pointed out that Israeli Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli just traveled to the United States to defend the government’s proposals. 

“Chikli was here a while ago, trying to persuade the conservative Jewish funders of Kohelet that the revolution underway is not antidemocratic,” Chukrun told the 50 or so Israelis who met outside the embassy, referring to the Kohelet Forum, an influential Israeli right-wing think tank that is leading the charge in advocating abroad for the new government.

“We can give the opposing voice, we must give the opposing voice,” he told the crowd, which responded with murmurs of agreement. “Whoever has friends in Jewish organizations, reach out. We must explain to them what is going on. There is a lot of ignorance, misunderstanding.”

The Israelis who are protesting, both in Israel and abroad, are reeling from a barrage of potential changes. The issue with the highest profile has been a proposed reform that would significantly weaken Israel’s judicial review and change the way judges are appointed. Groups of protesters also oppose government pledges to annex West Bank territory to Israel, restrict the rights of LGBTQ Israelis and expand police powers — particularly in relation to Israeli Arabs.

“A lot of [Jewish] Americans say,’What’s the problem? Here [in the United States], politicians pick judges,’” said Chukrun, 62, who works in educational tech. “They don’t understand that [in the United States], it is just one part of an overall structure of checks and balances, and you can’t just take one aspect of the state of Israel that is already a democracy standing on chicken legs.”

Expatriate Israeli protesters outside the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C., Feb. 5, 2023. (Ron Kampeas)Expatriate Israeli protesters outside the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C., Feb. 5, 2023. (Ron Kampeas) Image by

Etai Beck, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur, told the crowd at the San Francisco protest that the Jewish Diaspora had a moral stake in speaking out now. He framed his speech as a true/false test. Like Chukrun, he criticized the Kohelet Forum as well as Israel Hayom, a free right-wing tabloid in Israel that is funded by Miriam Adelson, wife of the late casino magnate and Republican donor Sheldon Adelson.

“The Jewish people outside Israel are not allowed to express their opinions and join the protest: False,” he said in his remarks in English, which were shared on WhatsApp with other protesters. “One, Israel was established as the worldwide Jewish center. Two, the Jewish people worldwide lobbies and supports Israel — in Congress, in the media, in day to day life.”

To the degree that Israeli Americans have had a public profile until now, that profile has leaned right. The Israeli-American Council, funded to a large degree by the Adelsons, has served as a forum for Republicans in recent years; it was one of just two Jewish groups that Donald Trump agreed to speak to as president, and he used the occasion to mock American Jews for not supporting Israel enough. The protests IAC organizes typically defend Israel’s sitting government.

Shay Bar, 38, who attended the Los Angeles protest with his family, said the concerns of Israelis abroad in this instance stretched beyond partisanship.

“Our solidarity from abroad is for the future of Israel and our future here in the Diaspora,” he said. “If Israel’s democracy erodes, that will directly affect Jewish and Israeli life and in the Diaspora.”

At the Washington rally, protesters held up massive Israeli flags. An older man, speaking Hebrew, asked a group of teenagers holding up letters spelling “DEMOCRACY” in English whether they were aligned properly, and they collectively rolled their eyes and said, in English, that yes, they were. The protest ended with a rendition of “Hatikvah,” the Israeli national anthem.

Protesters in San Francisco made light of an old Israeli warning not to “wash one’s dirty laundry” abroad. “We learned from Bibi [Netanyahu] to wash our dirty laundry overseas,” said a poster in San Francisco, a reference to Netanyahu’s wife Sara’s habit of loading her flights with dirty clothes because she preferred laundry service overseas.

“Some of us here are here temporarily, some not so much,” said Yoni Charash, 47, a lawyer wearing a T-shirt bearing UnXeptable’s logo. “We all go visit, we have a connection, those of us who leave Israel are not cut off from Israel.”

Nor were they cut off from the larger Jewish communities they live in, said Chukrun. Times had changed since Israelis arriving in the United States kept to themselves because they were alienated by the synagogue-centric life of American Jews.

“Jews in the United States feel the Judaism of faith and Israelis feel the Judaism of national identity, the Israeliness,” he told JTA. “There is a cultural difference, but in recent years it’s begun to change.”

Bar in Los Angeles said Israelis are likelier now to assimilate into American Jewish communities than not. “We’re Israeli Americans who live within the community, we send our kids to school with a Jewish education, go to synagogues on holidays and are an integral part of the American Jewish community,” he said.

Chukrun, speaking to JTA, said it was critical to leverage the relationships Israelis had with American Jews.

We have to explain that it’s not the land of the patriarchs and matriarchs, not the land of the Bible,” he said. “It’s a real country with real people — with ugly things.”

This article originally appeared on JTA.org.

The post ‘We have to leave our comfort zone’: Cautious but determined, Israeli expats protest Netanyahu’s government appeared first on The Forward.

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Netflix film ‘You People’ takes us back to a time that never was

YOU-PEOPLE_UNIT_018_30327_R-scaled.jpg

I’m not going to lie — when I saw the preview for the Netflix film You People, starring Jonah Hill and Lauren London, about a white Jewish man and Black Muslim woman who fall in love, I was both curious and maybe a little hopeful that You People would be a modern Black/Jewish retelling of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.

The acclaimed 1967 film, starring Sidney Poitier, Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, illuminated the struggles even nice white liberal couples like Tracy and Hepburn had when their daughter brought home her accomplished Black physician fiancé (Poitier). I hoped that You People would depict a Black/Muslim/Jewish storyline full of the contemporary conversations and cultural expressions unique to what happens when Black and Jewish people fall in love.

As I settled in to watch You People, I was particularly looking forward to seeing depictions of Jews of color. I anticipated a modern movie set among the racially diverse Jewish communities in Los Angeles, with a story that expressed the diversity and authenticity of both Jewish Americans and African Americans.

All of my optimism was dashed in the opening scene, set at Yom Kippur service at the Skirball Cultural Center in Bel Air. As soon as the camera pulled back to reveal that the congregants were all white, I knew that You People was not going to genuinely depict what American Judaism looks like in 2023.

There has been significant criticism of You People due to its antisemitic portrayal of Jewish Americans and racist portrayal of Black Americans. Yet there hasn’t been enough focus on one of the biggest misses of all: that an entire film about the relationship between Black and Jewish communities, a film informed by a paid “Jewish consultant” no less, omits the very Black Jewish people the film had a responsibility to explore and include.

The film is 117 minutes of stereotypes and caricatures about both Black Americans and Jewish Americans. The Jewish characters are anxious, nosy, boundary-crossing, racist and underinformed (or misinformed) about Black Americans and Black History. And the Black characters are underdeveloped and limited in their dimensions.

Chances are that any Black American so close to the Black Power movement that they would be gifted a kufi from Minister Louis Farrakhan, as Eddie Murphy’s character Akbar was, would have incredible stories and experiences to share. But not in You People. Akbar, the father of London’s main character Amira, was reduced to a non-religious “Black Muslim,” whose most memorable trait is a proximity to Farrakhan. The film does nothing to engage with the complexity of the Black American Muslim experience, and instead plays solely into Jewish discomfort with the well-known antisemite. Akbar’s interactions with his potential white Jewish son-in-law Ezra are a flattened and antagonistic projection of someone who could have had a character line rooted in our collective and complex history and vision for the future.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ character Shelley, the mother of Ezra, reacts to the idea that the future offspring created by Amira and Ezra would be Black. She muses, “Our family is growing in such a cool and hip and funky way!” a comment that is at best awkwardly tone-deaf, and at worse tokenizing. She continues, as if to make fun of the 20% of U.S. Jewish families that are multiracial, by overenthusiastically exclaiming, “We’re a family of color.” Shelley’s comments are the closest that You People gets to acknowledging that Jews of color exist, yet because it is mentioned in a flippant and frankly appropriative manner, Black and brown Jews become the unwitting punchline of the joke. To fleetingly and somewhat racistly note the possibility of creating baby Jews of color, absent any actual portrayal of Jews of color, is inaccurate and regressive.

I believe it took actual effort to consciously exclude Jews of color from You People. According to Brandeis University’s 2021 study of Jewish LA, 15% of Los Angeles Jews self-identify as people of color, 9% of which are children — a number that is increasing over time. This means that in every You People scene where there were Jews or people of color, we know from the data that many of those characters should have been non-white Jews. And if no non-white Jewish character was in the imagination of the writers and producers of You People, why not at least a reference to Jews of color?

The lack of effort to accurately depict Jewish Los Angeles feels both lazy and deliberate. I wonder if someone in a position of power made the decision to reflect a binary of Blacks and Jews to keep us as multiracial community regressed and trapped back in time. There aren’t many movies that take on relationships between Blacks and Jews, and You People seems to work extra hard at a depressing historical depiction more akin to the struggles the interracial couple of 1967’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner faced rather than a forward-looking reflection of reality.

The notion that all Jews in the United States are white is a myth which can easily be dismantled by data dating back to the 1700s. Today, 20% of American Jews are part of multiracial families, and 15%-20% of American Jews are people of color. Those numbers increase every day.

I understand producers have the creative license to depict as little or as much of the depth and truth as they wish. But the reality is that Hill’s character — a young Angeleno Jew who hangs out with Black people, and with a Black lesbian best friend (Sam Jay) — would definitely know Black and brown Jews. Wouldn’t it have been far more interesting to watch conversations between the characters with Jews of color in the mix? Wouldn’t the opening scene of Yom Kippur service at the Skirball Center also be more interesting and more realistic if it included Jews of color among the congregants?

With all of the stereotypes, inaccuracies and historical regressions present in the film, perhaps the saddest and most ironic part of You People is that London knows something of being a Jew of color, as she has a white Jewish father (her mother is Black and not Jewish). While London was raised by her mother and identifies as a non-Jewish Black woman, her existence as the progeny of a relationship between a Black American and Jewish American defies the normative mass of white Jewish identity portrayed on screen. Jews of color are not mysterious and unknown, and yet their erasure from You People, when an actual Black woman with Jewish heritage is in a leading role, is painfully paradoxical.

In 2023, when there are ample data sets available to inform movie producers about U.S. Jewish racial diversity, and dozens of efforts, programs and organizations supporting and celebrating the racial diversity of the American Jews, You People reinforces harmful stereotypes. It simplifies the depiction of both Jewish and Black Americans, and tells an inaccurate tale of who we are as Jews by omitting racially diverse Jews from the storyline.

Netflix had the opportunity with You People to tell a Black Jewish story of 2023. Instead, old stereotypes and reductive characters were rehashed, forcing us into the way-back machine of 1967.

To contact the author, email opinion@forward.com

The post Netflix film ‘You People’ takes us back to a time that never was appeared first on The Forward.

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Two children dead after bus rams into daycare in Canada; driver arrested

2023-02-08T18:57:55Z

Two children died and six others were injured after a bus rammed into a daycare center in the Montreal-area suburb of Laval on Wednesday morning, police said.

The bus driver, a 51-year-old employee of the Laval municipality’s public transit system, was arrested for homicide and reckless driving, a police spokesperson said.

Police declined to provide more details while they investigate and question the driver, who they said has worked for the transit system for 10 years and does not have a criminal record.

The incident happened at about 8:30 a.m. (1330 GMT), when kids are usually dropped off by their parents at daycare centers.

“Everyone is terribly saddened by what has occurred,” Quebec’s Families Minister Suzanne Roy said. “When you leave your children at the daycare for the day, you know that they’re in good hands … when an event like that can happen, it shakes us and shatters us.”

The circumstances around the crash or a possible motive was not immediately clear. The six children who were taken to hospital did not have life-threatening injuries, police said.

Authorities did not confirm the children’s ages, but according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corp, about 80 kids under the age of 5 attend that daycare facility.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, as well as Quebec Premier Francois Legault, expressed condolences to families after the incident.

“No words can take away the pain and fear that parents, children, and workers are feeling – but we are here for you,” Trudeau said.

Laval is about 30 km (20 miles) northwest of Montreal in Quebec, Canada’s second most-populous province.

Related Galleries:

A Laval city bus is seen crashed into a daycare in Laval, Quebec, Canada February 8, 2023. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

A Laval city bus is seen crashed into a daycare in Laval, Quebec, Canada February 8, 2023. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

A Laval city bus is seen crashed into a daycare in Laval, Quebec, Canada February 8, 2023. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

People are silhouetted in front of the Canadian national flag in Montreal, Quebec, Canada October 21, 2019. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe


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Kamala Harris: I ‘Haven’t Watched’ Video Of Husband Kissing Dr. Jill

Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday claimed she has not seen footage of her husband Doug Emhoff’s mouth-to-mouth kiss with first lady Jill Biden.

“No, I haven’t watched the video,” the vice president told Univision correspondent Edwin Pitti. “But I do know that the first lady and the second gentleman are working arduously with what we are doing with my husband against anti-Semitism.”

.@VP Kamala Harris responds to Univision correspondent Edwin Pitti’s question about The Kiss: “I haven’t watched the video.” pic.twitter.com/9nrrwh7b1R

— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) February 8, 2023

Harris denied seeing the footage after a clip of the kiss, which Emhoff and Biden exchanged on the House chamber’s balcony, went viral on social media.

BIZARRE: Jill Biden and Kamala’s Husband KISS at State of the Union pic.twitter.com/VWxWAAkLKp

— Breitbart News (@BreitbartNews) February 8, 2023

President Joe Biden has yet to comment on the public display of affection.

EXCLUSIVE: Frame-By-Frame Analysis Sheds Light on Dr. Jill’s Open-Mouthed Make-Out Sesh With Kamala’s Husband

The post Kamala Harris: I ‘Haven’t Watched’ Video Of Husband Kissing Dr. Jill appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.