Miami, FL
Heat snap four-game skid behind Adebayo power play in 108-95 victory in Detroit
DETROIT – Having lost earlier in the week to the even-worse Washington Wizards, this was nothing the Miami Heat could afford to take for granted.
So they didn’t, pushing past the Detroit Pistons 108-95 Friday night at Little Caesars Arena.
Now all they have to do is do it again, when the teams meet Sunday back on the Pistons’ court.
Having snapped a four-game losing streak, the Heat still find themselves with minimal margin for error in their bid to avoid the play-in round ahead of the NBA playoffs.
Center Bam Adebayo stepped up and did his part with 22 points and nine rebounds, with Duncan Robinson taking care of the outside punch in a 16-point effort that included four 3-pointers.
Factor in 18 points apiece from Terry Rozier, 18 and Caleb Martin and 14 from Jimmy Butler and the Heat moved to 36-30, while the Pastons fell to 12-54, ultimately done in by their turnover troubles.
Heat pest Simone Fontecchio led the Pistons with 24 points, on a night the Heat limited Detroit’s Cade Cunningham to 11 on 5-of-15 shooting.
The game opened a four-game trip that continues after Sunday with a Monday game against the Philadelphia 76ers and a Wednesday night game against the Cleveland Cavaliers, with the Heat continuing to play in the injury absences of Tyler Herro and Kevin Love.
Five Degrees of Heat from Friday night’s game:
1. Game flow: The Pistons led 28-27 after the first period, before the Heat took a 56-54 lead into halftime and then led 84-72 going into the fourth.
The Heat then pushed their lead into the 20s in the final period, with Martin’s energy and Thomas Bryant’s inside play at center allowing coach Erik Spoelstra to rest Adebayo and Butler in the fourth.
Martin closed 8 of 14 from the field, with eight rebounds and six assists. Bryant finished with 11 points and five rebounds.
2. On a roll: Adebayo was up to 16 points and seven rebounds by the intermission, with all 16 points in the second period.
Adebayo’s career high for a period is 19, against the Los Angeles Clippers in 2021. The 16 were one off Adebayo’s career high for a second period.
He closed 10 of 14 from the field,
3. Another three: Adebayo made a 3-pointer for the second consecutive game, when he converted from the top of the circle with 8:30 left in the second period.
Adebayo had made his lone attempt in Wednesday night’s home loss to the Denver Nuggets and now has attempted four 3-pointers over the last five games.
He improved to 3 of 16 for the season with Friday’s conversion.
The three 3-pointers tie his high for a season, when he went 3 of 15 in his second season in 2018-19.
4. Power of the 3: In going from 3 of 20 on 3-pointers to 5 of 22 with a pair of Robinson conversions, the Heat moved to an 80-65 lead and forced a Pistons timeout with 2:56 left in the third period.
Robinson then converted a third consecutive 3-pointer after that timeout to move to 4 of 9 from beyond the arc and lift the Heat to an 83-65 lead.
At that stage, the only players beyond Robinson to have converted 3-pointers were Adebayo and power forward Nikola Jovic.
5. Attack mode: Rozier played in attack mode, with eyes on the rim, compensating for his attempts that didn’t drop by working his way to the line.
Remaining to be seen is whether Rozier’s volume shooting can coexist with Herro’s volume shooting.
The aggression was welcomed and needed in this one.
Miami, FL
Dance NOW! Miami resurrects extinct songbird for season finale
In 1987, on the Hawaiian island of Kauaʻi, a naturalist and wildlife photographer named David Boynton captured on tape what many environmentalists feel is among the saddest sounds ever recorded.
It’s believed to be the final mating call of a male Moho braccatus — a small songbird — singing for a female that never replied.
Researchers posit that the last female of the species perished in a hurricane five years earlier. Within a few years of Boynton’s recording, the species was declared extinct.
But the lost songbird returns in Dance NOW! Miami’s new contemporary ballet titled Love-less: Dance of the Last Moho braccatus.
It makes its world premiere this week during the company’s season finale called Love Lost And Found.
The piece was created by DNM’s co-founder and co-Artistic Director Hannah Baumgarten, who says she first learned about the bird during a screening of the Sam Green documentary 32 Sounds at the Perez Art Museum in Miami.
“I heard this haunting call with no reply,” says Baumgarten. “And I was awash with so many feelings about love and loss that I just knew in that moment, I was going to make a ballet about it.”
Baumgarten says she saw parallels between the songbird’s story and how human beings cope with loss and their own mortality.
“”For me, personally, this piece became about the observations I made with my parents as I’m watching them age,” she says.
“And I’m watching my mother grapple with the differences in the speed at which she and my father are aging.”
DNM’s season finale also marks the world premiere of Traces, by the company’s co-founder and co-Artistic Director, Diego Salterini.
“It is the other end of the spectrum,” says Baumgarten. The piece charts the universal search for love, seen through the eyes of one woman.
Dance NOW! Miami’s season finale clocks in at only 80 minutes long (with two short pauses) but covers a lot of ground.
In addition to the two world premieres, DNM will perform Tandy Beal’s Forest Dreams; Deco-de, Salterini’s homage to Art Deco design and architecture; and an excerpt from Blue Pencil, DNM’s commentary on government censorship and repression.
IF YOU GO
WHAT: LOVE LOST & FOUND
Dance NOW! Miami
Program III Season Finale
WHEN: Friday, May 8 in Lauderhill &
Saturday, May 9 in Aventura
Both shows 8:00 pm
WHERE: Lauderhill Performing Arts Center
3800 NW 11th Place, Lauderhill, FL
Aventura Arts & Cultural Center
3385 NE 188th Street, Aventura, FL
More information: dancenowmiami.org
Miami, FL
Trust in crypto remains biggest barrier to adoption, say Consensus Miami 2026 panelists
Trust remains a primary barrier to broader crypto adoption, according to representatives from the National Cryptocurrency Association, Circle, U.S. Bank and ChangeNOW at Consensus 2026 in Miami.
Ali Tager of the National Cryptocurrency Association said research shows “the number one barrier to non-crypto holders is they just do not get it,” citing complexity, jargon and misinformation as persistent challenges.
Panelists from Circle, U.S. Bank and ChangeNOW said trust is built gradually through user experience rather than technical claims. Britt Cambas of Circle said “you are not going to get technical trust in 30 seconds,” emphasizing clarity and reducing complexity as prerequisites for adoption.
Rachel Castro of U.S. Bank said trust is central to financial services and “very easily broken,” adding that rebuilding it takes significantly longer once lost.
Speakers highlighted customer support and human interaction as critical differentiators in crypto platforms. Pauline Shangett of ChangeNOW said “the primary factor of trust for me when it comes to a web3 project is a feeling that you are working with real people,” pointing to gaps in user support across the industry.
Cambas said reducing ambiguity in products and partnerships is key, noting that simplifying complex systems can drive adoption more effectively than new features.
Panelists also pointed to education as a necessary step for onboarding new users. Tager said the industry must “make it super simple, make it accessible, make it trustworthy” to reach mainstream audiences.
The discussion, moderated by Ashley Wright, focused on designing systems that prioritize transparency, usability and communication, with speakers agreeing that trust must be embedded across product design, customer engagement and regulatory frameworks rather than treated as a standalone feature.
Miami, FL
Photographer Brings Measuring Tape to Miami GP to Get Cameras Past Security
Last week, PetaPixel reported that the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix has strict rules on what cameras are allowed in — so one photographer brought along a tape measure to prove that his gear was eligible for entry.
Roberto Baldea says on Instagram that a security guard on the gate told him his lenses — an 18-35mm and a 70-200mm — were too big. But he had a cunning plan.
“They didn’t want to let me in with my camera and my lens,” Baldea says. “I came prepared. This is a measuring tape from Ikea, and the guy was beefing with me. He was like, ‘It’s not six inches, this is too big for six inches’.”
The lens that Baldea brought with him, as he demonstrates in the video, is exactly six inches. “Be aware, photographers, bring a measuring tape if they say there’s a certain length limit. Don’t let them get to you,” he adds.
Baldea thanks professional motor sports photographer Jamey Price, who initially sent out a public service announcement about the strict rules at the race.
“I told you all,” Price responded to Baldea’s video. “These tracks want to create issues. Security isn’t hired by their high IQ levels. Well done for being prepared.”
On the event’s FAQs page, under cameras, it says that “point-and-shoot cameras and cameras with consumer-grade detachable lenses no longer than six inches will be allowed in order for guests to take photos, provided that they are only for personal and private non-commercial purposes.”
Fortunately for Baldea, he was able to get his cameras in and captured photos of the action as well as race winner Kimi Antonelli. A few years ago, at the same event, one fan wasn’t so lucky after he was turned away from the gate for having a mirrorless camera with him. Undeterred, he returned the next day with a floppy disk camera.
Image credits: Header photo licensed via Depositphotos.
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