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Christine Lagarde talked of leaving ECB to lead Davos forum

Christine Lagarde talked of leaving ECB to lead Davos forum

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Spike Lee reveals dramatic sacrifice he would make for his beloved Knicks to win NBA Championship
Spike Lee reveals dramatic sacrifice he would make for his beloved Knicks to win NBA Championship

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Spike Lee reveals dramatic sacrifice he would make for his beloved Knicks to win NBA Championship

Director and New York Knicks superfan Spike Lee admitted he would resort to desperate measures to watch his beloved team clinch the NBA championship. The award-winning filmmaker returned to Madison Square Garden Thursday night where he anxiously watched on as the Knicks managed to avoid elimination in a Game 5 win over the Indiana Pacers. However, the Knicks still trail the Pacers 3-2 in the Eastern Conference finals and face another crunch do-or-die in Game 6 to cling on to any hope of facing the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals. And Lee admitted he would make a massive sacrifice to not only ensure that his Knicks pulled off a miraculous conference series comeback, but also went all the way to hoisting the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy for a third time. The 68-year-old confessed that he is so desperate for an NBA title to return to the Big Apple that he would give up an Oscar. 'I would give up an Academy Award. Oscar, for the Knicks to win a Championship,' Lee said on NBA on TNT ahead of Game 5 while dressed in a blue and orange pinstriped suit. Spike: "I would give up an Academy Award. Oscar, for the Knicks to win a Championship." Chuck: "Well you're gonna keep 'em!" 🤣🤣 — NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) May 29, 2025 With the Knicks trailing 3-1 in the series at the time, Charles Barkley seized the chance to take a dig, hilariously responding: 'Well, you're gonna keep 'em.' Lee has wo two Oscars over his illustrious Hollywood career, including an honorary Academy Award in 2015 and Best Adapted Screenplay in 2019 for the motion picture BlacKkKlansman. The director has witness the Knicks become champions in his lifetime - twice, in fact. New York won championships in 1970 and 1973 but haven't claimed another in over 50 years. Lee's hopes were kept alive Thursday night as the Knicks refused to surrender the series in a dominant 111-94 win over the Pacers. Knicks stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns answered the call as they put up 32 and 24 points respectively at the Garden to carry New York to the crucial victory.

Revealed: How troubled NFL star Tyreek Hill is tackling off-field woes amid explosive divorce dispute with influencer wife
Revealed: How troubled NFL star Tyreek Hill is tackling off-field woes amid explosive divorce dispute with influencer wife

Daily Mail​

time35 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Revealed: How troubled NFL star Tyreek Hill is tackling off-field woes amid explosive divorce dispute with influencer wife

NFL phenom Tyreek Hill is attempting to move forward from a troubling offseason that includes an explosive divorce dispute by going to therapy and church more often. Hill spoke publicly for the first time since the end of the Dolphins' season in January, where he took himself off the field against the New York Jets before the end of the game and then appeared to request a trade after the game. Hill has walked back that desire, with head coach Mike McDaniel showing public displeasure for the way the speedy wide receiver handled his business. The 31-year-old's offseason hit a climax last month when police were called to his home during a domestic dispute with his then-wife, influencer Keeta Vaccaro. She has since filed for divorce from Hill. 'It's tough. Only thing I'm going to say is, man, money is a crazy thing for a lot of people,' Hill said. 'But I mean for me, we just going to let the details just handle itself, you know what I'm saying? Because at the end of the day, the truth always comes out, right?' 'My job is just to be a great father to all of my kids and be the best player I can be and be the best leader I can be for these guys in this locker room, man. So, I'm going to stand strong on that and I'm going to stand firm on that.' Hill also spoke on him wanting to be traded and where his current status with the Dolphins resides. 'It was tough, man,' Hill added. 'Obviously emotions were high then, but at the end of the day, I'm just looking to move forward from that, hoping that I can prove myself and prove to my teammates that I'm still one of them ones, man, who's chasing 2K [receiving yards], still one of those ones chasing playoff dreams and all of that great stuff.' After missing the postseason, it is clear Hill has changed things only as the AFC gets more stacked around Miami. 'I'm doing more,' Hill said. 'So just being more involved in that and then just understanding what coach is trying to do. I feel like when I first got here, I wouldn't say that I wasn't all the way bought in, but me having, me having a better understanding of what [McDaniel is] trying to push throughout the locker room, I feel like now I understand him better.' 'I understand Tua [Tagovailoa] better. I understand Bev [quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator Darrell Bevell]; our new receiver coach - me and him clicked immediately when he got here. Everybody's on the same page, man.' Robert Prince, the new wide receiver's coach in Miami, has praised Hill for how he has led the room since his arrival, including taking out the position group at the start of the Dolphins' offseason program. Whether therapy and his faith will help Hill become the near-MVP winner he was in 2023 is unclear. However, he seems focused on regaining that form.

Tech titan warns Americans are ignoring a looming jobs apocalypse
Tech titan warns Americans are ignoring a looming jobs apocalypse

Daily Mail​

time42 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tech titan warns Americans are ignoring a looming jobs apocalypse

A billionaire tech leader has delivered a stark warning about the mass unemployment that could be brought about by artificial intelligence. AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs in the next one to five years, according to Dario Amodei, CEO of leading AI company Anthropic. Amodei said AI could also soon raise unemployment to 10 to 20 percent. He said the government and AI companies should stop 'sugar-coating' the job apocalypse on the horizon. 'We, as the producers of this technology, have a duty and an obligation to be honest about what is coming,' Amodei told Axios. 'I don't think this is on people's radar.' The billionaire said he is concerned that most Americans are 'unaware that this is about to happen.' 'It sounds crazy, and people just don't believe it,' he explained. Major companies have already begun mass layoffs, referencing advances in AI in making roles redundant. Meta recently announced that it is cutting 5 percent of its payroll. Zuckerberg said in a recent interview that the tech giant was developing AI that 'can effectively be a sort of mid-level engineer that you have at your company that can write code.' Amodei has previously warned about the dangers of advancing AI when he signed a 2023 'Statement on AI Risk' open letter. 'Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war,' the statement read. Amodei signed the letter alongside other notable AI leaders including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, and billionaire Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates. Other experts have also issued startling warnings. Stuart Russell, a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, previously told the Financial Times that the 'AGI [Artificial General Intelligence] race is a race towards the edge of a cliff.' 'Even the CEOs who are engaging in the race have stated that whoever wins has a significant probability of causing human extinction in the process, because we have no idea how to control systems more intelligent than ourselves,' Russell added. Earlier this year an Open AI safety researcher labeled the global AI race a 'very risky gamble, with huge downside' for humanity as he dramatically quit his role. Steven Adler led safety-related research and programs for product launches and speculative long-term AI systems for OpenAI before resigning in January. 'I'm pretty terrified by the pace of AI development,' Adler wrote. He also criticized developments that have been quickly taking shape between world-leading AI labs and global superpowers. 'When I think about where I'll raise a future family, or how much to save for retirement, I can't help but wonder: Will humanity even make it to that point?,' he wrote on X.

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