Russians vote in presidential election amid sporadic acts of protest

Russia began three days of voting Friday in a presidential election that is all but certain to extend President Vladimir Putin’s rule for six more years after he stifled dissent.

At least half a dozen cases of vandalism at polling stations were reported, including a firebombing and several people pouring green liquid into ballot boxes — an apparent nod to the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who in 2017 was attacked by an assailant splashing green disinfectant in his face.

Voting is taking place through Sunday at polling stations across the vast country’s 11 time zones, in illegally annexed regions of Ukraine and online. Putin cast his ballot online, according to the Kremlin.

The election comes against the backdrop of a ruthless crackdown that has crippled independent media and prominent rights groups and given Putin full control of the political system.

Read moreFive things to know about Russia’s upcoming presidential election

It also comes as Moscow’s war in Ukraine enters its third year. Russia has the advantage on the battlefield, where it is making small, if slow, gains. A Russian missile strike on the port city of Odesa killed at least 14 people on Friday, local officials said.

Ukraine, meanwhile, has made Moscow look vulnerable behind the front line with long-range drone attacks deep inside Russia and high-tech drone assaults that put its Black Sea fleet on the defensive.

Border clashes

Russian regions bordering Ukraine reported a spike in shelling and repeated attacks this week by Ukrainian forces, which Putin described Friday as an attempt to frighten residents and derail the vote.

“Those enemy strikes haven’t been and won’t be left unpunished,” he vowed at a meeting of his Security Council.

“I’m sure that our people, the people of Russia, will respond to that with even greater cohesion,” Putin said. “Whom did they decide to scare? The Russian people? It has never happened and it will never happen.”

Read more‘Noon against Putin’: A small gesture and a powerful symbol of Russia’s opposition

 

By the time polls closed Friday night at Russia’s westernmost region of Kaliningrad, more than a third of the country’s eligible voters had cast ballots in person and online, according to the Central Election Commission. Online voting, which began Friday morning, is available around the clock in Moscow and 28 other regions until 8 p.m. local time Sunday.

Officials said voting proceeded in an orderly fashion, but in St. Petersburg, a woman threw a Molotov cocktail on the roof of a school that houses a polling station, local news media reported. The deputy head of the Russian Central Election Commission said people poured green liquid into ballot boxes in five places, including Moscow.

News sites also reported on the Telegram messaging channel that a woman in Moscow set fire to a voting booth. Such acts are incredibly risky since interfering with elections is punishable by up to five years in prison.

The election holds little suspense since Putin, 71, is running for his fifth term virtually unchallenged. His political opponents are either in jail or in exile; Navalny, the fiercest of them, died in an Arctic penal colony last month. The three other candidates on the ballot are low-profile politicians from token opposition parties that support the Kremlin’s line.

‘No opposition. No freedom. No choice’

Observers have little to no expectation the election will be free and fair.

European Council President Charles Michel mordantly commented Friday on the vote’s preordained nature. “Would like to congratulate Vladimir Putin on his landslide victory in the elections starting today. No opposition. No freedom. No choice,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Beyond the few options for voters, the possibilities for independent monitoring are very limited.

No significant international observers were present. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s monitors were not invited, and only registered candidates or state-backed advisory bodies can assign observers to polling stations, decreasing the likelihood of independent watchdogs. With balloting over three days in nearly 100,000 polling stations, any true oversight is difficult anyway.

“The elections in Russia as a whole are a sham. The Kremlin controls who’s on the ballot. The Kremlin controls how they can campaign. To say nothing of being able to control every aspect of the voting and the vote-counting process,” said Sam Greene, director for Democratic Resilience at the Center for European Policy Analysis in Washington.

Ukraine and the West have also condemned Russia for holding the vote in Ukrainian regions that Moscow’s forces have seized and occupied.

In many ways, Ukraine is at the heart of this election, political analysts and opposition figures say. They say Putin wants to use his all-but-assured electoral victory as evidence that the war and his handling of it enjoys widespread support. The opposition, meanwhile, hopes to use the vote to demonstrate its discontent with both the war and the Kremlin.

Two anti-war politicians were banned from the ballot after attracting genuine — albeit not overwhelming — support, depriving the voters of any choice on the “main issue of Russia’s political agenda,” said political analyst Abbas Gallyamov, a former Putin speechwriter.

‘Most vapid’ campaign since 2000

Russia’s scattered opposition has urged those unhappy with Putin or the war to show up at the polls at noon on Sunday, the final day of voting, in protest. The strategy was endorsed by Navalny not long before his death.

“We need to use election day to show that we exist and there are many of us, we are actual, living, real people and we are against Putin. … What to do next is up to you. You can vote for any candidate except Putin. You could ruin your ballot,” his widow, Yulia Navalnaya, said.

How well this strategy will work remains unclear.

Golos, Russia’s renowned independent election observer group, said in a report this week that authorities were “doing everything so that the people don’t notice the very fact of the election happening.”

The watchdog described the campaign ahead of the vote as “practically unnoticeable” and “the most vapid” since 2000, when Golos was founded and started monitoring elections in Russia.

Putin’s campaigning was cloaked in presidential activities, and other candidates were “demonstrably passive,” the report said.

State media dedicated less airtime to the election than in 2018, when Putin was last elected, according to Golos. Instead of promoting the vote to ensure a desired turnout, authorities appear to be betting on pressuring voters they can control — for instance, Russians who work in state-run companies or institutions — to show up at the polls, the group said.

The watchdog itself has been swept up in the crackdown: Its co-chair, Grigory Melkonyants, is in jail awaiting trial on charges widely seen as an attempt to pressure the group ahead of the election.

“The current elections will not be able to reflect the real mood of the people,” Golos said in the report. “The distance between citizens and decision-making about the fate of the country has become greater than ever.”

(AP)

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Hubble Telescope spies stormy weather and a shrinking Great Red Spot on Jupiter (video)

The gas giant Jupiter steals the show in these two new portraits of the planet’s opposing faces, showing the swirling storms and tumultuous cloud bands blown by winds raging at hundreds of miles per hour.

The Hubble Space Telescope took these images on Jan. 5-6, 2024. Jupiter rotates once every 10 hours, Hubble was able to image one hemisphere with the famous Great Red Spot visible, and wait for the other hemisphere to come into view before imaging that.

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24 Excellent Film Adaptions of Books That Defined the 1980s | Wealth of Geeks

While the 1980s was a decade known for the birth of the last of Generation X and big-hair bands, it also produced some of the best reading material of the last 40 years.

Names like Stephen King, Jean M. Auel, Alvin Schwartz, Robert Ludlum, and Carl Sagan have turned these stunning literary works into movies or shows, with some authors having several titles pulled for the big or small screen.

But as any word nerd knows, a book is almost always better than its film, even if we like them both. There are some great book-film crossovers you might recognize, even if you’ve never read the book.

Warning: this article contains spoilers.

1. The Handmaid’s Tale (1985)

Image Credit: McClelland and Stewart Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood is a horrifying story about the rigors of life as a handmaid in the imaginary Republic of Gilead. You’ll follow the realities of Offred, a human baby machine. Valued for her ability to carry a child, she exists in limbo, caught effectively between the horror of her reality and the life she knew before coming to live with the Commander and his wife.

The eponymous novel inspired the television series, which began in 2017 and streamed on Hulu for five seasons, with a sixth and final season premiering in 2025. Based on the book, a film starring Robert Duvall, Faye Dunaway, Aidan Quinn, and Natasha Richardson was also made in 1990. Given its intense subject matter, the 1980s gave The Handmaid’s Tale the perfect setting to approach the issues of women’s rights, social and population control, and climate change.

2. Ender’s Game (1985)

Enders game 1985
Image Credit: Tor Books.

This novel by Orson Scott Card is a fast-paced, alien apocalypse, doomsday adventure you’ll stay up to read. If you want the big screen experience, you’ll enjoy meeting “Ender,” the last commander humankind will ever need.

Ender’s Game emerged in 2013 and stars Harrison Ford and Asa Butterfield as Ender. Mostly filmed from Ender’s point of view, you’ll get to experience the desperate attempt to save humanity. Ender, who thinks he’s taking his last test in Command School, is actually fighting the final battle in the Third Invasion.

While this book indeed centers on space with a science fiction flair, its military angle is so well-written that it’s considered suggested reading for many militaries around the globe, including the United States Marine Corps.

3. The Color Purple (1982)

The Color Purple 1982
Image Credit: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

Alice Walker had an epic year in the early 1980s. She published a book that would go on to see not one but two screen adaptations.

The 1985 film starred Whoopi Goldberg and Danny Glover, while Taraji P. Henson and Fantasia Barrino starred in the 2023 remake. “Sisters are forever.”

If there was ever a book that gave a voice to women of color, The Color Purple is that book. It is a defining read that brings women together in their fight for equality and empowerment. It also received praise for its well-written use of Black English vernacular.

4. Matilda (1988)

Matilda 1988
Image Credit: Jonathan Cape.

A master at writing children’s fiction, Roald Dahl penned Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and The BFG, but his 1988 hit Matilda helped define children’s literature in the 80s.

The book became a film in 1996 that starred Mara Wilson, Danny DeVito, Rhea Perlman, and Embeth Davidtz. This film is perfect for your children when you want peace and quiet on a rainy afternoon.

More than just a fun read for children, this book is one of the first to make reading and a love of books cool. Book nerds no longer have to stay confined to the library.

5. It (1986)

It 1986
Image Credit: Viking Press.

When Stephen King published Carrie in 1974, he began his journey to becoming known as “The King of Horror.” His horror-clown story, likely his most notable, was adapted into a mini-series in 1990, a film in 2017, and a second-chapter film in 2019.

While Charles Dickens is credited with creating the “scary clown,” Stephen King turned Pennywise (his creepy clown) into a money-making machine. With more than 300,000 copies sold, the book that inspired the highest-grossing film of King’s career is worth a read — unless you’re afraid of clowns.

While It is supremely horrifying in a way only King can manage in the written word, it has themes that every adult can relate to: the age-old loss of innocence, relatable events that make children grow up too fast, and childhood trauma. It also embodies that timeless, sometimes generational fear of clowns.

6. The Joy Luck Club (1989)

The Joy Luck Club 1989
Image Credit: G. P. Putnam’s Sons.

Penned by Amy Tan in 1989, this beautiful portrayal of the bond between mothers and their daughters became a smash hit on the big screen in 1993, grossing three times its budget in box-office payout.

The novel follows four women who leave their homeland to offer a better future to their daughters in America. While each girl grows up believing her mother doesn’t understand her, they discover more in common with their matriarchal counterparts than they bargained for.

Sometimes, it’s what the author doesn’t put in their book that makes it exceptional. While The Joy Luck Club has notes that are autobiographical for Tan, her ability to laugh at herself and her book makes it all the more endearing and explains why a book such as this is required reading in many U.S. high schools.

7. Love in the Time of Cholera (1985)

Love in the Time of Cholera (1985)
Image Credit: Editorial Oveja Negra.

How long would you wait for love? A young couple answers this question as time and circumstance test their love repeatedly. Written by Gabriel García Márquez in 1985, this epic love story has elements of real-life decisions we make for all the right and wrong reasons.

Meet Florentino and Fermina. When Fermina chooses to marry to please her family, Florentino must wait fifty-one years, nine months, and four days to love her again. It’s one of the greatest love stories ever to be put to paper or film. The 2007 movie adaptation stars Javier Bardem, Giovanna Mezzogiorno, and Benjamin Bratt.

Love in the Time of Cholera takes a heartwarming look at the depths people will go through to find fulfillment. In this beautiful tale, Márquez examines human elements like love, longing, fulfillment, and death with a flair of experience that shines through on the page.

8. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, Life, the Universe and Everything, and So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish (1980-1984)

Hitch-hikers guide books
Image Credit: Pan Books, UK; Harmony Books, US.

Douglas Adams wrote like a crazy man in the 80s, publishing three novels in his hilarious and entertaining The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy series, named after the first book in the six-book set. Books two, three, and four all came out by 1984, and it was one of the best space-adventure stories ever to grace the big screen.

The series turned into The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy film in 2005, in which you meet Arthur, a stranded Earthling, Zaphod Beeblebrox, and a depressed robot named Marvin.

Noted for its easy humor and cast of unique characters, these three installments of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy were the bulk of Adams’s work on the series. He added Mostly Harmless in 1992 before his untimely death in 2001. The last book, And Another Thing, was authored by Eoin Colfer, author of the notable Artemis Fowl (2009).

9. Howl’s Moving Castle (1986)

Howl's Moving Castle
Image Credit: Greenwillow Books.

Published in 1986 by British author Diana Wynne Jones, Howl’s Moving Castle is the first in a trilogy of tales about a mystical wizard and his moving castle, Calcifer.

You’ll meet Sophie, a young woman whose only hope lies in finding Howl’s moving castle and the Witch of Waste, who destines Sophie to a miserable curse that only Howl can help her heal. The Japanese studio, Studio Ghibli, animated the story for all to enjoy in 2004.

While the movie and book are vastly different in many ways, the bones of each — those masterful story arcs — remain intact. In each telling, Howl learns to stand in the face of his biggest fears, and Sophie gains the confidence to be herself, no matter who she turns out to be. These lessons resonate and reach each reader where they are.

10. Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe (1987)

Fried Green Tomatoes and the Whistle Stop Cafe
Image Credit: Random House.

Adapted into the film Fried Green Tomatoes in 1991, the novel by author Fannie Flagg, first published in 1987, is an endearing story of love, loss, and the power of friendship.

Starring Kathy Bates, Mary Stuart Masterson, Mary-Louise Parker, Jessica Tandy, and Cicely Tyson, the story will stay long after you turn the last page.

While many Gen Xers and millennials may have seen the film, reading the book is a different tale altogether. In the movie, the director and producer shied away from explicitly calling Ruth and Idgie (the main characters) lesbians or inferring that they were in a romantic relationship. However, the book doesn’t avoid the distinction. For many who might rewatch the movie or pick up a copy of the book, it is an affirmation that came well before its time and speaks to the beautiful way LGBTQ+ community support shone through before a community existed.

11. Misery (1987)

Misery
Image Credit: Viking Press.

Another Kathy Bates special, Misery comes to us from the King of Horror himself, Stephen King. Published in 1987, Misery follows the recovery of author Paul Sheldon as Annie Wilkes cares for him after an automobile accident. Wilkes, who is self-described as Sheldon’s number one fan, demonstrates why changing the ending to his signature novel would undoubtedly be in his best interest. The master of fright wrote several memorable titles in the 80s we still love today. Misery is just one of them. It was adapted into a film in 1990 and remains a favorite for fans of King’s work.

During the 80s, Stephen King struggled with a drug and alcohol addiction, and for him, the main character in his Misery novel exhibited that addiction. “Annie was my drug problem, and she was my number one fan. God, she never wanted to leave,” King told The Paris Review. His drug issue also caused him to have almost no memory of another of his famous works, Cujo. In his memoir On Writing, he says it’s a novel, “I barely remember writing at all.” The struggle was intense for King, requiring intervention from his family and friends. However, in the late 80s, he was able to get clean and stay sober.

Seeing Annie Wilkes in relation to King’s addiction gives a new angle to this must-read for new and old King fans and lends itself to opening a window into how King created such a disturbed woman as Annie Wilkes.

12. Lonesome Dove (1985)

Lonesome Dove
Image Credit: Simon & Schuster.

Published in 1985 and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for literature, Larry McMurtry’s Lonesome Dove was turned into one of the most memorable mini-series to hit television in recent history. An all-star cast including Robert Duvall, Diane Lane, Tommy Lee Jones, Ricky Schroder, D.B. Sweeney, Danny Glover, and Robert Urich made the story as memorable onscreen as it is in paperback.

If you could experience the breadth of human emotion in one telling, it’d be Lonesome Dove. One review praises, “Richly authentic, beautifully written, always dramatic, Lonesome Dove is a book to make us laugh, weep, dream, and remember.”

13. The Silence of the Lambs (1988)

The Silence of the Lambs
Image Credit: St. Martin’s Press.

Thomas Harris wrote one of the creepiest characters to ever grace the written page when he published The Silence of the Lambs in 1988. Psychologically riveting, Clarice Starling and Dr. Hannibal Lecter fill the time as Clarice tries to catch a serial killer by getting to know one with a penchant for eating his victims.

The film adaptation was released in 1991 and starred Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster. To this day, it is one of the most-watched psychological horror thrillers and one you should add to your must-watch list.

Only one book has ever been the basis of a horror film that won an Oscar for Best Picture; shockingly, it isn’t one of Stephen King’s works. The Silence of the Lambs won the Oscar in 1992 and delivered Best Actor Oscars to both Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins. Imagine how much better the book is if the film grabbed three Oscar nods.

14. The Cider House Rules (1985)

Cider House Rules
Image Credit: William Morrow.

First drafted by John Irving, the novel The Cider House Rules was published in 1985. Inside its pages, you’ll meet Homer Wells, a bright, searching soul with a tender heart and a seeking mind.

When allowed to travel with a young couple, he jumps to see what’s beyond the orphanage where he grew up and discovers a life he never imagined. The film, released in 1999, starred Charlize Theron, Tobey Maguire, Michael Caine, and Paul Rudd.

In a man vs. himself internal conflict, The Cider House Rules explores the nature of humanity’s disposition in a world fallen from grace and the consequences that follow. It touches on innocence, adventure, finding oneself, and coming full circle to end up where you started.

15. Pet Sematary (1983)

Pet Sematary
Image Credit: Doubleday.

They don’t call Stephen King The King of Horror because he writes about daisies. His stories are powerfully moving and poignantly creepy and stay with you long after you’ve finished the book. Drawn from a real-life experience involving his son, Owen, King wouldn’t publish the book for several months because he found it too disturbing.

To this day, it is one of his nastiest books. Two adaptations of the original tale have been seen, one in 1989 and the other in 2019, with a sequel titled Pet Sematary 2.

While death is a topic many authors steer clear of, King embraces it in all its horror. Despite King’s reluctance to publish Pet Sematary, this all-too-real tale of mystery, intrigue, unbearable grief, and exploring what happens after we die remains a must-read for horror fans and anyone who likes examining spiritual matters.

16. V for Vendetta (1990)

V for Vendetta
Image Credit: DC Comics Vertigo.

Alan Moore penned a dystopian future where the rule of law rules all. Its 2005 movie adaptation gives a sense of fullness to Moore’s story. “Remember, remember the 5th of November…” echoes through the pages as a renegade vigilante, appropriately named V, encourages citizens to revolt by joining him. V’s last message to Creedy is the simple truth, “Ideas are bulletproof.” Will you join the revolution?

Sometimes, it’s a second or third reading of a book that cements the author’s work in a reader’s heart or mind. V for Vendetta explores themes of freedom in a hyper-controlled world and, while certainly not the first or last to do so, reaches readers for its stark contrast between V and the entities that seek to squeeze freedom until it surrenders. Like 1984 by George Orwell, it offers a look at what the world might look like without innate freedoms like those the Constitution protects in America.

17. A Time to Kill (1989)

A time to kill
Image Credit: Wynwood Press.

In a time when race still segregates and justice is anything but blind, a lawyer seeks grace and mercy for the father of a young girl who is assaulted, beaten, and left in a river. When the man hears that the two men who hurt his daughter may walk on their charges, he takes justice into his own hands, inadvertently injuring a deputy in the process.

Through the power of imagination, the lawyer helps an all-white jury understand the depths of a father’s love for his child without color getting in the way. After an acquittal, the father and the lawyer celebrate a successful result. The 1996 film based on the novel stars heavy hitters like Samuel L. Jackson, Sandra Bullock, Matthew McConaughey, Kevin Spacey, and Brenda Fricker.

Because of the heavy adult-centered scenarios in this book, John Grisham saw several rejections before a publisher gave it a modest 5,000 copy printing. However, it led to other bestsellers like The Firm, The Pelican Brief, and The Client, which some libraries banned for objections over their content. Law-based thrillers that discuss real-life issues are some of the best reads, and while A Time to Kill isn’t Grisham’s breakout novel, it is still an excellent read. This is largely because of Grisham’s time as a lawyer before he became a published author. After the success of his other novels, A Time to Kill also became a bestseller.

18. The Hunt for Red October (1984)

The hunt for read october
Image Credit: Naval Institute Press.

Tom Clancy’s The Hunt for Red October went to print in 1984 and became one of the best pieces of fiction concerning military might ever to become a novel. When a Soviet commander starts charging west with a state-of-the-art sub loaded with missiles, Washington goes on high alert. America wants that sub, and Russia wants it back, but only the commander knows his true intentions. The film came out in 1990, starring the likes of Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin, James Earl Jones, Scott Glenn, and Sam Neill.

When The Hunt for Red October hit shelves, it well outperformed the expectations of Naval Institute Press, its publisher. It also cemented Tom Clancy as an author who knows how to depict war-time strategy and all the feelings that go with it. To this day, it’s considered one of the best depictions of Cold War era feelings and is a must-read for anyone interested in naval warfare, war-time strategy, or Clancy fans who haven’t read the book yet.

19. Contact (1985)

Contact
Image Credit: Simon and Schuster.

In 1985, Pulitzer Prize winner Carl Sagan penned a beautiful tale of communication between extraterrestrial beings and Ellie Arroway, a young astronomer. When Ellie joins the “Argus” space-listening program, she’s keen to pick up any abnormal signal and eventually finds a message that ignites a firestorm of military and government secrecy.

After discovering plans for a vehicle that seemingly allows people to travel into space, she’s given clearance to contact the beings who sent the message. Starring Matthew McConaughey, Jodie Foster, James Woods, John Hurt, Tom Skerritt, and Angela Bassett, the 1997 film brings Sagan’s story to life for the big screen.

Contact is a must-read for science nerds, novices, and anyone interested in extraterrestrial occurrences. Carl Sagan does a masterful job of building a believable encounter between Ellie and beings beyond our world. Her experience is one you can completely understand and envision for yourself. It’s emotional, hopeful, and bittersweet all at once.

20. The Bourne Identity (1980)

The Bourne Identity
Image Credit: Richard Marek.

If there were ever a case of dangerous amnesia, Jason Bourne’s issue in The Bourne Identity would be it. Written by Robert Ludlum in 1980, this action-packed story takes you into the mind of a trained assassin and never lets you go. The 2002 movie, based on the novel, stars Matt Damon, Franka Potente, Julia Stiles, Chris Cooper, Clive Owen, Brian Cox, and Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje.

Interestingly, this isn’t the first adaptation of the novel. In 1988, Richard Chamberlain played Jason Bourne, although the film is a bit different, considering Chamberlain was 54 years old at the time. Even though plenty of actors went through the selection process, Bourne came alive in Matt Damon’s action-packed performance.

Fast-paced, high-energy, and just plain fun, The Bourne Identity gives you a new appreciation for the job professional assassins acquire when trained and hired by world governments. Whether or not they exist in real life is a guess. Imagine waking up without a memory of who you are, where you are, or what you did just 24 hours before. Now add in expert-level martial arts knowledge, knowing how and where to find specific information, and trained killers on your trail and you can imagine the adrenaline rush you’d feel. The movie is excellent; the book is even better.

21. Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (1981)

Scary Stories to tell in the dark
Image Credit: Harper & Row.

Everyone loves a good haunted house on Halloween, but you’d better know what you’re doing when you take something home. Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark came out in 1981 from Alvin Schwartz and crept onto big screens in 2019. The story follows a young woman named Sarah Bellows, whose family tortured into believing horrid things about herself.

Her revenge was writing scary stories about those who tormented her. When a girl takes the book from Sarah’s home and asks Sarah to tell her a story, the girl’s friends start to disappear one by one. I saw this film recently, and you can pick your poison, but my money’s on the sickly smile of the dough girl who slowly makes her way to you and hugs you until her pasty flesh engulfs you.

While some horror stories grip you by the collar and don’t let go until the end, Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark slowly immerses you into a world filled with horrifically fantastic stories. It sends you down the rabbit hole with little hope of ever coming back up for air. For horror fans who want something a little slower-paced or a story you can chop up into bits for slower digestion, this book will fulfill all your slow-simmering horror needs.

22. Sarah, Plain and Tall (1985)

Sarah plain and tall
Image Credit: Harper & Row.

First released in 1985, Sarah, Plain and Tall is a story about the pain of loss and the beauty of love as a man cares for his two children after his wife’s death. Knowing his children need a mother, he advertises for a wife, and Sarah Elisabeth Wheaton answers his call.

While not expecting love, Sarah keeps pushing the man and his children to mourn for the wife and mother they lost and overcome all obstacles, finally finding her place in this beautifully broken family. The adaptation of Patricia MacLachlan’s tale stars Glenn Close and Christopher Walken.

This beautiful story embraces the unknown by showing the reader that love can grow anywhere, even when the soil is hard, rocky, and dry from being unattended. When Sarah first appears, Anna and Caleb, who are motherless, can’t help but wonder what she’ll be like. Through the eyes of a child, you’ll experience the slow blossoming of love that chases away all those childhood fears, soothes tiny souls, and embraces the hope and possibility of the future.

23. The Polar Express (1985)

The Polar Express
Image Credit: Houghton Mifflin.

From the author of Jumanji (1981) comes a tale of a mysterious train and a boy who wonders if it’s still worth believing in Christmas. When the boy arrives at the North Pole, Santa grants him one gift: a bell from the harness on the reindeer.

On Christmas morning, his mother laments that the bell doesn’t make a sound, but the boy realizes that only true believers can hear the sound. The 2004 animated film stars Tom Hanks, Daryl Sabara, Nona Gaye, Jimmy Bennett, and Eddie Deezen.

As all children do, we grow up, and the magic of believing in Santa Claus gets lost to adult aspirations. For one boy on the cusp of that change, a ride on the Polar Express offers a choice to continue believing in the magic and spirit of Christmas. Fun, engaging, and delivering that same whimsical choice to every reader, the book is an invitation to re-embrace that playful, fun-loving spirit that goes beyond Christmas to touch every season of life.

24. Firestarter (1980)

Fire Starter
Image Credit: Viking Press.

1980 saw another brilliant turnout from Stephen King. Firestarter tells the tale of a young girl named Charlie McGee who can start fires with just her mind. Unfortunately, that makes her a target for many people with many different motives.

Charlie wants to be like everyone else, but her ability doesn’t allow normalcy. The book’s first successful 1984 film version stars a young Drew Barrymore as Charlie. The newer adaptation in 2022 takes a twist on the tale as Charlie’s parents (Zac Efron and Sydney Lemmon) try to help her control her ability.

In 1980, interest in paranormal activities and abilities surged. With books like Firestarter that explored what a world government might do to weaponize someone with the ability to start fires with their mind, the paranormal became accessible in ways it hadn’t been before. Even with the 1984 movie adaptation, the book remains a worthwhile read, especially for fans of King’s work.

Lucky Ones

If you’ve ever read a book, seen the film adaptation, and loved them both, you’re among the lucky ones. These 80s books have turned into some of the best films you’ll find on their subjects and offer a peek into the creative license that can take a book on a whole new journey.

Many of these titles even gave some of your favorite modern actors roles they will certainly be remembered for. While other great books came to print during the 1980s, these titles shine for their grit, humor, and easy horror. One even encapsulates the spirit of Christmas in a tale children can love even as adults.

I’m also betting that even if you haven’t read all the novels that inspired these movies, you’ve seen at least one of the films on this list.

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Russia Hits Odesa After Ukraine Targets Oil Plant Near Moscow

Russia hit the Black Sea port of Odesa on Friday in a deadly missile attack, hours after Ukrainian drones targeted a small petrochemical plant near the Moscow region without causing serious damage, the latest in a series of attacks on Russia’s oil industry.

The strikes on the city in southern Ukraine killed 14 people and injured at least 46 on Friday morning, regional Governor Oleg Kiper said. Among those who died when a second missile hit were a rescue worker and a doctor who’d arrived to help people injured in an earlier explosion, he said.

In the past weeks, Russia has stepped up attacks on Odesa, a key port for grain and commodity exports, hitting it almost daily with drones or missiles. 

Ukraine has unleashed a flurry of attacks on Russia’s oil processing facilities this week, ahead of elections that will hand Vladimir Putin a fifth presidential term. Officials in Kyiv have said the intent is to damage a key industry that provides revenue for Russia’s war and to disrupt domestic fuel supplies.

Four Ukrainian drones were downed in the Dzerzhinsk district of Russia’s Kaluga region overnight, according to local governor Vladislav Shapsha. Russia’s air defense forces shot one of them, while the other three were downed by the electronic warfare system, he said. Kaluga borders the Moscow region to the southwest.

“Two of them fell on the territory of a plant, and one exploded above it, without causing serious damage to it,” the governor said in a Telegram post. “The facility continues to operate.” 

In an earlier post, he said there were no casualties. 

The Perviy Zavod facility, located in the Dzerzhinsk district of the Kaluga region, has an annual processing capacity of 1.2 million tons, or about 24,000 barrels a day, according to its website. There were no official statements on any damage at the facility, and the plant didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The drones were targeting a refinery in that region, according to a Ukrainian military intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity. 

Two years after the invasion of Ukraine, many in Russia have reason to feel the wartime economy is working well — just as Putin is about to win a fifth term

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Photo Shows 1924 KKK March in Wisconsin, Not Democratic Convention in NYC – FactCheck.org

Para leer en español, vea esta traducción de Google Translate.

Quick Take

The Ku Klux Klan caused a divisive Democratic National Convention in 1924 but failed to nominate its preferred candidate. A social media post shows a photo of a Klan march to falsely claim it depicts Democratic delegates at the convention in New York. But the photo is from a Klan funeral march later that year in Wisconsin.


Full Story

Democrats and Republicans have criticized each other for years with claims about ties to or support for the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacist groups, as we’ve previously written.

Historians say the Klan — which was founded after the Civil War and had a resurgence in the 1920s — has sought to achieve power through both parties. The organization ignited a particularly divisive Democratic National Convention in July 1924 in New York City, when the Klan-backed candidate failed to capture the party’s nomination.

A century later, amid another election season, a social media post mislabels an archival photo to misleadingly portray the participants at that Democratic convention.

An Instagram post on March 13 shows a march of Ku Klux Klan members in their white hoods and robes, with text that claims it is an “AUTHENTIC PHOTO OF THE 1924 NATIONAL DEMOCRAT CONVENTION.” The text on the photo also says, “MAKE SENSE NOW?”

The post has received more than 9,200 likes. One commenter wrote, in part: “The Democrats have NEVER voted in the history of America to make life easier for blacks. Only the Republicans have done that.” 

But Linda Gordon, a history professor at New York University, told us in an email that the image in the Instagram post “is not a photo of the [D]emocratic convention” of 1924.

Rather, the photo is from the archive of the Wisconsin Historical Society and actually shows Klan members in December 1924, in Madison, Wisconsin, said Gordon, the author of “The Second Coming of the KKK: The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American Political Tradition.”

The Wisconsin archive describes the photo as “Ku Klux Klan (KKK) wearing iconic masks and white robes parading down King Street to Schroeder Funeral Home for the funeral of Police officer Herbert Dreger.”

Reuters debunked similar posts in 2020 and noted that the false description of the photo has circulated on social media since 2015.

Gordon told Reuters that the Klan’s efforts to influence politics in the 1920s was “pretty much equally divided between Democrats and Republicans.” 

‘A Powerful Force’ in Both Parties

Felix Harcourt, associate professor of history at Austin College in Texas, told us in an email that the Klan was “a powerful force” in the Democratic Party in the 1920s and at the 1924 convention, where there was also strong opposition to the Klan.

“The Klan lobbied furiously to prevent the party from endorsing a platform plank that would condemn the group by name. The organization’s leaders played an influential role in denying Al Smith, the Catholic governor of New York, the Democratic nomination during the contested convention,” said Harcourt, whose research focuses on the Klan’s political power.

The effort to include a platform statement condemning the Klan at the Democratic convention failed. But the Klan’s preferred candidate, William G. McAdoo, did not capture the nomination, which went to John C. Davis on the 103rd ballot.

“At the same time, the Klan was highly opportunistic, with little partisan attachment beyond what served the organization and its bigoted goals,” Harcourt said. “So, the Klan wasn’t just a powerful force in the Democratic Party — it was a powerful force in politics more broadly. It was lobbying Democratic leaders at their 1924 convention. It was also lobbying leaders during the Republican convention in 1924, albeit in a less visible way since the nomination wasn’t really contested and there was no similar effort to put forward a plank denouncing the Klan by name.”

“Eventually, almost everyone running in the presidential election that year denounced the Klan by name, with the exception of Calvin Coolidge, who farmed the responsibility out to his vice presidential nominee, Charles Dawes. And the Klan’s national leadership in turn backed (in a limited way) Coolidge,” Harcourt said.

Coolidge, the Republican incumbent, won reelection in 1924.

“The Klan’s national leadership then very vocally and actively backed Republican Herbert Hoover against Democrat Al Smith in 1928,” Harcourt said. Hoover easily defeated Smith.

In recent years, Harcourt also said, “that opportunism — of the Klan and of the broad panoply of white nationalist groups that have come to largely replace the Klan — has often remained in place. The most prominent example, of course, is David Duke, who has run for office as both a Democrat and a Republican and who has endorsed both Democratic and Republican politicians.”


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org is one of several organizations working with Facebook to debunk misinformation shared on social media. Our previous stories can be found here. Facebook has no control over our editorial content.

Sources

Britannica. “United States presidential election of 1924.” Accessed 15 Mar 2024.

Farley, Robert. “Trump Has Condemned White Supremacists.” FactCheck.org. 11 Feb 2020.

Fichera, Angelo. “Anti-Biden Ad Misleads on Race Claims.” FactCheck.org. 23 Jul 2020.

Fichera, Angelo. “Image Altered to Show KKK Members with Trump Sign.” 3 Mar 2020.

Gordon, Linda. Professor emerita of history, New York University. Email to FactCheck.org. 14 Mar 2024.

Gordon, Linda. “The Second Coming of the KKK: The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American Political Tradition.” W.W. Norton. October 2017.

Hamilton, David. “Herbert Hoover: Campaigns and Elections.” University of Virginia, Miller Center. Accessed 15 Mar 2024.

Harcourt, Felix. Associate professor of history, Austin College. Email to FactCheck.org. 14 Mar 2024.

National Geographic. “The Ku Klux Klan.” education.nationalgeographic.org. Accessed 15 Mar 2024.

Pietrusza, David. “The Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s.” Bill of Rights Institute. Accessed 15 Mar 2024.

Reuters. “Fact check: Photograph shows 1924 KKK parade not DNC.” 6 Jul 2020.

Shafer, Jack. “1924: The Wildest Convention in U.S. History.” Politico. 7 Mar 2016.

The American Presidency Project. 1924 Democratic Party Platform. 24 Jun 1924.

Wisconsin Historical Society. “Ku Klux Klan Parade.” 5 Dec 1924.



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25 Best Sports Broadcasters of All Time | Wealth of Geeks

Broadcasting a sporting event is one of those jobs that’s more important than most people make it out to be. Announcers ingrain themselves in the event in a way that ties their voice and spirit to the biggest iconic moments in history.

Great sports broadcasters know when to yell and when to shut up and let the athletes’ play do the talking. From national broadcasters to local legends, these incredible media members paint a picture of what’s happening on the field.

1. Al Michaels

Al Michaels
Image Credit: Shutterstock.

Al Michaels’ voice sounds like a sage grandfather’s, a kind soul who’s telling tales by the campfire. Michaels knows how to hype up a game, when to let his color commentator speak, and how to always say the perfect thing at the ideal time in a broadcast.

Football fans will always cherish Michaels’ commentary. His best years were spent on NBC alongside Cris Collinsworth on Sunday Night Football. Michaels and Collinsworth created a really easy rapport that was hard for other networks to emulate.

2. Marv Albert

Reggie Miller and Marv Albert
Image Credit: Keith Allison – CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons.

Marv Albert got the benefit of announcing most of Michael Jordan’s NBA Finals wins, but New Yorkers knew how special he was back during the 1970s. Albert’s signature “Yes!” was honed on Knicks broadcasts for decades.

Albert’s simplicity and radio-style voice easily translated to television and helped make him the best basketball announcer of all time. Even after he was past his prime, Albert’s announcing felt like a needed part of NBA on TNT telecasts.

3. Vin Scully

Vin Scully at Tournament of Roses Grand Marshal announcement
Image Credit: Floatjon – Own work – CC BY-SA 3.0/Wiki Commons.

Vin Scully might be the only local broadcaster who became just as famous as a national one. Scully’s time with the Los Angeles Dodgers made every baseball game feel special in Southern California.

Scully’s stories about baseball history and his own life during boring games made even the most uninspired inning brighter. He never made himself bigger than the baseball players, though, managing to mix anecdotes with the on-field action in a beautifully eloquent style.

4. John Madden

U.S. Senator Susan Collins and coach John Madden
Image Credit: Wiki Commons.

John Madden’s brilliant understanding of football revolutionized the way color commentators broadcasted games. Madden would draw on the telestrator with keen insights about the game before saying something hilarious to disarm the audience.

Most football fans came to know him as the namesake for the Madden video game series. There’s a huge reason he received such an honor: not many football people could commentate and entertain simultaneously like John Madden.

5. Howard Cosell

Howard Cosell
Image Credit: Gotfryd, Bernard – Public Domain/Wiki Commons.

Howard Cosell is credited with turning sports broadcasters into celebrities. Cosell mainly announced football and boxing, and his authenticity behind the microphone showed that he understood his influence on the events he was narrating.

Cosell was one of the original broadcasters for Monday Night Football. This role blazed a trail that was hard for future commentators to follow. Cosell’s pioneering skills on the microphone would surely still resonate with modern audiences today.

6. Jim McKay

Jim McKay
Image Credit: ABC Television/Wiki Commons.

Jim McKay’s broadcasting made sports for every fan feel like friends in a coffee shop sharing a mocha. McKay’s constant presence on ABC allowed several different generations of viewers to tune in for Wide World of Sports.

McKay kept the focus on the athletes and didn’t overtalk, a skill that allowed him to masterfully maneuver tragic situations in real time. He was the calming voice everyone needed when the Black September terrorist group committed an attack during the 1972 Olympics.

7. Charles Barkley

Charles Barkley
Image Credit: Chensiyuan – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons.

Charles Barkley’s outspoken, unfiltered analysis of the NBA became appointment viewing two decades ago and remains an unforgettable part of basketball viewing today. The NBA on TNT‘s Inside the NBA incorporates the audience into the show with fun banter and chaotic mirth.

Sir Charles is just as likely to make fun of a fan’s weight as he is to describe a pick and roll, but it’s this unique approach that makes him legendary. No matter how many fans might get sick of Barkley’s biased analysis, he doesn’t know how to satisfy anybody but himself!

8. Jack Buck

Jack Buck
Image Credit: majorvols – flickr – CC BY 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Jack Buck may be known more for being Joe Buck’s father nowadays, but his MLB announcing during the 1960s through the 1980s gave fans some of the best broadcasting ever. Buck punctuated many of the St. Louis Cardinals’ best moments!

On a national level, Buck elevated his announcing to reach wider audiences during the World Series. Unlike his son, Jack Buck really understood how to heighten a moment in history, like when Kirk Gibson hit a walk-off home run in the 1988 World Series.

9. Chick Hearn

Chick Hearn
Image Credit: The Pat McDermott Company – Public Domain/Wiki Commons.

Chick Hearn is responsible for many of the most famous sayings in basketball, from inventing the term “finger roll” to calling the free throw line the “charity stripe.” He lent his voice to every incredible Los Angeles Lakers moment for over 40 years.

Hearn received so much appreciation from the Lakers and their fans that supporters of the team can visit a statue of him in front of the Crypto.com Arena. He was embedded in the fabric of the city, but he always kept a distance from the action on the court.

10. Johnny Most

Mayor Raymond L. Flynn, Bernard Cardinal Law, and Johnny Most
Image Credit: City of Boston Archives from West Roxbury – CC BY 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Johnny Most blurred the line between fan and broadcaster while announcing Boston Celtics games, but New Englanders certainly appreciated his love for the franchise. His raspy voice and biased commentating sucked viewers in and created the illusion of a crazy uncle announcing the games!

Most’s passion was always on full display, most famously after John Havlicek cinched the 1965 Eastern Division Finals. Most couldn’t contain himself, simply screaming, “Havlicek stole the ball!” Sometimes, the best call is an authentic blaring of emotions.

11. Keith Jackson

Keith Jackson college football broadcaster
Image Credit: Shutterstock.

Keith Jackson’s college football broadcasting is as ingrained in the minds of fans of the sport as any touchdown or fumble. Jackson’s voice added a classic element to games that heightened the moment but didn’t overwhelm the fans.

Outside of college football, Jackson tried his hand at NBA basketball and Major League Baseball. Older viewers of these sports might remember his voice as a fleeting background track to games from the 1970s.

12. Jim Nantz

Jim Nantz
Image Credit: Dan Perry – CC BY 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Jim Nantz is the type of announcer who just does his job, acts like a professional, and litters the sports world with great calls. Nantz has been a fixture of college basketball, NFL football, and PGA golf since the 1990s.

Pairing him with Tony Romo has been a stroke of genius on CBS. Nantz sometimes has to reel Romo’s excitement in with a calming phrase of a rebuttal, showing the pair’s entertaining chemistry.

13. Don Cherry

Don Cherry from Hockey Night in Canada, Tony Daniels, voice of CBC, at CBC Winter launch
Image Credit: Jeremy Gilbert – Flickr – CC BY 2.0/Wiki Commons.

What made Don Cherry’s commentating career flourish also put it out for good. Cherry makes claims that are more funny than factual, and while this works with ice hockey, it doesn’t when talking about world issues.

Still, Cherry’s legacy remains as one of the sport’s most entertaining media members. His wardrobe represented a walking dress code violation but in a good way! Hockey often needs a little more flair.

14. Chris Berman

Chris Berman
Image Credit: Kenneth C. Zirkel – Own work – CC BY-SA 3.0/Wiki Commons.

Chris Berman’s Sunday night highlight montages were as synonymous with football season as the changing color of the leaves on an autumn day. He often punctuates a touchdown run with his iconic “He could go all the way!” phrasing.

Berman also executes interview segments well by engaging with players and centering them rather than himself. He combined his wit with Tom Jackson to make ESPN a great place for football highlights.

15. Stuart Scott

Stuart Scott
Image Credit: Shutterstock.

Stuart Scott’s bold commentary on ESPN opened the doors for so many other Black announcers in the decades after his hiring. Scott was always as cool as the other side of the pillow and felt like one of the guys you’d enjoy a beer with during a game.

Scott’s shocking death from cancer in 2015 resulted in fans celebrating his enormous legacy in the broadcasting world. His ESPY Awards speech shortly before his passing demonstrated his courage and candor.

16. Ernie Johnson

TBS broadcasters Cal Ripken, Jr. and Ernie Johnson, Jr.
Image Credit: Keith Allison – CC BY-SA 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Ernie Johnson has one of the toughest jobs in sports broadcasting. Ensuring Shaquille O’Neal, Kenny Smith, and Charles Barkley don’t get too absurd on Inside the NBA would make many hosts anxious, but Elevator Ernie is often the coolest person on the set!

Johnson doesn’t roll over and let the energy of his analysts overwhelm him or the viewer, and his candor when sharing his personal life connects viewers to his kindness.

17. Scott Van Pelt

ESPN analysts Scott Van Pelt, from left, Brian Griese, Mark May and Kirk Herbstreit
Image Credit: Daniel Hartwig – CC BY 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Scott Van Pelt has survived the era of hot takes on ESPN to create a measured, insightful postgame show each evening as one of SportsCenter’s best anchors. The network’s decision to give Van Pelt a solo hour with no other host demonstrates their trust in him.

Van Pelt never has to say something outlandish or resort to cheap tactics for views. He tries to give an equal spotlight to every team and player even when other ESPN commentators don’t do the same.

18. Chris Fowler

Chris Fowler
Image Credit: Neon Tommy – CC BY-SA 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Chris Fowler’s wildly different sports of expertise (college football and tennis) demonstrate his talent. He continues to get promotions deep into his ESPN career, which started in 1986.

Fowler’s understanding of the rules, different players’ careers, and dedication to each event he broadcasts make him one of the most underrated in the world. Anytime ESPN needs a host for a random event like the X-Games or a documentary series on ESPN Classic, Fowler often gets tabbed for the job.

19. Mike Breen

Mike Breen
Image Credit: Shutterstock.

Mike Breen has broadcasted the NBA Finals for nearly 20 seasons in a row and, in the process, has tied his voice to some of the best players in basketball history. Breen’s iconic “BANG!” call after a big three-point shot changed the way fans think of huge game-winners in the playoffs.

For over a decade, Breen paired with Jeff Van Gundy and Mark Jackson on ESPN broadcasts. With the network going in a different direction with color commentators, Breen symbolizes a stable presence in the booth.

20. Kevin Harlan

Kevin Harlan, Sports Broadcaster
Image Credit: NFL.

Kevin Harlan’s enthusiastic nature might not jive with every sports fan, but he can make even the most boring sporting event entertaining. A sports announcer’s main job is to affirm the importance of what’s happening on the field, and nobody respects these big moments like Harlan.

Harlan not only yells louder than the action on the field, but his palpable energy seeps through the screen. He works equally well in football and basketball.

21. Brent Musburger

Brent Musburger
Image Credit: RD W – CC BY 2.0/Wiki Commons.

Brent Musburger’s commentary always makes football and basketball better, even when he’s making slightly over-the-top thirst comments about players’ girlfriends. Musburger’s honesty and easy tone possessed a nostalgic twinge even back before his career was decades long.

Musburger possesses one of the most versatile resumes in sports broadcasting. He used to announce NBA basketball before moving almost exclusively to college football in his senior years.

22. Bob Costas

Bob Costas
Image Credit: Shutterstock.

Bob Costas has become underrated in a way, probably because so many people detest his wordy monologues during games. Costas handles a variety of sports well, such as basketball, baseball, and the Olympics.

Fans never know when Costas is going to flat-out roast a player with an unhinged comment about their abilities! His monotonous, blunt delivery can either elicit a laugh or a groan, depending on the viewer.

23. John McEnroe

John McEnroe
Image Credit: Shutterstock.

John McEnroe was always meant to be a broadcaster after a career on the tennis court where he ran his mouth as much as he hit service aces. McEnroe gives surprisingly stable analysis and even sometimes pokes fun at his temper.

He combines with Chris Fowler on ESPN to foster a fun, exciting broadcast of tournaments like the Australian Open and U.S. Open. McEnroe continues to represent American tennis with his version of journalistic integrity.

24. Kevin Calabro

Seattle SuperSonics, basketball team
Image Credit: Håkan Dahlström – CC BY 2.0/Fair use/Wiki Commons.

Kevin Calabro currently broadcasts basketball games for the Portland Trail Blazers, but his time with the Seattle SuperSonics is where he formed his legend. Calabro’s intensity and passion behind the microphone paired insanely well with the excitement of Gary Payton and Shawn Kemp’s greatness to make Sonics’ basketball so memorable.

Calabro staying in the Pacific Northwest allows basketball fans familiar with his career to enjoy his presence on Root Sports.

25. Mina Kimes

Mina Kimes
Image Credit: Thomson200 – Own work – CC0/Wiki Commons.

Mina Kimes deserves to be mentioned with the greats of sports broadcasting despite being early in her career. In a field usually composed of white men, Kimes inspires women to pursue a love for football.

Kimes’ analytical breakdowns of the game on social media look like something from a coach’s handbook! She keeps an even-keeled, non-biased viewpoint, even while rooting for her hometown Seattle Seahawks.

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Trending TikTok Music and Virality | Colibri Digital Marketing

We live in a world where technology is advancing rapidly, and one of the latest and most popular trends is TikTok. This app has become a significant force in the music industry, changing how talent is discovered. In the past, artists were often found in the most unthinkable corners of the world. Now, many emerging artists get their start from trending TikTok music, with a built-in following that producers and labels can take advantage of for success. 

Starting from scratch looks very different now. The platform’s virality is vital in cultivating success for record labels, artists, and marketers. 

TikTok’s Role in the Music Industry

TikTok has revolutionized music promotion with its blend of short-form video content and an algorithm that favors engagement. Its ability to transform three-minute tracks into chart-topping hits showcases its unparalleled influence. 

But what’s the formula? Why does it work so well? The platform’s genius lies in its ability to distill a song down to its most catchy, memorable moments—those few seconds that resonate, get stuck in your head, and inspire trends. The trick here is leveraging trending TikTok music as a backdrop for users to express themselves, share aspects of their lives, and engage in global conversations on topics that capture attention.

These critical 20-30 seconds can make or break an artist’s career. When users embrace a track, participate in a trend, or create content around a song, they’re not just listening—they’re actively promoting it. This engagement can lead to tangible outcomes for artists, including record deals and mainstream success.

While viral music success has evolved since TikTok’s early days, achieving virality has become more challenging. Despite this, the platform continues to provide exceptional opportunities for artists. TikTok stands out as a unique channel, allowing artists to cut through the noise and leave their mark on the music scene.

Major Labels and TikTok Marketing

TikTok has become a key platform for music labels to promote artists and find new talent.  Nowadays, it’s common for these labels to team up with influencers, create branded challenges, and tailor content to resonate with TikTok’s audience, amplifying their reach and tapping into a younger, digital-savvy demographic.

This approach is a game-changer for labels and extends beyond simple promotion. TikTok works as a discovery tool, unearthing talented artists and nurturing fanbases in ways traditional scouting methods cannot match. Its impact is multifaceted: artists gain visibility, labels access a pipeline of fresh, market-ready talent, and audiences enjoy a front-row seat to the birth of new music phenomena.

But it’s not just about promoting music. Labels have to think carefully about how they use TikTok. They need to strike a balance between organic virality and strategic promotion. They’re also figuring out what success on TikTok really means and how it can differ from other platforms.

On top of that, labels need to consider how this affects the artists themselves. Can artists still do their own thing and be unique when an algorithm influences decision-making? And with all kinds of music out there, how do labels ensure a wide variety is getting attention, not just the types of songs that typically go viral? Lastly, in a world where a song can be a hit one day and forgotten the next, how do labels decide what success means? These are essential questions as labels navigate this new digital world.

Case Studies. Emerging Artists and Careers from TikTok

Let’s look at real-life stories of artists who made it big thanks to TikTok. These case studies show how TikTok could be a stepping stone for musicians to launch their careers. We’ll explore how some songs became overnight sensations and how other artists used TikTok smartly to build lasting careers in music.

JVKE’s Golden Hour: 

Last year, you might have found yourself humming along to “Golden Hour” and enjoying its piano tunes. The artist JVKE became famous when he played his new song for his piano teacher and captured her touching reaction, which went viral.

That video was just the start. It led to more viral videos that skyrocketed JVKE’s career. He now has over 12.2 million followers on TikTok, an album released on Spotify, and multiple singles that we occasionally listen to on TikTok. 

The Meghan Trainor and Chris Olsen Phenomenon: 

We knew and loved Meghan Trainor way before TikTok. But there was a period when she wasn’t in the spotlight as much. Her hit “I Made You Look” revived her popularity on TikTok. Since then, her songs have been consistent hits on the platform, gaining her immense popularity and growth as an artist.

A key player in Meghan’s TikTok success is her social media manager, Chris Olsen, who is an influencer in his own right. Along with Meghan’s family, Chris helped create a solid social media presence for her, contributing to her music’s success on TikTok. This highlights an important point: while artists are music experts, having a marketing pro in your corner can make a huge difference.

How Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Dreams’ Found a New Beat on TikTok

Another artist who has seen renewal thanks to TikTok is Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac. While Fleetwood Mac’s music has always been iconic, the band saw a new wave of popularity among younger listeners through TikTok. Their song “Dreams” sparked this resurgence with a viral TikTok video featuring Nathan Apodaca. In the post, he’s skateboarding, drinking cranberry juice, and lip-syncing “Dreams.”

This moment brought “Dreams” back to the charts decades after its release and introduced Fleetwood Mac music to a new generation. The band’s streaming numbers soared, and “Dreams” found its way onto many playlists and charts, showing the power of TikTok in reviving classic hits.

Stevie Nicks embraced the platform, creating her TikTok account and connecting with new fans. This move highlights the idea that artists from any era can find renewed relevance and connect with new audiences through engagement with digital platforms.

One of the best things about TikTok is how it helps artists grow organically. The platform’s algorithm encourages authentic interaction and follower growth, creating a community that actively supports and promotes artists.

Universal Music Vs. TikTok 

The disagreement between Universal Music and TikTok has sparked considerable interest, underscoring the challenge of balancing fair compensation for artists with the desires of fans who want to enjoy music on their favorite platform. 

At the heart of the controversy is a disagreement over financial compensation. Universal Music contends that TikTok’s compensation offers fall short of what they deem fair for their artists. Additionally, there’s a pressing concern about the platform’s ability to protect artists against copyright infringements, especially with the rise of AI-generated content that could misuse artists’ work without proper licensing.

Ultimately, resolving these issues requires a balance that respects the rights and needs of artists while also considering the expectations and desires of the fanbase. How this balance is struck could influence not only the relationship between artists and fans on TikTok but also the broader dynamics of music distribution and consumption in the digital age.

Artists at the Crossroads

This topic extends beyond TikTok, encompassing a broader conversation about how artists are compensated and protected today. With digital platforms now central to music consumption and promotion, the industry is at a crossroads. Artists and their representatives are increasingly asserting their rights and demanding fairer terms, signaling a shift towards more control in the digital landscape.

As this conflict unfolds, a key concern for both artists and fans is the resolution of this dispute. Will a new agreement be reached that acknowledges the value of artists’ contributions and ensures their rights are protected? Or will this standoff prompt a broader reevaluation of how music is shared and monetized on digital platforms? The outcome of this confrontation could set important precedents for the music industry in the digital era.

The Democratization of Music Discovery

TikTok has transformed how we discover new music talent, providing a platform where artists can reach a global audience without the intermediation of traditional industry gatekeepers. This approach allows artists more freedom to explore their creativity and chart their own musical journey. 

Starting on TikTok offers a unique benefit: artists can establish their voice and style. The personal branding occurs before they dive into the complexities of record deals. Once contracts are in play, the artist’s vision can become diluted. Numerous outside factors and influences can impact their work. This makes it challenging for them to maintain their original identity and authenticity.

Key Takeaways 

The interplay between the music industry and TikTok symbolizes the broader shifts occurring in the digital media landscape. As the industry adapts to these changes, the relationship between music, technology, and social media will continue to evolve, presenting new challenges and opportunities for artists, labels, and creators alike.

Understanding all the pros, cons, and processes to find success through TikTok can be confusing. Schedule a call with us today to delve deeper into TikTok music and marketing trends. Whether you aim to enhance your online visibility, expand your brand’s influence, or achieve growth, our team is here to transform your goals into results.



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She could have died from meningitis. Now this student wants more people to get vaccinated | CBC News

When varsity athlete Megan Plamondon started feeling sick last November, she thought she’d pushed herself too hard on a two-hour run.

The student at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont., started feeling tired toward the end of her Sunday long run with her triathlon teammates, but that wasn’t unusual — it was 17 kilometres, after all. She lay down to rest afterward, like she often would, but then she started feeling nauseated, and her head hurt.

By Sunday night, Plamondon, 19, was still in bed with a cracking headache, stiff neck, and sensitivity to light. By the next morning, after a restless, painful night, she says she knew something was very wrong. 

“I just wanted it to stop. It was the worst pain I’d ever felt in my life,” Plamondon told CBC News. “I couldn’t even keep water down. I would throw up water, throw up Advil, throw up everything.”

After a series of phone calls with her mother, who pushed her to go to the hospital, Plamondon was eventually diagnosed with a rare but life-threatening form of bacterial meningitis, one of three cases that prompted Kingston health officials to warn of an increase in invasive meningococcal disease type B activity in the region.

She was the first case. Now she wants other people to know what she didn’t: there is a vaccine specifically for meningococcal disease type B, but it’s not offered routinely to the general population.

Plamondon was hospitalized for 10 days. (Submitted by Megan Plamondon)

Plamondon says she’s grateful that, as she spent 10 days being treated with IV antibiotics in the hospital, she didn’t really understand how serious meningitis can be. She didn’t yet know that up to 10 per cent of people infected with IMD die, according to Health Canada, and complications include deafness, limb amputations and permanent brain damage.

“I would have been freaking out. I didn’t think there was a remote possibility that I would die.”

‘We almost lost her’

Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a rare but life-threatening bacterial infection that can infect the brain and spinal cord, causing meningitis, and the bloodstream, causing septicemia. There are almost 200 cases in Canada per year on average.

Most IMD cases are caused by five types of bacteria: A, B, C, Y and W-135, though in Canada, group B causes most illness, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada. The vaccine for meningococcal B isn’t a routine vaccine like meningococcal C, typically given to babies at age one, or meningococcal ACYW-135, typically administered in Grade 7 in Ontario.

On Feb. 29,  Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Public Health (KFL&A) Public Health warned of an increase in invasive meningococcal disease type B activity in the region — three cases in recent months, including one pediatric case, Dr. Piotr Oglaza, medical officer of health at KFL&A Public Health, previously told CBC News.

Lisa Farun’s daughter, Carly, is the second case. Carly, 21, is another student at Queen’s University. 

“We almost lost her,” Lisa Farun, who lives in Toronto, told CBC News. “It could have been different. And that is something that is devastating to me.”

In December, Carly called her mother to say she was feeling unwell. Lisa says it sounded like she had a migraine; she offered to bring her daughter soup, but she said no, it wasn’t that bad. By the next day, though, Carly was having difficulty speaking and was barely aware of what was going on around her.

Then, she fainted twice, Lisa said. Her roommates found her in her room in a confused state and called 911.

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She was diagnosed with meningitis at the hospital, Lisa said, and it progressed quickly. Her daughter also had septicemia and her systems were shutting down. She spent eight days in the hospital, seven of them in the ICU.

“It was an absolute nightmare,” Farun said.

Now that Carly is fully recovered, Farun wants to raise awareness, not only that this is a high-risk age group, but that there’s a vaccine available for this particular strain.

“This is something that is easily preventable.”

In Kingston, they’re recommending the meningococcal B vaccine for people under age 25. The cost for the general population is about $160 per dose, with two doses required. 

Currently, no provinces or territories cover the cost of the meningococcal B vaccine for all children, according to the Canadian Paediatric Society. But it is generally available for people who have certain high-risk medical conditions, and it’s also used for outbreak control. 

In May 2023, Nova Scotia began offering the meningococcal B vaccine for free to people aged 25 and under living in group settings, such as university residences. In January, Prince Edward Island expanded its free vaccine eligibility to all post-secondary students.

Rare but deadly

While IMD cases in Canada are rare, outbreaks do occur across the country, says a 2023 report from the National Advisory Committee on Immunization.

Most cases came from children under age five and adolescents aged 15 to 19, the report said. University campuses in Atlantic Canada have had outbreaks in the last few years, including student deaths

One of them, Acadia University student Kai Matthews, 19, died of meningitis in June 2021. His family and friends formed the organization B for Kai to support and promote awareness of the meningococcal B vaccine.

“Kai left an ever-lasting mark on everyone who had the pleasure of knowing him,” the family notes on the B for Kai website.

“If it only takes one person to make a difference, let Kai’s death be the reason for change.”

Four people stand together in a living room holding a graduation photo of a young man.
Kai Matthews’ loved ones, from left to right: sister Vera Matthews, father Norrie Matthews, mother Kari Matthews, and girlfriend Paige Meagher are pictured in 2022. Kai Matthews died of meningitis in 2021. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

It’s only because of stories like Matthews’, and coverage of another student who died at Dalhousie University in 2022, that Plamondon’s mother Marian Coke says she pushed her to go to the hospital.

The stories resonated with her because the Dalhousie student was the same age group as her daughter, Coke told CBC News from Ottawa. So she recognized the symptoms when she spoke with Plamondon.

“If I hadn’t read that article about the girl at Dalhousie, I’m certain my daughter wouldn’t be alive,” Coke said.

“It’s like lightning. You can be dead in 24 hours.”

A smiling young woman on a boat
Plamondon is a varsity athlete at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont. She still has headaches five months after contracting meningitis. (Submitted by Megan Plamondon)

Today, both Plamondon and Farun are back in class at Queen’s University. The two don’t know each other, and their cases were never connected, public health previously confirmed with CBC News.

Plamondon says she’s “pretty much” back to normal, but racing still gives her a headache. She’s sharing her story to raise awareness that the shot for meningococcal B isn’t a routine vaccine, but that there’s an option to protect yourself.

“The biggest issue is people don’t know how serious it is. Everyone gets their meningitis shot in Grade 7 or Grade 8, and they assume they’re good for life.”

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A giant volcano spanning 280 miles and taller than Mt. Everest was discovered on Mars

The newly discovered giant volcano on Mars is located just south of the planet’s equator, in Eastern Noctis Labyrinthus, west of Valles Marineris, the planet’s vast canyon system. Credit: NASA/USGS Mars globe/Pascal Lee/Sourabh Shubham.

Our understanding of Mars has come a long way since the Viking missions touched down in the 1970s. Since then, more than 18 spacecraft have operated in Mars’ orbit, seven of which are still active. Numerous rovers have crisscrossed the planet’s barren landscape, revealing invaluable discoveries.

With all these eyes above and on the ground, you’d think something as massive as a mountain would have been mapped out by now. But Mars is always full of surprises.

Scientists have identified a new volcano on Mars, named provisionally Noctis Mons (or Noctiv Volcano), situated south of the planet’s equator in the Eastern Noctis Labyrinthus region. This thing is absolutely enormous, towering at 9,022 meters (30,000 feet) and spanning 450 kilometers (about 280 miles).

“We were examining the geology of an area where we had found the remains of a glacier last year when we realized we were inside a huge and deeply eroded volcano,” said Dr. Pascal Lee, a planetary scientist with the SETI Institute and the Mars Institute based at NASA Ames Research Center.

An elusive giant hiding in plain sight

While it’s now dead quiet, Mars used to have a rich history of volcanism. The assumption is that, since it’s smaller than Earth, the planet would have cooled faster than ours after it formed. As its thermal activity decreased, so did its ability to generate new volcanoes and so-called “marsquakes”. More recently, scientists have found that there is still some volcanic activity that makes some regions prone to mild tremors. Still, these are nothing as intense as what it used to experience billions of years ago.

Given Noctis Mons’ immense size and deeply eroded features, it must be very old, a landmark of a bygone era. But when it was active, it must have caused quite the stir.

Noctis Mons is located on the eastern part fractured maze-like grander geological formation known as Noctis Labyrinthus. The reason why it wasn’t identified sooner despite countless flybys by satellites is due to the deep erosion it has suffered over millions of years.

The Noctis volcano does not present the conventional cone shape of a typical volcano because a long history of deep fracturing and erosion has modified it.
The Noctis volcano does not present the conventional cone shape of a typical volcano because a long history of deep fracturing and erosion has modified it. Credit: NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO)/Pascal Lee/Sourabh Shubham.
Noctis volcano in 3D.
Noctis volcano in 3D. Credit: ESA/DLR/FU.

The eastern section of Noctis Labyrinthus is characterized by a chaotic mix of layered flat-topped hills (mesas) and valleys — important clues that first set scientists on this path of investigating its volcanic origin. At the heart of this area, a group of elevated mesas forms a semicircle, creating the highest point in the region. These mesas and valleys stretch outward for up to 225 kilometers (140 miles), sloping away in various directions. Near the center, there’s a caldera remnant, the remains of a volcanic crater that collapsed after hosting a lava lake. Throughout this area, one can find traces of past volcanic activity, including lava flows, layers of volcanic debris (like ash, cinders, pumice, and tephra), and spots where minerals formed in the presence of water.

Possible buried glacier ice near the base of the Noctis volcano
Possible buried glacier ice near the base of the Noctis volcano. Credit: NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO)/Pascal Lee and Sourabh Shubham.

“This area of Mars is known to have a wide variety of hydrated minerals spanning a long stretch of Martian history. A volcanic setting for these minerals had long been suspected. So, it may not be too surprising to find a volcano here,” explained Sourabh Shubham, a graduate student at the University of Maryland’s Department of Geology and the study’s co-author.

“In some sense, this large volcano is a long-sought ‘smoking gun’”.

Volcanoes and glaciers

That’s not all. Within the bounds of Noctis Mons lies a vast area filled with volcanic deposits, spanning 5,000 square kilometers (1,930 square miles). This region is dotted with numerous low, rounded, and elongated mounds resembling blisters, which the scientists call “rootless cones.” Scientist speculate that these formations would have been created by bursts of steam or the expansion of steam when a thin layer of hot volcanic material settled on a surface rich in water or ice.

Previously, Lee had found the well-preserved remains of a glacier, known as a “relict glacier,” within the same volcanic area. This glacier was marked by a deposit of light-colored sulfate salts. These likely formed from the chemical reaction between volcanic material and ice. Breaches in rootless cones also contained polyhydrated sulfates, suggesting the volcanic layer may conceal a significant glacier ice sheet beneath it.

 A Relict Glacier near Mars’ Equator. Credit: NASA MRO/Lee et al.

“It’s really a combination of things that makes the Noctis volcano site exceptionally exciting. It’s an ancient and long-lived volcano so deeply eroded that you could hike, drive, or fly through it to examine, sample, and date different parts of its interior to study Mars’ evolution through time. It has also had a long history of heat interacting with water and ice, which makes it a prime location for astrobiology and our search for signs of life. Finally, with glacier ice likely still preserved near the surface in a relatively warm equatorial region on Mars, the place is looking very attractive for robotic and human exploration,” said Lee.

The rich interaction of heat with water and ice over time raises questions about the potential for life at this site. As such, the discovery of the Noctis volcano offers a new and exciting location for studying Mars’ geological evolution, searching for life, and planning future exploration, particularly because of the possible presence of glacier ice in a relatively warm equatorial region. Perhaps this site could be suitable for human settlements if its water resources are abundant, confirmed and easily extractable.

“We now have to determine if, and how much, water ice might actually be present in this relict glacier, and whether other light-toned deposits might also have, or have had, ice-rich substrates,” Lee said in a statement.

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Blue Jays’ Clement excels as ‘good competition’ unfolds

DUNEDIN, Fla. — Ernie Clement feels like he’s put himself in the best possible position to succeed as he fights for a job with the Blue Jays. 

The utility man worked hard in the weight room during the off-season to get his body right. He arrived at Spring Training right at the beginning of February and dove into defensive work. He’s put himself ahead of schedule with his bat and is among the team’s most impressive hitters thus far in camp.

That work and the corresponding results haven’t gone unnoticed.

“He came in with something to prove,” said Blue Jays manager John Schneider. “And he definitely has done that.”

Clement is jockeying for a spot on the Blue Jays’ bench along with Santiago Espinal and close friends Spencer Horowitz and Davis Schneider. The way the 27-year-old views things, though, it’s not a competition, per se.

“There’s a lot of guys who can really, really play,” Clement said. “And whether they give that opportunity to me or somebody else, you really can’t go wrong because there’s some studs out here.

“It doesn’t feel like a competition,” he added. “We have so many good players that it makes the decision really difficult for the front office. But all I can do is go play. I’m not thinking of it as a competition. I leave all that sort of stuff up to the front office. I’m out there playing baseball, getting to know my teammates and trying to help them win baseball games.”

Clement joined the Blue Jays exactly one year ago after he was released by the Oakland Athletics. He excelled last season in triple-A Buffalo, where he played alongside Horowitz and Schneider. The trio joined the Blue Jays and contributed to the club down the stretch, with Clement posting an .885 OPS and one win above replacement, per Baseball Reference, over 30 games. 

He entered Friday with 12 hits during Grapefruit League play trailing only Bo Bichette (15) for the team lead. Clement has homered twice and hasn’t struck out in 30 at-bats. 

“More of what he did last year, really,” said John Schneider. “He’s hitting the ball hard, he’s doing damage early in counts. He’s making a ton of contact. And he’s playing good defence. 

“Just looking for him to continue to do what he’s doing and you’ll probably see him bounce around — in the infield and probably get him in the outfield as camp keeps going. 

“He’s done a phenomenal job.”

The push from Clement has potentially put Espinal in a tough position. An all-star in 2022, the infielder regressed last season and because he has options — unlike Clement — he could be sent down to the minors. 

Espinal made the long trek to Fort Myers, Fla., on Thursday as the Blue Jays visited the Minnesota Twins and put in his own impressive performance. He led off the game by smoking a double to the left-centre field gap off right-hander Bailey Ober. He also drew a walk and was later robbed of a hit by right-fielder Max Kepler’s impressive diving catch. 

“By no means is it finalized,” said Schneider of a decision on the bench. “[Espinal], his track record speaks for itself with us at the major-league level and he’s been an all-star. And, I think where he is right now, he’s done everything we’ve asked, too. Playing great defence, his at-bats have been really good. Has a really good understanding of where he handles pitches. 

“He’s doing everything that he can. He’s playing third, shortstop, second. It is a good little competition right there.” 

GAUSMAN LIKELY TO MISS OPENING DAY

Blue Jays starter Kevin Gausman pitched one inning of live batting practice on Friday morning at the club’s player development complex. The next step for the right-hander will potentially include multiple innings in a spring game, according to Schneider. 

Gausman has been dealing with shoulder fatigue and has yet to appear in a Grapefruit League contest. At this point, it appears unlikely the ace will be ready for the club’s season-opening series against the Tampa Bay Rays in two weeks. 

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“Opening day will be pretty tough right now for him,” said Schneider. “So, you just want him to be good. And if that means 30 starts as opposed to 32, or whatever it is, we’ll be happy with that.”

The Blue Jays would ideally like to have Gausman built up to around 70 pitches before considering a regular-season outing. 

“He’s a veteran,” said the manager. “He was kind of building up so hopefully it stays on turn and on course. But you don’t want to hamstring yourself with a really low pitch count, as enticing as that may be.”

TIEDEMANN FOCUSED ON BIG PICTURE

The pitching line for Ricky Tiedemann wasn’t sparkling on Friday, but the Blue Jays’ top prospect isn’t too concerned.

The left-hander made his second start of the spring and his only objective was get his pitches in and continue to build toward the regular season. 

“Main goal is getting more pitches in and get deeper in the game,” Tiedemann said. “Obviously, it’s a process to get ready for the season.” 

Consider both those boxes checked. The 21-year-old, who dealt with a left hamstring issue last month, tossed 38 pitches over 2.1 innings in Friday’s game against the Detroit Tigers at TD Ballpark. Those numbers were improvements over the 26 pitches and 1.1 innings he tossed against the Phillies last weekend. 

That he allowed two runs on three hits with one walk and one strikeout on Friday didn’t matter as much.

“I think the past two years there were different goals set in mind for me to start spring training,” said Tiedemann. “Right now, it’s just honestly feel good and be ready for when the season starts. Obviously, the outcome to these games [matters], obviously you want to do well, but they’re not the be-all-end-all for the time being. You get an entire season to look forward to, so it’s just about getting ready to go and make sure you’re feeling good for the next outing.”  

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