It’s not every day you see a grizzly bear having a blast in a swimming pool, but it was bound to happen at some point, right? Grizzlies are great swimmers and love the water, so it’s only natural that they’d like to splash around in a pool. But actually seeing …
Archives for June 2023
Sanders says ‘choice is between normal or crazy’ in GOP response
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders (R ) called for a new generation of Republican leadership in her response to President Biden’s State of the Union address on Tuesday.
“The dividing line in America is no longer between right or left,” Sanders said from the governor’s mansion in Little Rock. “The choice is between normal or crazy. It’s time for a new generation of Republican leadership.”
Sanders was a White House spokesperson for former President Trump, who is seeking another term as president. He is the only Republican candidate in the 2024 race at this time.
A number of Republicans have suggested it is time to turn the page on the Trump era, and the Sanders remark could be read as a shot at Trump.
But Sanders also went on to praise the former president, recalling traveling with him when he visited troops in Iraq during a Christmas in his administration.
Sanders spent most of her address hitting Biden over his address, attacking him over inflation, the flow of migrants over the southern border, foreign policy, and cultural issues.
“In the Radical Left’s America, Washington taxes you and lights your hard-earned money on fire,” Sanders said. “But you get crushed with high gas prices, empty grocery shelves, and our children are taught to hate one another on account of their race.”
Sanders took a personal tone during parts of the speech, particularly when she recounted her and her mothers’ own experiences battling cancer.
“Faith propels us to charge boldly ahead,” she said.
The governor is considered a new generation of leadership in the GOP herself, being the first woman to serve as Arkansas governor and the youngest governor in the nation.
Republicans were quick to praise Sanders following her address, including Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who tweeted a photo of him watching the rebuttal.
“The contrast between her speech and Biden’s couldn’t be more clear,” McCarthy tweeted. “Republicans offer a vision for a future built on freedom, not fear-mongering.”
Ben Affleck and stepdaughter Emme laugh it up in Santa Monica | Daily Mail Online
Ben Affleck spent his Saturday having a blast with his stepdaughter Emme in Santa Monica.
The Gone Girl actor, 51, and the 15-year-old budding star made their way around the city to shop and grab some food as they sported smiles on their faces the entire time.
Emme is one of the twins that actress and singer Jennifer Lopez, 53, had with her former husband, Marc Anthony. Her brother Max was absent from the outing with Ben.
The On the Floor songstress recently rekindled her long-time romance with the Good Will Hunting actor, and the pair tied the knot back in July 2022.
Affleck and Emme both donned comfortable and warm looks for their stepfather-stepdaughter day out.
Day out: Ben Affleck spent his Saturday having a blast with his stepdaughter Emme
Lots of laughs: The Gone Girl actor, 51, and the 15-year-old made their way around the city to shop and grab some food as they sported smiles on their faces the entire time
The Air director sported a black bomber jacket over a black hoodie and a white t-shirt underneath.
He kept extra hidden from the sun in a pair of grey jeans and black and white high-top sneakers.
The actor spent his time making Emme laugh as he moved his arms around and donned a funny face as she laughed beside him.
Emme, who has worked beside her A-list mom before, looked cozy in an oversized white hoodie and a pair of loose-fitting jeans.
She amped up her look with a pair of white Converse sneakers, which looked like they had been drawn on with several different colored markers.
The aspiring performer wore her hair cut short and in tight curls around her face, which she kept makeup free.
In her ears she had a pair of wired headphones connected to the phone in her hand, yet she seemed fully attuned to the jokes Ben was making.
The duo went to a used store book store first before heading to a thrift store, and they finished up their outing with a meal at Jack in the Box.
Cracking jokes: Emme is one of the twins that actress and singer Jennifer Lopez had with her former husband, Marc Anthony
Cool stepdad: The actor spent his time making Emme laugh as he moved his arms around and donned a funny face as she laughed beside him
During their day, both Ben and Emme acquired large paper bags, presumably filled with the things they picked up.
Before marrying J-Lo, Ben was previously married to 13 Going on 30 actress Jennifer Garner from 2005 until 2018.
The two A-list actors share three kids, Violet, 17, Seraphina, 14, and Samuel, 11.
Since rekindling his romance with J-Lo, 20 years after they were originally engaged, but broke it off just before their wedding in 2003, the pair have worked on blending their new family.
While appearing for an interview on TODAY in January, she spoke about the process of integrating five children under one roof.
‘We moved in together. The kids moved in together,’ Lopez said. ‘It’s been, like, a really kind of emotional transition, but at the same time, all your dreams coming true.’
They met on the set of the box office flop Gigli, where the two played gangsters who fall in love while attempting to kidnap a neurodivergent man.
Ben and Jen had yet to be burned by their looming box office failure when they reunited in 2002 to film Jersey Girl, which was released two years later.
Blended family: Since tying the knot, Ben and Jen have been working on blending their families; seen at the Air premiere in March
Sweet: The On the Floor singer shares Emme and her son Max with her former husband Marc Anthony
Old flame: Ben was previously married to actress Jennifer Garner from 2005 until 2018; seen at the 2014 Vanity Fair post Oscar party
He played a widower in the 2004 rom-com, while she had a supporting role as his character’s late wife. The movie marked the start of the A-list couple’s tumultuous romance.
After postponing their impending nuptials due to ‘excessive media attention,’ the couple stayed together for a few more months before confirming their split in a statement released in early 2004.
The then-former couple both entered long-term relationships with other stars, the Waiting for Tonight singer marrying Marc Anthony and then getting engaged to former MLB player Alex Rodriguez.
Jennifer and Ben, more fondly known as ‘Bennifer,’ reignited their romance in May 2021 and tied the knot officially that following summer.
Share or comment on this article:
Ben Affleck and stepdaughter Emme laugh it up in Santa Monica
Liverpool news: Darwin Nunez pulls off crazy pass
Watch Darwin Nunez send an outrageous cross-field pass to a team mate during Liverool’s league win over Wolves last night.
Kiszla: Nuggets’ championship was born way back in 2016 with a crazy idea: Nikola Jokic could be better than Larry Bird.
A championship parade through the streets of Denver that will make Nuggets Nation cheer and clap louder than thunder began with one bold step on a sad day in Dallas nearly seven years ago.
This is the story of the precise moment when a fly-over NBA city gambled everything on a 21-year-old Serbian forward with a soft shooting touch and a softer belly.
As the Nuggets get ready to parade the shiny gold Larry O’Brien trophy through downtown, I’m here to tell you that maybe the most momentous date in team history is Dec. 12, 2016, when a struggling team searching for answers got blown out by 30 on the road against the Mavericks.
That’s when the brain trust of Nuggets president Josh Kroenke, general manager Tim Connelly and coach Michael Malone leaned hard into the analytics and embraced a radical hypothesis many in the league would dispute to this day:
Nikola Jokic is the second coming of Larry Bird.
“(Connelly and I) sat down and looked at the analytics. We were trying to play two talented big guys in the starting lineup at the same time and it wasn’t working, when everybody in the league was going small because of Golden State’s success,” Kroenke told me Monday night, in a champagne-drenched locker room after the Nuggets beat Miami 94-89 to close out the NBA Finals in five games.
“… At that point, Nikola was coming off an all-league rookie season. We had a data set on him we could really look at, about a year and a half of play. So we did a Player A and Player B comparison, standardized to 36 minutes per game production, looking at everything.”
The findings were jaw-dropping.
“The only caveat was Player A played basketball for four years in college and was two years older than Player B at the time of their second seasons in the NBA. But the same point in their careers, you could clearly see that Player B was better than Player A, based on the physical evidence,” recalled Kroenke, his eyes twinkling with the memory.
“Player B was Nikola Jokic. Player A was Larry Bird.”

With little more to rely on except a page of outrageously optimistic data points and gut instinct, the Nuggets dared to dream a second-round draft choice could grow up to be Bird, revered for being the league’s MVP three times and leading the Celtics to three championships on his way to enshrinement in the Hall of Fame.
Was it a crazy notion? You bet.
A little more than a month earlier, shortly before Thanksgiving 2016, Jokic went to Malone and volunteered to give up his spot in the starting lineup as a power forward alongside center Jusuf Nurkic.
In defiance of the league trend, the Nuggets were futilely trying to to build a winner around twin towers, by playing Jokic out of position at forward. Long before he grew into “a triple-double machine” admired by Heat coach Erik Spoelstra, a young Jokic already saw everything on the court unfold more clearly than anyone else. At age 21, he convinced Malone to shelve the twin towers experiment after a November loss to those ballyhooed Warriors in which Jokic scored only a single basket and two free throws during 18 unproductive minutes.
But shortly thereafter, on that sad December night in Dallas when the Nuggets’ record dropped to 9-16, the team’s brain trust committed to an idea that changed everything. Armed with analytics that suggested an under-utilized reserve could be as productive as Bird, Malone looked himself in the mirror and asked: “What am I doing?”
Three days later, when Denver returned home to play Portland, Malone re-inserted Jokic as a starter at his natural position of center and benched Nurkic. It was a move that so upset Nurk, a 2014 first-round pick, that the relationship with the Bosnian Beast and the team soon ended in a messy divorce.
On Dec. 12, 2016, the Nuggets decided to bet everything on Jokic.
“And that’s when our team took off,” Malone recalled at the outset of the NBA Finals. “He became the focal point of everything we did.”
The Nuggets not only re-imagined their offense around an innovative concept Jokic has since mastered as a passing wizard best described as a point center, the organization built its winning culture on his broad shoulders.
So it’s not a stretch to suggest the first championship in the franchise’s 56-year history is the by-product of a bromance between a coach who’s as saucy as a slice of New York pizza and a gentle giant who’d rather be in Serbia cleaning out his horse stables than take a ride on a fire truck along a raucous victory parade route.
While Malone now calls it the best decision of his coaching life, it took guts to entrust his job to a 21-year-old who had only shown flashes of brilliance up until then. A center now lauded as half Tim Duncan, half Magic Johnson and totally amazing never would’ve grown into a 6-foot-11 basketball unicorn without the brave commitment of Malone.
“The guy gave me everything,” Jokic told me back in 2021, shortly before he won the first of back-to-back MVP trophies. Malone “gave me the freedom, he showed me the way. We built a great relationship, not just he’s the coach and I’m a player. We are friends, too. It’s more than basketball.”
This is a basketball love story conceived in analytics that resonated with the logical left side of the organization’s brain, then was brought to life by the creative sorcery of a big Serbian’s imagination in a potent mix of science and art.
The payoff?
On Denver streets long paved with the fatalism that a championship could never happen here, Nuggets Nation will gather during a parade to be bedazzled by the O’Brien trophy’s beautiful gold basketball, shining in the Colorado sun.
Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.