Lifestyle
Jeremy Allen White and Rosalía Enjoy Smoke Break Amid Dating Rumors
Jeremy Allen White and Rosalía aren’t putting dating rumors to rest — in fact, they’re adding fuel to the fire and lighting a match … to spark up cigs, and more rumors, no doubt.
TMZ got these photos of “The Bear” actor and the Spanish singer hanging out Wednesday in WeHo … where they were chopping it up in a parking lot, and enjoying a smoke break in each other’s company.
It’s kinda funny … you could argue this scene here is life imitating art a bit — namely, on Jeremy’s end. His character from the TV show is constantly stepping out to inhale a cigarette amid the restaurant chaos … and while this moment isn’t nearly as dramatic, it does feel familiar.
Anyway, JAW and Rosalía ended up talking a bit more — sans cancer sticks — and ultimately departed with a nice big hug … but no kiss, something we know Jeremy ain’t shy to do when he’s into a new boo.
Still, it’s interesting to see them continue to hang amid last month’s public farmer’s market outing — where Jeremy was walking around with a huge bouquet of flowers … which may or may not have been for his new would-be significant other.
Folks thought there was something going on between them then … and they’re sure to keep on believing that after this latest rendezvous.
What adds an extra layer of intrigue here is the fact that Jeremy is still navigating a divorce from his wife, Addison Timlin … with whom he shares 2 children.
The exes seem to be on good terms, ’cause they’re constantly stepping out as a family … so it would appear they’re going about their uncoupling amicably.
Anyway, Jeremy certainly isn’t scared to put his personal life on the front street, and with his growing success in the biz, he’s only going to get more and more attention the bigger he gets.
The dude’s IDGAF vibes are pretty palpable … he’s as down-to-earth as they come.
Lifestyle
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett : Consider This from NPR
Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
Country music singer Charley Crockett was born and raised in Texas, grew up in a single-wide trailer with his mom and says his family lineage traces all the way back to the frontiersman Davy Crockett.
This Sunday is the music industry’s biggest night — the Grammy Awards. And Crockett is up for an award for the first time — Best Americana Album — for his record “$10 Cowboy.”
For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org
Email us at considerthis@npr.org
This episode was produced by Kira Wakeam and Marc Rivers, with audio engineering by Kwesi Lee .
It was edited by Christopher Intagliata.
Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
Lifestyle
5 easy exercises for your hands, wrists, forearms and elbows to alleviate desk job aches and pains
Prolonged desk work can lead to musculoskeletal problems ranging from annoying aches and pains to injuries. This month, we launched a six-part series showing you how to stretch and strengthen your body parts to prepare them for marathon sitting sessions at your desk. We’ll roll out a new exercise routine every week, each focusing on a different area of the body, that will help alleviate desk job-related woes.
Last week we published exercises for the shoulders and chest. This week we’re tackling hands, wrists, forearms and elbows.
To learn more about how sitting affects the body, and why these exercises are important, read our first piece in the series.
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A routine for your hands, wrists, forearms and elbows
Typing and mousing for long periods is stressful for the finger and wrist muscles as well as the forearms. The forearms are designed to pick up sticks and pull fruit off of trees, not to tap a keyboard for eight hours straight. As a result, developing inflammation in the area is common. Scar tissue can also develop from long-term inflammation, often where the muscles of the forearm attach to the elbows. The result is stiff fingers and wrists, achy joints and tennis or golf elbow — painful, inflamed tendons — among other conditions.
Do these exercises to help stretch and strengthen your hands, wrists, forearms and elbows. They’re demonstrated by trainer Melissa Gunn, of Pure Strength LA, whose team trains desk workers on how to protect their bodies through exercise.
- Put all five fingertips together on one hand, as if grabbing a pinch of salt. Put a rubber band around your fingernails and open your fingers, pushing into the resistance of the band and spreading your fingers as far apart as possible, until you have a wide-open hand. Repeat 5 times on each hand.
- Standing or sitting, put the palms of your hands together in front of your chest, at chest height, as if praying. Slowly raise your elbows, with your thumbs against your body, and your hands will naturally drop down. Do it until you feel a stretch in your fingers and forearms. Repeat 5-10 times.
- Place your hand flat, palm down, on a desk or table. Gently lift one finger at a time off the table and then lower it. You can also lift all your fingers at once and then lower them. Repeat 5-10 times on each hand.
- Lay your arm flat on a table or desk with your wrist hanging over the edge. Keep your arm straight while lifting your wrist up toward the ceiling and hold for 5-10 seconds. Gently lower your wrist down toward the floor and hold for 5-10 seconds. Repeat this 5 times for each wrist or do both together.
- Slowly roll your wrists inward and outward, 5-10 times on each side.
(Exercises came from Dr. Joshua T. Goldman, UCLA sports medicine; Melissa Gunn, Pure Strength LA; Tom Hendrickx, Pivot Physical Therapy; Vanessa Martinez Kercher, Indiana University-Bloomington, School of Public Health; Nico Pronk, Health Partners Institute; Niki Saccareccia, Light Inside Yoga.)
Lifestyle
A museum's confession: why we have looted objects
Last year, the Thai government sent a letter to the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco requesting the return of four ancient bronze statues depicting Buddhist spiritual figures — buddhas and bodhisattvas.
“ We did some initial research on these,” said Natasha Reichle, the museum’s associate curator of Southeast Asian art. “It was not too difficult to determine that they were looted.”
Stolen around 60 years ago in a massive art heist, the statues are soon heading home to Thailand. But before they leave, the museum is explaining how these artifacts wound up in its collection in the first place in the exhibition Moving Objects: Learning from Local and Global Communities. This effort is indicative of a growing trend: Museums opening up about dark truths.
“I would love audiences to think of the return of these objects not as in any way a loss,” Reichle said, noting that the exhibition explores complex questions to do with cultural heritage, ownership, and restitution. ”And it’s also, I hope, a way to form relationships with countries in Southeast Asia that’s based on equity and collaboration.”
Turning a blind eye to questionable provenance
Reichle said these statues were among the many stolen in the mid-1960s from the ruins of a temple in a remote part of northeast Thailand.
The looted statues were sold to private collectors and museums around the world by a London art dealer. Four of them were gifted to the Asian Art Museum by a major donor.
Even back then, Reichle said, her institution had suspicions about their sketchy provenance. “You can see in the correspondence that they were concerned about the legality of this, but pretty much ignored it, put it to the side, and went ahead.”
Changing values
Until about a decade ago, most museums in the West didn’t think too deeply about questions of provenance when it came to acknowledging — let alone making amends for — looted works in their collections.
“The museum sector stance was much more, ‘We’re the authorities, we’re the experts, we’re going to talk about these things we’ve studied in other cultures,” said Elizabeth Merritt, the founding director of the Center for the Future of Museums at the American Alliance of Museums.
But a growing number of requests from overseas authorities for the return of stolen artifacts, along with prominent investigations in the U.S. media and government around a few of these cases has led to a shift in the public’s understanding of what museums do — and a shift in museums’ own values.
Many museums are now re-evaluating their traditional role as universal custodians of the world’s heritage and culture.
“There’s a larger public consciousness now about what museums are,” said Stephen Murphy, a senior lecturer in the Department of History of Art and Archaeology at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, who researches looted Southeast Asian art. “Like, ‘Why do you have all this material from different cultures around the world? And how did you get it?’ “
Murphy said that’s why museums are not only having more open conversations with the countries and communities whose artifacts were stolen, but also with the museum-going public.
“There’s such an appetite with the general public to understand how objects came into their collections,” Murphy said. “And I think if museums engage more openly with this, they will be able to develop a greater understanding among the museum-going public of the issues that museums face.”
The challenges facing museums
Those issues are substantial.
Many museums, including the Asian Art Museum, don’t have the money and staff to deeply research questions of provenance. And sometimes it can be difficult to identify what government or group has standing to receive these artifacts.
Figuring out the answers to these questions takes significant time. And museums may have thousands of objects, only some of which are on public display. Many are in storage, awaiting potential research.
Also, some museums still worry that the countries requesting these objects won’t be able to look after them.
As the American Alliance of Museums’ Merritt points out, caring for and researching significant cultural heritage is what museums do.
“I think it’s really important that the public understand that museums steward these vast collections for the benefit of the public, and what it takes to take care of those things,” Merritt said.
Talking to the public
The Asian Art Museum is just one institution confronting these competing forces out in the open.
There’s also an exhibition at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C., which tells the story of sculptures stolen during a British raid on Benin City, Nigeria, in the late 1800s. The Smithsonian repatriated 29 of these co-called “Benin Bronzes” in its collection in 2022, and borrowed nine back from the Nigerian government for the exhibition.
And the Museum of Food and Drink in New York recently held a public event ahead of the repatriation of more than 50 antique Mesoamerican artifacts to Mexico and other countries.
“It’s really a celebration of the way that we are retelling history from the perspective of the people who made the history and not necessarily the people who came in and changed the history,” said Catherine Piccoli, the museum’s curatorial director.
The global museum community has been watching the evolution of American attitudes towards repatriation with interest. Udomluck Hoontrakul, the director of the Thammasat Museum of Anthropology at Thammasat University in Thailand, said she admires the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco’s efforts to engage its visitors around these issues.
“This helps audiences understand the broader situation in which these objects were taken,” Hoontrakul said. “And it highlights the violence and exploitation involved in the illicit trade of cultural property.”
Jennifer Vanasco edited the broadcast and digital versions of this story. Chloee Weiner produced the audio.
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