Shanghai Celebrates Festival Opening With Glitzy Red Carpet Event

Foreign visitors were in short supply at Saturday’s opening ceremony of the 26th Shanghai International Film Festival, but that did little to diminish the festive atmosphere.

The ceremony was held at the Shanghai Grand Theater in the downtown area on an evening that was warm and spring-like and without the “plum rain” or summer downpours that the city is known for at this time of year.

Arguably the biggest names in attendance were Hong Kong actor and “Westworld” star Daniel Wu, Hong Kong director Dante Lam, Chinese star actor-director-producer Xu Zheng and Japanese actor Yakusho Koji, who won the best actor award a year ago at Cannes for his leading role in Wim Wenders’ “Perfect Days.” Marco Mueller, a celebrated festival director and artistic consultant, was also on hand in his adopted home town

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‘Mind Your Business’ reaches more than 2 million HHs, becomes Bounce TV’s most-watched original series premiere

 The newest Bounce TV original series “Mind Your Business” handled its business beautifully in its debut as its first two episodes reached more than 2 million households over the course of premiere weekend telecasts – an all-time high for a Bounce original series.

The new hit series "Mind Your Business" is seen Saturday nights at 8 p.m. ET on Bounce TV.
The new hit series “Mind Your Business” is seen Saturday nights at 8 p.m. ET on Bounce TV.

The first two episodes of “Mind Your Business” premiered back-to-back on Bounce on Saturday, June 1, from 8-9 p.m. ET, and its initial airing burst included special presentations on Bounce’s sister network ION and local owned & operated Scripps networks. The 10-episode first season is running Saturday nights throughout the summer, leading into the return of the hit Bounce series “Johnson,” which will start airing new episodes Saturday, Aug. 3.

“Mind Your Business” is a half-hour situation comedy featuring an ensemble led by Columbus Short (“Scandal,” “Stomp the Yard”), Drew Sidora (“The Real Housewives of Atlanta,” “That’s So Raven”), Rolonda Watts (“Rolonda”), and singer/radio host Bebe Winans. It centers on the Williams family, which is in the business of celebrating some of life’s most significant occasions with its event and party space in Chicago. However, when it comes to their own family affairs, there seems to be a bigger need for referees than DJs.

Like many small businesses, the once-prospering 30s-and-older lounge owned by Lucille Williams (played by Watts) took a huge pandemic hit, forcing her to close. Lucille’s baby brother, Henry (Winans), couldn’t stand by and let Lucille’s Place slip away, so he recruited his fraternal twins, Aaliyah (Sidora) and Alfonso (Short), to keep the business in the family. With Aaliyah’s creative sensibilities and Alfonso’s business mind, a safe space for planning and hosting events was born. Alfonso’s wife, Kimberly, and son, Alfonso Jr., join the event planning team. Even Aaliyah has one of their chosen family members, Mia, join the team; she is a jack of all trades – so she thinks. Although the new-and-improved “Lucille’s” brings everyone together, their affairs end up causing a mess bigger than a college frat party.

“Mind Your Business” also features Caryn Ward Ross (“Fame,” “Monogamy,” “Patterns of Attraction”), Brely Evans (“Ambitions,” “Being Mary Jane,” “The Man in 3B”), Bryce Xavier (“A Bennett Song Holiday,” “Stay Tuned: The Movie,” Total Eclipse”), and Chloe Elise Ellis (“Borrasca,” “Footprints,” “Three Stories Up”).

“Mind Your Business” is produced by Harvest Studios and executive produced by Bentley Kyle Evans (“Martin,” “The Jamie Foxx Show.”)

**Source: National data based on Nielsen; NPower; Live+7 data; premiere night (06/01/24) 6-episode combined reach on Bounce and ION; HH; 1-minute qualifier; comparisons made to Bounce original series premieres on Bounce & ION: Act Your Age 03/24/23, Finding Happy 09/24/22, Johnson S1 08/01/21; Local data based on Comscore; Live HH preliminary reach; 06/01-06/03/24; 14 total Scripps markets (Baltimore, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Miami, Milwaukee, Nashville, Norfolk, Richmond, Tampa, West Palm Beach)

Media contact: Jim Weiss, 770-672-6504, jim.weiss@scripps.com 

About Bounce
Bounce (@bouncetv) features a programming mix of original series and movies, theatrical motion pictures, off network series, specials and events designed for African American audiences. Bounce is available to 98% of U.S. television homes free and over the air with a digital antenna, on cable, on DISH channel 359, DIRECTV channel 82, over the top on Roku, Pluto TV and Apple TV; on mobile devices via the Bounce app; and on the web via BounceTV.com. Bounce XL is a free ad-supported television (FAST) channel available on Samsung TV Plus, Pluto TV and Xumo. Bounce is part of The E.W. Scripps Company (NASDAQ: SSP).

SOURCE Bounce

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Vice President Kamala Harris Came to Atlanta for Her Economic Opportunity Tour with the 100 Black Men of America, Inc.

Vice President Kamala Harris, in a significant move, brought her economic opportunity tours to Atlanta to visit the 38th Conference of the 100 Black Men of America, Inc. This pivotal stop was to discuss economic empowerment with the audience, underlining the importance of the event.

The Vice President, in a thought-provoking discussion moderated by entertainer Steve Harvey, emphasized her message on economic empowerment. “It’s about giving people the opportunity to compete, to allow hardworking individuals to not just get by, but to get ahead,” said Vice President Kamala Harris.

It’s crucial to clarify that this visit was solely a conversation about economic opportunity. It was not an endorsement from the 100 Black Men of America, Inc.

About The 100 Black Men of America, Inc.
The 100 Black Men of America is the world’s largest volunteer network of Black men focused on mentoring minority youth. The national organization began with nine chapters in 1986. The first chapter was founded in New York City in 1963.  The 100 Black Men of America is a national alliance of leading African-American men in business, public affairs, and government. Their mission is to improve the quality of life for African Americans, with a specific focus on African-American youth. Since its inception, the organization has grown to more than 4,000 members, with 105 chapters that impact more than 100,000 underserved and underrepresented minority youth every year. Visit www.100blackmen.org for more information on the programs and initiatives of 100 Black Men of America, Inc. and their global network of chapters.

SOURCE 100 Black Men of America, Inc.

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Riley Keough’s battle over Graceland ends: Company drops plans for foreclosure sale and is now under investigation

Riley Keough‘s legal battle over Graceland has apparently come to an end.

After a Tennessee judge temporarily blocked Naussany Investments and Private Lending on May 22 from selling the former home of Elvis Presley in a foreclosure sale, the company said it will drop its claim.

The dispute stems from a $3.8 million loan the lending company said Lisa Marie Presley, Keough’s late mother, took out in 2018, using Graceland as collateral, and never repaid. Keough filed a lawsuit against the company on May 20 after it advertised a foreclosure auction of Elvis Presley’s home set for May 23. She claimed the sale was fraudulent and that her late mother’s signature on the loan documents was forged.

The Tennessee attorney general is looking into Naussany Investments to determine if there was any misconduct.

🚨What just happened?

Keough, the sole trustee of her grandfather Elvis Presley’s Memphis estate after her mom’s 2023 death, scored a legal victory on May 22 when Shelby County Chancellor JoeDae Jenkins issued the temporary injunction halting the auction.

Hours later, an attorney for Keough “received an email from Gregory Naussany confirming they do not intend to move forward with their claim,” a Graceland rep told People magazine.

Naussany Investments emailed a statement to the Associated Press saying the company would not proceed because a key document in the case and the loan were recorded and obtained in a different state, so “legal action would have to be filed in multiple states.” As a result, “The company will be withdrawing all claims with prejudice.”

Naussany said in an email to the Memphis Commercial Appeal:”There was no harm meant on Ms. Keough.”

The attempted foreclosure is now being investigated by Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti’s office.

“I have asked my lawyers to look into this matter, determine the full extent of any misconduct that may have occurred, and identify what we can do to protect both Elvis Presley’s heirs and anyone else who may be similarly threatened,” he said in a statement on May 23.

Keough said in her legal filing last week that her mother “never borrowed money from Naussany Investments” nor did she give the company a deed of trust for Graceland. She alleged that the business “is not a real entity,” but was “created for the purpose of defrauding” Keough’s (previously Lisa Marie’s) Promenade Trust.

The Daisy Jones & the Six actress claimed her mother’s signature was forged on the alleged loan documents. The notary listed as a witness to the loan, Kimberly Philbrick, said she never met Lisa Marie Presley nor notarized any documents for her. Keough’s filing alleged that the “individuals who were involved in the creation of such documents are believed to be guilty of the crime of forgery.”

Elvis Presley Enterprises — the corporate entity that runs Graceland — backed Keough’s claims that the auction was fraudulent. “There is no foreclosure sale. Simply put, the counter lawsuit has been filed to stop the fraud.”

Priscilla Presley, Elvis’s former wife and Keough’s grandmother, deemed it a “scam.”

How we got here

Last summer, Keough was granted control of the Graceland home, Elvis’s belongings and 15% of Elvis Presley Enterprises after her mother’s sudden death and her brief legal battle with Priscilla.

In September, Naussany Investments and Private Lending sued the estate, claiming Lisa Marie defaulted on the loan, which was supposed to have been paid off by May 2022. The company claimed it had no contact with Lisa Marie after March 2022 and that attempts to reach her were unsuccessful. Naussany Investments said it would drop the lawsuit if the estate paid 75% percent of the debt, or around $2.85 million, within 45 days.

Lisa Marie had financial problems during her life. She inherited her father’s estate, worth an estimated $100 million, when she was 25. Failed business deals and overspending led to her selling 85 percent of the stake in Elvis Presley Enterprises in 2005. (She later sued her former business manager, Barry Siegel, claiming he mismanaged the estate.) In the $114 million sale, Lisa Marie received $50 million cash, $26 million in stock and had $25 million of debt erased. She retained 15% of Elvis Presley Enterprises as well as ownership of Graceland and its original items. Elvis Presley Enterprises changed hands again in 2013, with Lisa Marie retaining her stake.

Lisa Marie was buried at Graceland last year, near her father, grandparents and son Benjamin Keough, who died in 2020. In an interview after her mother’s death, Keough talked about what the estate meant to her and her plans for Graceland, which included a Christmas special she produced.

As sole trustee, Keough also manages the trusts of her two younger siblings, 15-year-old half-sisters Finley and Harper Lockwood, who are Lisa Marie’s daughters from her marriage to musician Michael Lockwood.

Updated, May 23, 2024 5:22 p.m. ET: This story has been updated to reflect that Naussany Investments dropped its claims and is now under investigation.

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New laws going into effect in California on July 1, 2024

A number of new laws on topics ranging from housing to hidden fees are set to come into effect in California on July 1.

Here are some of the laws more likely to have a direct impact on the average Californian.

Hidden Fees

Two bills that made it through the legislature last year take aim at hidden fees.

Senate Bill 478 and Assembly Bill 537 essentially require the advertised or displayed price for most goods or services to include all fees and other charges required to make a purchase other than government taxes and fees.

SB 478 covers most types of businesses with a few exceptions for businesses that have different regulations around advertising.

AB 537 is specifically targeted at rates for short-term lodging such as hotels or peer-to-peer platforms like AirBnB.

Drug Testing Kits

Businesses with “on-sale general public premises” alcohol licenses such as bars and restaurants are required to sell drug-testing kits at a price not much higher than what it costs to purchase wholesale.

The business must also post a notice that reads, “Don’t get roofied! Drink spiking drug test kits available here. Ask a staff member for details.”

Menstrual Products for Students

Assembly Bill 230, signed into law last October, takes an existing law that requires public schools that instruct any grade from 6 – 12 to provide free menstrual products in bathrooms and expands it to include grades 3 – 5.

In supporting documentation filed with the law, the bill’s author, Asm. Eloise Reyes, notes that 10% of girls have their first period by the age of 10.

Right to Repair

Senate Bill 244 requires manufacturers of electronics priced at $50 or higher for wholesale to make documentation and spare parts or tools available to repair or maintain a product.

Manufacturers of products priced $100 or more for wholesale must make parts and documentation available for at least seven years after the product was last manufactured.

Housing

Another law coming into effect is Senate Bill 684, which aims to get more housing built by speeding up the approval process for subdivision maps.

The law requires local agencies to approve those maps for projects in urban areas so long as they meet certain requirements including that the project not include more than 10 housing units.

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New AARP Arizona Poll: Voters 50+, Especially Women, Could Tip the Scales in 2024

Donald Trump leads over President Joe Biden among older voters; Senate race is neck-and-neck between Rep. Ruben Gallego and Kari Lake

PHOENIX, June 12, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Today, AARP Arizona released a 2024 statewide election survey that shows candidates for President, U.S. Senate, and state races should pay close attention to Arizonans ages 50 and older. Seventy-eight percent of voters ages 50+ report that candidates’ positions on Social Security are important in deciding whom to vote for in November, followed by Medicare (74%), helping people stay in their homes as they age (67%), and the cost of housing and utilities (both at 65%).

Arizonans ages 50+ will be key to determining who wins in November. This voting bloc makes up an outsized portion of the electorate: in the 2020 elections, older voters accounted for 55% of all Arizona voters and in the 2022 mid-terms, they made up 64% of the state’s voters. Eighty-six percent of voters ages 50+ say they are “extremely motivated” to vote in this election, compared to 66% of voters ages 18-49 who say the same.

Former President Donald Trump (R) leads President Joe Biden (D) by 8 percentage points among voters ages 18 and older – 45% to 37%, with Robert Kennedy Jr. at 11%. Trump’s lead is greater among voters ages 50 and older, at 49% – 39%. However, among women voters 50+, the candidates are tied. President Biden leads among older Hispanic voters, 48% – 37%.

Representative Ruben Gallego (D) holds a narrow lead over Kari Lake (R), 48% to 45%, in the U.S. Senate race among voters overall. Among voters 50 and older the candidates are almost even, with 48% of voters favoring Lake and 47% preferring Gallego. The gender gap among voters 50+ is significant, with women supporting Gallego by 12 percentage points and men preferring Lake by 15 points. Rep. Gallego leads among Hispanic voters 50+, 62% – 36%.

“Arizona voters over age 50 are the biggest voting bloc that could tip the scale for any candidate in this election,” said Dana Kennedy, State Director, AARP Arizona. “If candidates want to win, they should pay attention to the issues that matter to voters over age 50, from protecting Social Security to supporting family caregivers.”

Other key takeaways from the poll include:

  • Immigration and border security (41%) is the most important issue to voters ages 50 and older when deciding who to vote for in November, followed by inflation and rising prices (28%), and threats to democracy (27%).
    • Fifty-four percent of these voters cite personal economic issues – inflation and rising prices, the economy and jobs, and Social Security – as the most important issues. Notably, Trump is leading Biden (60%-27%) among older voters who prioritize this group of issues.
  • A significant majority (68%) of Arizona residents ages 50 and older think the country is headed in the wrong direction.
  • Fifty-eight percent of older voters say they are worried about their personal financial situation.

AARP commissioned the bipartisan polling team of Fabrizio Ward & Impact Research to conduct this survey. The firms interviewed 1,358 likely Arizona voters, which includes a statewide representative sample of 600 likely voters, with an oversample of 470 likely voters age 50 and older and an additional oversample of 288 likely Hispanic voters age 50 and older, between May 28-June 4, 2024. The interviews were conducted via landline, cellphone, and SMS-to-web. The margin of sampling error for the 600 statewide sample is ±4.0%; for the 800 total sample of voters 50+ is ±3.5%; for the 400 total sample of Hispanic voters 50+ is ±4.9%.

View the full survey results at aarp.org/AZpolling.

For more information on how, when and where to vote in Arizona, visit aarp.org/AZVotes.

About AARP
AARP is the nation’s largest nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering Americans 50 and older to choose how they live as they age. With a nationwide presence, AARP strengthens communities and advocates for what matters most to the more than 100 million Americans 50-plus and their families: health security, financial stability and personal fulfillment. AARP also works for individuals in the marketplace by sparking new solutions and allowing carefully chosen, high-quality products and services to carry the AARP name. As a trusted source for news and information, AARP produces the nation’s largest circulation publications, AARP The Magazine and AARP Bulletin. To learn more, visit www.aarp.org/about-aarp/www.aarp.org/español or follow @AARP, @AARPenEspañol and @AARPadvocates on social media.

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Dolores Huerta, State Senator Monique Limón and Women of Color Rally at State Capitol to Demand Lawmakers to Fix State’s Racist Voter Registration Laws

One-hundred advocates from across the state met with legislators to share how voter registration laws makes voting harder for their communities, calling on the legislature to pass SB-299, to automate voter registration 

SACRAMENTO, Calif., June 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Yesterday, , California State Senator Monique Limón, Assemblymember Chris Holden, and 100 voting rights advocates from across the state who make up the California Grassroots Democracy Coalition, rallied in front of the Capitol building to galvanize the State Legislature around California’s New Motor Voter Program bill (SB-299). If passed into law, SB-299 would automatically bring 4.7 million eligible but unregistered voters, who are disproportionately Asian American, Black, and Latinx citizens, one step closer to the ballot box. The Coalition hopes to move Elections Committee Chair Assemblymember Gail Pellerin to expand California’s democracy to all eligible voters and move California toward truly automatic voter registration with SB-299.

“Simply put: voter registration laws are racist,” said Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farmworkers and president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation who has been advocating for the expansion of voting rights for underrepresented communities since the 1950’s. “They are relics of the racist Jim Crow Era, a time when literacy tests, poll taxes and other hurdles were put in place to prevent Black, Indigenous and other people of color from voting.”

California’s exclusionary voting practices have evolved and persisted for more than two centuries. Beyond California’s 92-year-long delay in assuring equal rights for Black, Chinese, Mexican and Native American people through the prolonged ratification of the 15th Amendment, California discouraged voting by withholding citizenship from Chinese immigrants, requiring literacy tests for all voters at the ballot box, and introducing a variety of poll taxes that disproportionately affected workers, immigrants and infrequent voters. The requirement to register oneself with a county clerk was introduced in 1866, and had the same desired effect to make voting exclusive.

Senator Monique Limón, (D-Santa Barbara) who authored the bill said, “It is unacceptable that working-class communities of color continue to be systematically left out of access to political power. We must take the necessary steps to ensure that California’s diverse population becomes a diverse electorate that truly represents the power of our state.”

SB-299 would update California’s voter registration to Secure Automatic Voter Registration (SAVR), which automatically registers eligible people when they interact with a state agency like the DMV or Medicaid. This bill follows a national trend of updating and fully automating Motor Voter laws which have recently passed in Alaska, Delaware, DC, Colorado, New Mexico, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, Oregon and Washington.

In addition to Limón and Huerta, three women of color leaders spoke at the rally and press conference about the kinds of obstacles voter registration poses to their communities.

“I was my family’s sole interpreter and civic navigator from a very young age, and voter registration was not at the top of the urgent paperwork I was translating for them,” said Sydney Fang, Policy Director at AAPI FORCE who is the child of immigrants and refugees who speak Cantonese. “Once they were able to opt-in for in-language voting, registration became easier for my family. SB-299 would remove this laborious extra step that’s keeping so many non-English speakers from participating in our democracy.”

Kristin Nimmers, Policy and Campaign Manager with the California Black Power Network described how system impacted people (1 out of every 13 Black adults) experience frequent changes to their voter eligibility, making it difficult to keep up with registration. “California re-enfranchised over 50 thousand people in the last four years thanks to Prop 17,” said Nimmers. “But in the absence of a back-end system, many of those people, and others on parole, probation, serving a misdemeanor sentence or awaiting trial, are still learning about this critical new right, and are therefore much less likely to be registered.”

“A lack of in-language information for immigrants in various stages of their citizenship process makes registering to vote, not only difficult  but also dangerous,” said Itzel Maganda Chavez, Civic Engagement Director for Alliance San Diego, who described a community member who mistakenly registered before they were eligible, jeopardizing his ability to naturalize, and could have resulted in deportation. “By putting the burden of registration on all Californians, the state endangers non-citizens who aren’t aware of the consequences or historical knowledge of the US voting process. Forcing people to opt in, puts vulnerable communities at serious risk while at the same time excluding eligible voters from exercising their fundamental right to vote.”

About California Grassroots Democracy Coalition
The California Grassroots Democracy Coalition comprises 140+ grassroots organizations and is dedicated to helping California’s most vulnerable communities become empowered through pro-democracy reforms. The organizations include a wide range of backgrounds including, but not limited to: criminal justice reform, immigrant rights, language access, low-income communities, environmental justice, religious, labor unions, etc. www.cademocracy.org

SOURCE The California Grassroots Democracy Coalition

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New AARP Arizona Poll: Voters 50+, Especially Women, Could Tip the Scales in 2024

Donald Trump leads over President Joe Biden among older voters; Senate race is neck-and-neck between Rep. Ruben Gallego and Kari Lake

PHOENIX, June 12, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Today, AARP Arizona released a 2024 statewide election survey that shows candidates for President, U.S. Senate, and state races should pay close attention to Arizonans ages 50 and older. Seventy-eight percent of voters ages 50+ report that candidates’ positions on Social Security are important in deciding whom to vote for in November, followed by Medicare (74%), helping people stay in their homes as they age (67%), and the cost of housing and utilities (both at 65%).

Arizonans ages 50+ will be key to determining who wins in November. This voting bloc makes up an outsized portion of the electorate: in the 2020 elections, older voters accounted for 55% of all Arizona voters and in the 2022 mid-terms, they made up 64% of the state’s voters. Eighty-six percent of voters ages 50+ say they are “extremely motivated” to vote in this election, compared to 66% of voters ages 18-49 who say the same.

Former President Donald Trump (R) leads President Joe Biden (D) by 8 percentage points among voters ages 18 and older – 45% to 37%, with Robert Kennedy Jr. at 11%. Trump’s lead is greater among voters ages 50 and older, at 49% – 39%. However, among women voters 50+, the candidates are tied. President Biden leads among older Hispanic voters, 48% – 37%.

Representative Ruben Gallego (D) holds a narrow lead over Kari Lake (R), 48% to 45%, in the U.S. Senate race among voters overall. Among voters 50 and older the candidates are almost even, with 48% of voters favoring Lake and 47% preferring Gallego. The gender gap among voters 50+ is significant, with women supporting Gallego by 12 percentage points and men preferring Lake by 15 points. Rep. Gallego leads among Hispanic voters 50+, 62% – 36%.

“Arizona voters over age 50 are the biggest voting bloc that could tip the scale for any candidate in this election,” said Dana Kennedy, State Director, AARP Arizona. “If candidates want to win, they should pay attention to the issues that matter to voters over age 50, from protecting Social Security to supporting family caregivers.”

Other key takeaways from the poll include:

  • Immigration and border security (41%) is the most important issue to voters ages 50 and older when deciding who to vote for in November, followed by inflation and rising prices (28%), and threats to democracy (27%).
    • Fifty-four percent of these voters cite personal economic issues – inflation and rising prices, the economy and jobs, and Social Security – as the most important issues. Notably, Trump is leading Biden (60%-27%) among older voters who prioritize this group of issues.
  • A significant majority (68%) of Arizona residents ages 50 and older think the country is headed in the wrong direction.
  • Fifty-eight percent of older voters say they are worried about their personal financial situation.

AARP commissioned the bipartisan polling team of Fabrizio Ward & Impact Research to conduct this survey. The firms interviewed 1,358 likely Arizona voters, which includes a statewide representative sample of 600 likely voters, with an oversample of 470 likely voters age 50 and older and an additional oversample of 288 likely Hispanic voters age 50 and older, between May 28-June 4, 2024. The interviews were conducted via landline, cellphone, and SMS-to-web. The margin of sampling error for the 600 statewide sample is ±4.0%; for the 800 total sample of voters 50+ is ±3.5%; for the 400 total sample of Hispanic voters 50+ is ±4.9%.

View the full survey results at aarp.org/AZpolling.

For more information on how, when and where to vote in Arizona, visit aarp.org/AZVotes.

About AARP
AARP is the nation’s largest nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering Americans 50 and older to choose how they live as they age. With a nationwide presence, AARP strengthens communities and advocates for what matters most to the more than 100 million Americans 50-plus and their families: health security, financial stability and personal fulfillment. AARP also works for individuals in the marketplace by sparking new solutions and allowing carefully chosen, high-quality products and services to carry the AARP name. As a trusted source for news and information, AARP produces the nation’s largest circulation publications, AARP The Magazine and AARP Bulletin. To learn more, visit www.aarp.org/about-aarp/www.aarp.org/español or follow @AARP, @AARPenEspañol and @AARPadvocates on social media.

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Starbucks® and Grubhub Launch Delivery Partnership

Starbucks orders will be available via Grubhub in select markets beginning in June, with national availability by August 2024

Today, Starbucks® and Grubhub announced a partnership to bring Grubhub delivery to Starbucks customers in the U.S. Starbucks is the most searched merchant not yet available on Grubhub’s Marketplace, and through this partnership, both brands will provide customers with the ultimate convenience of having their Starbucks orders delivered right to their door. Beginning in June, Starbucks Delivery with Grubhub will roll out to select markets in Pennsylvania, Colorado and Illinois, with national availability anticipated in all 50 states across the U.S. by August 2024.

Grubhub and Starbucks
Grubhub and Starbucks

“Customer demand to get Starbucks delivered continues to increase, as evidenced by double-digit growth in the U.S. delivery business this past quarter, indicating that our customers continue to want convenience in their everyday lives,” said Meg Mathes, vice president of digital experiences at Starbucks. “Our new partnership with Grubhub will help fuel this growth by increasing availability of Starbucks products to Grubhub’s tens of millions of customers, via a leading delivery provider.”

“By joining forces with a beloved national brand like Starbucks, we’re offering customers more of what they want on Grubhub while strengthening our enterprise offering and growing our merchant supply in markets nationwide,” said Liz Bosone, vice president of enterprise partnerships at Grubhub. “We’re proud to offer national and independent restaurants on our platform — a complementary duo — to give customers more choices and build loyalty.”

Increased Convenience for Customers
Starbucks Delivery will be accessible through the Grubhub mobile app, available on iOS and Android devices, in addition to Grubhub.com. Starbucks and Grubhub have partnered to ensure delivery is as quick as possible so customers can enjoy their Starbucks beverages and food promptly. Customers can track their orders through Grubhub from preparation to drop off.

To ensure quality and assist with delivery, Starbucks developed multiple packaging solutions, including two-cup to-go trays and improved shopper bags, that are used for delivery orders and enable delivery drivers to easily transport multiple beverages at a time.

Customers can order most of the Starbucks menu, including seasonal beverages and food through Grubhub. Additionally, customers can customize their orders just as they would at Starbucks within the Grubhub app, including the ability to choose the amount of espresso shots, flavor, the type of milk and espresso roasts.

Delivering Customer Experience
Grubhub+, Grubhub’s $9.99 monthly membership program, provides customers ordering from Starbucks on Grubhub with $0 delivery fees on eligible orders, lower service fees, and exclusive offers. Standard delivery and service fees apply for all other customers.

Over the past decade, Starbucks has continued to innovate the retail experience to connect with customers digitally. Whether through Starbucks Rewards, the Starbucks app or Starbucks Delivery, Starbucks continues to adapt to evolving customer preferences with the belief that the Starbucks experience should be effortless and delightful. Delivering an uplifting, connected, and personalized experience to their customers continues to be a strategic and relevant differentiation that Starbucks offers.

About Starbucks
Since 1971, Starbucks Coffee Company has been committed to ethically sourcing and roasting high-quality arabica coffee. Today, with over 38,000 stores worldwide, the company is the premier roaster and retailer of specialty coffee in the world. Through our unwavering commitment to excellence and our guiding principles, we bring the unique Starbucks Experience to life for every customer through every cup. To share in the experience, please visit us in our stores or online at stories.starbucks.com or starbucks.com.

About Grubhub
Grubhub is part of Just Eat Takeaway.com (LSE: JET, AMS: TKWY), and is a leading U.S. food ordering and delivery marketplace. Dedicated to connecting diners with the food they love from their favorite local restaurants, Grubhub elevates food ordering through innovative restaurant technology, easy-to-use platforms, and an improved delivery experience. Grubhub features 375,000 merchants in over 4,000 U.S. cities.

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What Really Happened Inside Miss USA?

Laylah Rose says she won her first pageant at age 2. With dark, glossy hair and a measured smile, she went on to enter many more. Yet, even as a girl, she dreamed of something bigger. Rose didn’t only want to wear a sash, as her mother and grandmother had done before her: She wanted to run Miss USA.

Last summer, Rose, 45, whose legal name is Laylah Loiczly, finally achieved that goal. In an email, she said she saw “opportunities to improve, enhance and in many ways repair the iconic brand.”

Those repairs were sorely needed. In recent years, Miss USA has weathered allegations of racism and sexual harassment, and has passed from owner to owner — one of them being Donald Trump. The 2022 suicide of Miss USA 2019 sent the organization reeling. In 2023, Rose’s predecessor was suspended after accusations of pageant rigging.

In her first months in charge of the pageant, Rose got to work. (She bought the rights to manage Miss USA for an initial payment of $1.5 million, according to a preliminary deal document.) She helped secure a multiyear deal with The CW to broadcast the Miss USA pageant for the first time since 2016. In an interview, Renato Basile, a Hollywood producer she hired to work on the production, credited her with “bringing the luster back to Miss USA and Miss Teen.”

But less than a year into Rose’s tenure as the president and CEO of the organization, the reigning Miss USA and Miss Teen USA, Noelia Voigt and UmaSofia Srivastava, stepped down within days of each other. In the pageant’s seven-decade history, no winner had ever quit.

Careful observers identified what they believe to be a secret message hidden in Voigt’s Instagram post announcing her resignation: “I AM SILENCED.”

The departures rocked the pageant world, but were less than shocking to those who knew Rose. In interviews with over two dozen pageant insiders, several people familiar with Rose said she had a tendency to overpromise and under-deliver. They recalled frequent staff turnover, describing her as abrasive and self-obsessed. Several people said the environment she created at the organization was toxic.

“I’m not surprised that Noelia stepped down,” Kimberly Nicewonder, the longtime director of the Virginia pageants, said of the former Miss USA. “I just thought it would have happened sooner.”

Disillusioned With the Crown

Some of the problems simmering inside Miss USA were garden-variety for a tightknit professional community: There was interpersonal conflict, dysfunction and disappointment with a new leader who suddenly seemed to turn everything upside down. But many of the participants and state directors — who run the state-level pageants that send their winners to the Miss USA event — felt those issues exposed deeper tensions within an institution at odds with its own stated mission of women’s empowerment.

For decades, the Miss USA pageant was a splashy, televised affair with hosts including Dick Clark, Bob Barker and Andy Cohen. The winners were proto-influencers, traveling the country to promote personal causes and appearing on red carpets. Some used the pageant as a springboard to professional careers, such as Shawn Weatherly, Miss USA 1980, who went on to star in “Baywatch.” Halle Berry placed as first runner-up in 1986.

The pageant, however, has lost cultural relevance in recent years.

“Interest in Miss USA is way, way down from where it was in the last century and even earlier in this century,” said Hilary Levey Friedman, author of “Here She Is: The Complicated Reign of the Beauty Pageant in America.”

“There are just so many more opportunities for women now than there were in the ’50s,” she said.

Voigt was frustrated by what happened after she accepted the glittering crown last September, according to her mother, Jackeline Voigt. Through a representative, Noelia Voigt declined to be interviewed, citing a nondisclosure agreement.

The new Miss USA began making the typical preparations for the Miss Universe pageant, which was being held that November in El Salvador. In the past, the director of Miss USA had accompanied the winner to the global event. Voigt expected that Rose would do the same.

But Rose did not attend the event. Instead, Jackeline Voigt accompanied her daughter to the pageant on her own dime. (Rose said she did not attend because of a family matter.)

When Voigt and her mother returned to the United States, they ran into more problems. As part of her title, Voigt expected to receive a $100,000 salary, a luxury car and an apartment in Los Angeles to live in for the duration of her reign. It seemed like a reasonable expectation: During the televised broadcast of Miss USA, one of the hosts rattled off a list of prizes the winner would receive, including an apartment and a car. Rose said in an email that while Voigt’s contract included a salary, the other prizes were not guaranteed.

Still, in December, Rose told Voigt the organization had secured her a new apartment, according to Jackeline Voigt. When it never materialized, Voigt, who had already moved out of her apartment in Utah, ended up crashing with friends and family. She confided in her pageant coach, Thom Brodeur, about her housing situation. He jokingly called her “the homeless Miss USA,” Brodeur said.

Finally, in March, Miss USA provided Voigt with a car and a place to live in Miami.

It wasn’t enough. Two months later, Voigt resigned. In her internal resignation letter, obtained by The New York Times, she detailed the allegations about not receiving her apartment and car in a timely manner. She wrote that being Miss USA had affected her health, adding that she struggled with anxiety and took medication to manage her symptoms.

She also described an incident of sexual harassment when, during a Christmas parade last year in Sarasota, Florida, the driver of her car made an inappropriate comment. He asked her if she was “into old men with money,” Jackeline Voigt said her daughter had told her. In her resignation letter, Voigt wrote that the organization failed to support her when she reported the incident.

In late May, Rose replied to Voigt in a 10-page letter obtained by the Times. In it, Rose denied Voigt’s accusations and accused her of carrying out a “smear campaign” against the organization. Rose wrote that she “immediately” discussed the incident at the Christmas parade with Voigt after being made aware of it.

“You indicated you did not need or want to seek redress,” Rose wrote.

Srivastava, the Miss Teen USA, had her own tensions with the Miss USA organization — and with Rose specifically. Her mother, Barbara Srivastava, said in an interview that Rose could be abrasive in emails with her then-16-year-old daughter. (Rose described her communication style as “professional and appropriate.”) The younger Srivastava declined to comment because of a nondisclosure agreement.

Barbara Srivastava said she eventually asked Rose to stop communicating with her daughter altogether: “I said, ‘I don’t want that woman bullying my daughter.’”

Rose would also use the official Miss USA and Miss Teen USA Instagram accounts to leave positive comments about herself, which were made to look as if they were written by Voigt and Srivastava, said Claudia Michelle Engelhardt, who stepped down from her role as social media director for Miss USA in May. Rose denied this claim.

Srivastava’s parents felt unsure about how to handle the situation. Unlike many competing in Miss Teen USA, their daughter was relatively new to the pageant world. They had no idea what to expect when she won.

In March, Barbara Srivastava called Mario Bucaro, the vice president for international relations at Miss Universe, which oversees Miss USA and Miss Teen USA. She and her husband had several video calls with Rose and Bucaro, in hopes that the organization might address how their daughter was being treated.

The meetings, while cordial, didn’t accomplish much, Barbara Srivastava said. She recalled that Bucaro, a former Guatemalan diplomat, praised her daughter and said the organization could help with her dreams of attending Harvard University.

“‘She’s everything that a Miss USA and a Miss Universe should be,’” Barbara Srivastava recalled being told in one meeting.

The ‘Fyre Fest’ of Pageants

It wasn’t only the winners who felt wronged by Rose. Some state directors said they were put off when Rose did not ask them to introduce themselves in their first meeting together. (All current state directors interviewed for this article were granted anonymity because they feared retaliation by Rose.)

Soon after, Rose informed the directors that their local pageants were being put on hold — leaving at least one director on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars in expenses for events set to be held just a few weeks out, according to several state directors with knowledge of the situation.

The decision also affected hundreds of women around the country who compete in state-level pageants throughout the year, and often spend thousands of dollars on travel, attire, coaching and entry fees.

“I thought I was being pranked,” said VanillaAíday Carter, 27, who lost $400 on a makeup team she had booked to compete in the Miss Washington USA pageant.

Rose kept the national Miss USA competition on the schedule for September as planned, since the 2023 state winners had already been crowned. Under Rose, however, the pageant was haphazard, according to five women who competed in Miss USA 2023.

“‘Chaos’ is the best word I can use to describe the Miss USA pageant,” said Regan Ringler, 26, who competed as Miss Tennessee USA. So many things went wrong that she joked it was like the “Fyre Fest” of pageants.

Problems arose before the competition even started. To compete in Miss USA and Miss Teen USA, contestants were required to sign a 25-page “Official Entry Form/Contract,” which was obtained by the Times. The document authorized the organization to conduct “physical and mental examinations” of contestants and to request medical records from any doctor who had ever treated them. It also gave the organization the right to terminate Miss USA’s employment in the case of “facial or physical disfigurement.”

Rose said Miss USA contestants had a month to sign, but according to emails obtained by the Times, multiple women received the documents after 8 p.m. the day they were due. If they didn’t sign, they could not participate in the event.

The pageant got off to a rocky start. Several Miss Teen USA contestants arrived at the airport with no one there to greet them or help them get to the venue, multiple state directors said.

Rose denied these allegations. “All teens were supervised and had both chaperones and security,” she wrote.

For some Miss USA contestants, the interview portion of the event did not go as they had expected. Interviews account for half of a contestant’s score and are the only opportunity for participants to be judged on something other than their looks.

While contestants waited in a holding room during the pageant, Rose came in and made an announcement. “What she said to us was, ‘There’s going to be no political questions, nothing about religion, nothing about sex,’” said Rachelle di Stasio, 27, who competed as Miss New York USA 2023.

Several women felt that Rose was discouraging them from talking about the more substantive pieces of why they wanted to earn the platform that came with Miss USA’s crown. (Rose said in an email that she instructed judges to ask about such topics only if they were part of a contestant’s platform.)

Di Stasio had planned to talk about her experience as a survivor of sexual assault and her advocacy work, which had been her platform as Miss New York. Judges asked about her career in ballet. Then the conversation shifted: “The next question that this judge specifically asked me was: ‘Would you still be discussing your platform and talking about these issues if you were to become Miss USA?’” she recalled. It felt like a trick question, she said, and she paused before answering that she did not plan to shy away from the issue.

When she did not make the competition’s Top 20, she felt that the conversation may have been the reason.

“The national stage is supposed to be a safe space for these girls to go and have their voices heard and be able to promote their personal platforms and showcase their beauty and their strength and their intelligence,” Nicewonder, the Virginia director, said. “It’s just not a safe space anymore.”

Months later, she left the Miss USA organization after three decades. The “unprofessionalism” of the new leadership was among her reasons, she said.

An Uncertain Future

In the aftermath of Voigt’s and Srivastava’s resignations, the once-coveted Miss USA and Miss Teen USA crowns have become hot potatoes. Savannah Gankiewicz, the new Miss USA, the runner-up to Voigt, said she had faced “bullying and harassment” since stepping in to take the vacant crown. The next in line for Miss Teen USA declined the position.

One of Rose’s triumphs, the television deal with The CW, is under scrutiny. The CW is “evaluating its relationship with both pageants,” the network said in a statement last month.

Would-be contestants of state-level pageants have been dropping out as a result of the recent drama, some directors said, disillusioned with the meaning of the crown and sash they had once so fervently sought. Brodeur, the pageant coach, said eight of his clients had decided not to compete this year. On social media, Voigt is still asking to be released from her nondisclosure agreement.

Many in the pageant world would like to see Rose ousted, but she seems to have no intention of stepping down. She told the Times she was looking forward to more exciting changes at Miss USA.

“These women are truly poised to change the world,” she said.

SOURCE: The New York Times Company

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