Marriage

Puncho Villashio brings a feature film to Broward County with 'CAR SHOW KINGS' featuring Clifton Powell and the Donkmaster

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Filmed entirely in Broward County, Executive Producer Puncho Villashio's decision to showcase his hometown was a no-brainer.

Key Points: 
  • Filmed entirely in Broward County, Executive Producer Puncho Villashio's decision to showcase his hometown was a no-brainer.
  • "I completed projects in Atlanta and other cities, but I always felt compelled to bring a feature film project to my hometown of Broward County," says Puncho.
  • With standout performances from Clifton Powell (Frank), Norval Howard (Uncle Slim), Sage Thomas (Donkmaster), and Anika Fourcand (Starr), the film dives deep into the empowering nature of the Donk world.
  • From the streets of Broward County to the silver screen, "Car Show Kings" promises to be a heartwarming journey that will leave audiences cheering for more.

Baseus Introduces a Revolutionary Open-Ear Experience with Eli Sport 1 Open-Ear TWS Earbuds

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, March 12, 2024

These are the company's first-ever open-ear TWS Earbuds, marking a significant leap forward for Baseus in elevating audio technology.

Key Points: 
  • These are the company's first-ever open-ear TWS Earbuds, marking a significant leap forward for Baseus in elevating audio technology.
  • Baseus Dual-Channel Low-Latency Technology: Experience minimal audio latency with the Eli Sport 1 earbuds.
  • Baseus continues to push the boundaries of audio technology with the Eli Sport 1 Open-Ear TWS Earbuds, delivering an unparalleled combination of comfort, performance, and innovation.
  • Be among the first to experience the future of audio experience with Eli Sport 1 from Baseus.

Why rural white Americans’ resentment is a threat to democracy

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 5, 2024

Although there is no uniform definition of “rural,” and even federal agencies cannot agree on a single standard, roughly 20% of Americans live in rural communities, according to the Census Bureau’s definition.

Key Points: 
  • Although there is no uniform definition of “rural,” and even federal agencies cannot agree on a single standard, roughly 20% of Americans live in rural communities, according to the Census Bureau’s definition.
  • The unfortunate fact is that polls suggest many rural white people’s commitment to the American political system is eroding.
  • Even when they are not members of militant organizations, rural white people, as a group, now pose four interconnected threats to the fate of the United States’ pluralist, constitutional democracy.
  • Although these do not apply to all rural white people, nor exclusively to them in general, when compared with other Americans, rural white people:


Let’s examine a few data points.

Xenophobia

  • That’s a lower proportion than urban and suburban dwellers and even nonwhite rural residents.
  • In addition, Cornell researchers found that rural whites reported feeling less comfortable with gay and lesbian people than urban whites do.

Conspiracism

  • Polls in 2020 and 2021 indicated that QAnon supporters are 1.5 times more likely to live in rural areas than urban ones, and 49% of rural residents – 10 points higher than the national average – believe a “deep state” undermines Trump.
  • Rural residents are also more likely than urban and suburban residents to believe the 2020 election was stolen from Trump, according to 2021 polling by the Public Religion Research Institute.

Antidemocratic beliefs

  • In addition, more than half of rural residents surveyed by the Public Religion Research Institute said being a Christian is important to “being truly American” – 10 percentage points more than in surburban or urban areas.
  • This is one of several signals that rural residents are disproportionately likely to support white Christian nationalism, an ideology that reaches beyond Christian ideas of faith and morality and into government.

Justification of violence

  • And 27% of Americans who say Trump should be returned to office even if “by force” are rural residents.
  • Those are minority views, but both proportions are significantly higher than the rural proportion of the overall population.


Thomas F. Schaller does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Irish families have changed — it’s a shame the constitution won’t be amended to reflect that

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Voters also rejected a second referendum on changing wording about a woman’s “duties in the home”.

Key Points: 
  • Voters also rejected a second referendum on changing wording about a woman’s “duties in the home”.
  • The change would have reflected the diversity of families in contemporary Ireland, and granted equal constitutional rights to single parents.
  • By 2022, the last Irish census, 45% of all family units were defined as a married couple with children.
  • But my research shows that marriage itself isn’t, on its own, necessarily the most important factor for family or child wellbeing.

Marriage isn’t everything

  • I’m a sociologist who studies family life, marriage and relationships.
  • My analysis of this data, with colleagues, shows that marriage isn’t the most important factor in determining whether children thrive.
  • One-parent families were largely lone mother families with 9% defined as “never married” lone mothers and 8% as “previously married”.
  • The children born to never married mothers tend on average to weigh less than those born to married mothers.
  • Families differ for many reasons besides marriage.
  • In other words, we estimated that most of the difference was due to the socioeconomic resources available to families, rather than to marriage itself.


Carmel Hannan receives funding from the Family Support Agency administered
through the Irish Research Council

Ireland referendums: what went wrong for the government and why double defeat draws a line under a decade of constitutional reform

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Another chapter in that history has played out in the form of resounding defeats for two government proposals aimed at modernising the constitution.

Key Points: 
  • Another chapter in that history has played out in the form of resounding defeats for two government proposals aimed at modernising the constitution.
  • One sought to remove a reference to a “woman’s” life “within the home” and recognise the value of “care” provided to others within the home.
  • Referendums were usually just a procedural requirement, imposed by the constitution, for making certain types of legal changes.

The ‘post-crash referendums’

  • Amid a national crisis of confidence, following a crash of historic proportions, a degree of soul-searching was in evidence.
  • Themes of rebirth and renewal came to prominence within what was historically a conservative (and very stable) political system.
  • A series of high-profile disputes between the church and the state followed over the country’s reckoning with this legacy.
  • Beginning in around 2012, referendums came to be used as part of a distinctive project of constitutional modernisation.
  • The blasphemy referendum removed an arcane criminal offence which some regarded as having been effectively impossible to prosecute anyway.

End of an era

  • Again, this was understood as liberalising and modernising a constitutional framework where only traditional marital families were given constitutional recognition.
  • These referendums showed the limits of the project of constitutional liberalisation that has been conducted since the great recession.
  • It seems unlikely that the problem lay in this liberalisation “going too far”, or in a decisive conservative shift in public opinion.
  • These referendum defeats are therefore likely to draw a line under a recent pattern of symbolic and “expressive” referendum use in Ireland.


Eoin Daly does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Fire represents power and control for an Indigneous teenager who lacks both, in Melanie Saward’s compassionate debut novel

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 13, 2024

“From the moment I got here, I’ve wanted to set the whole of Brisbane on fire,” reflects Andrew, the protagonist of Melanie Saward’s debut novel.

Key Points: 
  • “From the moment I got here, I’ve wanted to set the whole of Brisbane on fire,” reflects Andrew, the protagonist of Melanie Saward’s debut novel.
  • Saward, a Bigambul and Wakka Wakka author, moved to Bracken Ridge in the northern suburbs of Brisbane as a teenager, after growing up in Tasmania.
  • Fire is symbolic: it’s power and control for Andrew, who has precious little control over his life.

Reading as ‘invited guests’

  • Writes Leane:
    Presencing means the recognition that First Nations works are happening in the same ‘now’ as the settler reader.
  • Presencing means the recognition that First Nations works are happening in the same ‘now’ as the settler reader.
  • While my own experience was very different, I recognise the way poverty and deprivation press up against natural beauty in Saward’s novel.
  • As an adult living in Melbourne, I became gradually aware of the economic gap between the mainland and Tasmania.
  • They were reasons I left the state when I was old enough to do so.
  • Despite living in Melbourne for nearly 30 years, I still feel the thread Saward writes about, connecting me to Tasmania.
  • Burn, however, generates a type of “presencing” that allows you to see complexity in the way the past manifests in the present.

Inside family trauma

  • “We don’t know how deep it is,” he said the first time I started wading in for a paddle.
  • If a nice, warm, nearly nine-year-old boy gets in, they might think you’re their dinner.” The tidal pool becomes a recurring image for trauma.
  • We see inside family trauma, how the dynamics are self-perpetuating.
  • We also bear witness to the role institutions play in exacerbating trauma associated with colonialism, such as ongoing disconnection from culture.

Crossover appeal


Burn has obvious crossover appeal for teen and adult audiences, with a strong adolescent protagonist driving the story. So it interests me that this novel has been published as adult fiction. In fact as a young adult author and once-upon-a-time editor of books for teenagers, I puzzled over the decision.

  • When teaching young adult fiction to creative writing and publishing classes, I often ask Dr Lili Wilkinson’s four powerful plotting questions: What does your character want?
  • In this novel, there is nothing Andrew alone can do to break the cycle of intergenerational trauma.
  • The only answer posed to the question, “What does Andrew need to do?” is: light fires.
  • Andrew lights fires which destroy, but Andrew’s fires also offer regeneration and renewal.

‘Who’s your mob?’

  • In Tasmania, Sarah and Andrew try and fail to imagine new futures for themselves, to generate a fantasy of who they might be.
  • New love interest, Tess, makes clumsy attempts to connect with Andrew, and he in turn tries hard not hurt her.
  • This question cuts to the heart of what it means to belong: to family, to Country, to culture and to your own story.


Penni Russon does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Holding His Hand is a Heartwarming Memoir on Autism Parenting, Blended Families, and Holding on to Hope

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 6, 2024

But then she meets Jeff, a widower cautiously exploring dating for the first time since his wife’s passing.

Key Points: 
  • But then she meets Jeff, a widower cautiously exploring dating for the first time since his wife’s passing.
  • The couple, who currently act as full-time caregivers for their son, Billy, have seen their fair share of trials.
  • Highlights of their story include Billy’s autism diagnosis, a life-altering medical challenge, and watching their children grow into adults.
  • In spite of these challenges, the theme of Jeff’s and Nancy’s life together has been unwavering hope.

Catalight Unveils Wellbeing Scale to Assess and Enhance the Lives of Families Living with Intellectual Developmental Disabilities and Autism

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 29, 2024

For more than a decade, Catalight has sought to define wellbeing as not just a nebulous, variable feeling but as a measure of treatment success.

Key Points: 
  • For more than a decade, Catalight has sought to define wellbeing as not just a nebulous, variable feeling but as a measure of treatment success.
  • In serving clients with I/DD and autism, clinicians utilize various strategies to improve the lives of the individual and their families, decrease stress and save time.
  • The scale itself and its subsequent psychometrics turned heads at the International Society for Autism Research annual meeting last year in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • By considering a broad range of factors, the scale provides a more comprehensive and nuanced understanding of family wellbeing.

Black Rock Coffee Bar Unveils its Delicious Spring Drink Collection to Celebrate the Season

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 26, 2024

Black Rock’s new Spring Drink offerings include:

Key Points: 
  • Black Rock’s new Spring Drink offerings include:
    Strawberry Blondie: Silky smooth espresso combined with a fruity and creamy taste.
  • Black Rock Coffee Bar, which is guided by three principles - coffee, community and connection, has more than 130 stores in the U.S. Its mission is to be a positive force in the communities it serves.
  • In 2023, Black Rock Coffee Bar ranked 1179th among America’s Fastest-Growing Private Companies by Inc. Magazine’s 5000 Annual List.
  • The Black Rock culture prides itself on providing opportunities for young people to learn how to lead, run a business, and develop people skills.

Maxime Bernadin: Photographer Launches Wedding Photography Services in the South of France

Retrieved on: 
Friday, February 23, 2024

Maxime Bernadin: Photographer is proud to announce the launch of his wedding photography services in the south of France in Saint Remy de Provence to offer couples an opportunity to capture their destination wedding in the most beautiful way possible.

Key Points: 
  • Maxime Bernadin: Photographer is proud to announce the launch of his wedding photography services in the south of France in Saint Remy de Provence to offer couples an opportunity to capture their destination wedding in the most beautiful way possible.
  • “I am a self-confessed romantic, and knowing how special love and marriage is, it is no wonder that I decided to become a provence wedding photographer,” said Maxime Bernadin.
  • With services extending the entire French Riviera and the South of France, Maxime Bernadin can tell a couple’s love story in the most beautiful way possible.
  • To learn more about Maxime Bernadin: Photographer, and his wedding photography services in the South of France, please visit the website at https://www.maximebernadin.com/en/ .