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Monday's Child: 'Jai,' 14, is a bubbly, joyful girl with a deep love for animals, outdoors

Monday's Child: 'Jai,' 14, is a bubbly, joyful girl with a deep love for animals, outdoors

Yahoo12-05-2025

Jailianne, 14 — known as 'Jai'— is a bubbly, joyful girl whose bright spirit lights up every room. She has a deep love for animals and the outdoors, especially cats, dogs and any little critters she finds. Jai's caring nature shines through in the creative 'homes' she builds for frogs and other small creatures, using sticks, leaves and stones to make them feel safe and at home. Beyond her nurturing side, Jai is a natural performer. She loves singing, dancing and putting on shows for family and friends. Her creativity and confidence on stage suggest she'd flourish in a chorus or acting class, where she can share her talents and connect with other young artists. With her combination of compassion, imagination and charisma, Jai is sure to thrive wherever she goes.
If you're at least 18 years old, have a stable source of income and room in your heart, you may be a perfect match to adopt a waiting child.
Adoptive parents can be single, married or partnered; experienced or not; renters or homeowners; LGBTQ+ singles and couples. As an adoptive parent, you won't have to pay any fees; adoption from foster care is completely free in Massachusetts.
The process to adopt a child from foster care includes training, interviews and home visits to determine if adoption is right for you. These steps will help match you with a child or sibling group that your family will fit well with.
To learn more about adoption from foster care, call the Massachusetts Adoption Resource Exchange (MARE) at (617) 964-6273 or go to mareinc.org.
This article originally appeared on Telegram & Gazette: Monday's Child: 'Jai,' 14, is a bubbly, joyful girl

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Trump plans to attend 'Les Misérables' at the Kennedy Center after taking over the institution
Trump plans to attend 'Les Misérables' at the Kennedy Center after taking over the institution

Associated Press

time44 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Trump plans to attend 'Les Misérables' at the Kennedy Center after taking over the institution

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is set to take a seat at Wednesday's opening night of the award-winning musical 'Les Misérables' at the Kennedy Center, where he replaced the previous leadership with loyalists, had himself installed as chairman and pledged to rid the performing arts venue of programming he has complained is 'woke' and too focused on leftist ideology and political correctness. The Republican president's attendance at the sold-out showing of the Tony Award-winning tale of redemption in 19th century France comes as he has focused more than any recent predecessor on the arts center along the Potomac River that is a memorial to a slain Democratic president. Presidents' involvement in the Kennedy Center's affairs had been limited to naming members to the board of trustees and attending the taping of its annual honors program in the fall. But after returning to office in January, Trump stunned the arts world by firing the Kennedy Center's longtime director and board and replacing them with loyalists, who then named him as chairman, and promising to overhaul its programming, management and even appearance as part of an effort to put his stamp on the national arts scene. Trump's appearance in the Opera House on Wednesday, accompanied by first lady Melania Trump, will also mark his first time at a Kennedy Center performance as president. He avoided the venue after entertainment industry pushback to his policies in his first term in office, breaking with presidential tradition by never attending the annual Kennedy Center Honors taping. His moves have upset some of the center's patrons and performers. In March, the audience booed Vice President JD Vance and his wife, Usha, after they slipped into upper-level seats in the Concert Hall to hear the National Symphony Orchestra. Trump appointed Usha Vance to the Kennedy Center board along with White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Fox News Channel hosts Maria Bartiromo and Laura Ingraham, among other supporters. Sales of subscription packages are said to have declined since Trump's takeover, and several touring productions, including 'Hamilton,' have canceled planned runs at the center. Artists such as actor Issa Rae and musician Rhiannon Giddens scrapped scheduled appearances, and Kennedy Center consultants including musician Ben Folds and singer Renée Fleming have resigned. Understudies may perform Wednesday night due to boycotts by 'Les Misérables' cast members. Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has adopted a more aggressive posture toward the arts. The White House has taken steps to cancel millions of dollars in previously awarded federal humanities grants to arts and culture groups, and Trump's budget blueprint proposed eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Trump has also targeted Smithsonian museums by signing executive orders to restrict their funding and by attempting to fire the director of the National Portrait Gallery. Trump hosted the board at the White House for dinner in May and said congressional Republicans have pushed for more than $250 million for repairs and maintenance at the Kennedy Center. He claimed that 'tremendous amounts of money' had been spent at the center but 'they certainly didn't spend it on wallpaper, carpet or painting.' He characterized previous programming as 'out of control with rampant political propaganda' and said it featured 'some very inappropriate shows,' including a 'Marxist anti-police performance' and 'Lesbian-only Shakespeare.' Trump cited some drag show performances as a reason to take control of the center, though next season's theater lineup includes 'Mrs. Doubtfire,' which tells the story of a divorced man who disguises himself as a female nanny so he can spend time with his children. Trump also visited the Kennedy Center in March to preside over a board meeting and take a tour. The Kennedy Center, which is supported by government money and private donations, opened in 1971 and for decades has been seen as an apolitical celebration of the arts. It was first conceived in the late 1950s, during the administration of Republican President Dwight Eisenhower, who backed a bill from the Democratic-led Congress calling for a National Culture Center. In the early 1960s, Democratic President John F. Kennedy launched a fundraising initiative, and his successor, President Lyndon B. Johnson, signed into law a 1964 bill renaming the project the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. Kennedy had been assassinated the year before.

Julia Garner and Anthony Boyle to Star in Netflix's Wild Ride Through the FTX Collapse — GeekTyrant
Julia Garner and Anthony Boyle to Star in Netflix's Wild Ride Through the FTX Collapse — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

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  • Geek Tyrant

Julia Garner and Anthony Boyle to Star in Netflix's Wild Ride Through the FTX Collapse — GeekTyrant

Netflix is diving into one of the biggest financial implosions of the decade with The Altruists , the upcoming limited series based on the infamous collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, and it's landed two sharp leads with Julia Garner and Anthony Boyle. The series is going to take us on a twisted, high-stakes journey through the crypto jungle, and it sounds unmissable. Garner will play Caroline Ellison, while Boyle steps into the role of Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced founder of FTX. The series follows 'Sam Bankman-Fried and his girlfriend, Caroline Ellison, two hyper-smart, ambitious young idealists who tried to remake the global financial system in the blink of an eye – and then seduced, coaxed, and teased each other into stealing $8 billion.' The series is described as the wild romance of Gen Z's own Bonnie and Clyde. Graham Moore ( The Imitation Game, The Outfit ) and Jacqueline Hoyt ( The Underground Railroad, Dietland ) will co-showrun and executive produce the series. James Ponsoldt ( The Spectacular Now, Daisy Jones & The Six ) is on board to direct the pilot and executive produce. This is also a Higher Ground Productions project, with Michelle and Barack Obama's production company teaming up with New York Magazine/Vox Media Studios, plus producers Vinnie Malhotra, Jessie Dicovitsky, Tonia Davis, Lauren Morelli, and Julia Garner herself. The series is titled The Altruists, and that name alone has a dose of irony sharp enough to cut through the blockchain. These aren't just financial whiz kids, they're portrayed as cultish visionaries, seducing each other with idealism and dragging everyone else down in a mess of fraud, fantasy, and financial free fall. This isn't the first FTX-inspired project to pop up, but with this cast, this team, and the full Netflix muscle behind it, The Altruists is shaping up to be the definitive dramatization of the Sam Bankman-Fried saga. It's part cautionary tale, part psychological thriller, and possibly the most romanticized $8 billion scam you'll ever watch. So if you're into morally complicated tech disasters, millennial ambition run amok, this is one to put on your radar. Source: Deadline

Mass. issued a record $23 million tax credit to ‘Dexter' TV series. Insiders say it masks industry's downtown in state.
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Boston Globe

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  • Boston Globe

Mass. issued a record $23 million tax credit to ‘Dexter' TV series. Insiders say it masks industry's downtown in state.

The state late last month quietly That total stands as the highest amount in film tax credits the state's issued in a single year since the COVID-19 pandemic and the most ever outside of 2019, when projects collected nearly Advertisement But there's often a lag, both when productions apply for the subsidies and when the state updates its data. There are often pending applications when the state releases its annual tax credit transparency report, meaning the totals for 2023 total could climb even higher. The state, for example, also reported last month that it issued $46.8 million in credits in 2022 — millions of dollars more than it Advertisement The film and television projects themselves also often reap their tax credits years after they've decamped from Massachusetts. ' The $23 million credit it received topped the previous record of $16.1 million the state issued for a scripted series, which went to the second season of ' The largest film tax incentive the state issued in 2023 went to the widely panned superhero movie ' Those subsidies follow the $46.4 million tax credit the state issued in 2021 to the film ' Despite those substantial handouts, the industry struggled mightily in 2023 and last year. The Advertisement New England Studios in Devens was 'essentially dead' both those years, in part due to the strikes and contract negotiations between multiple unions, said Gary Crossen, the studio's general manager. That's since shifted, to a degree. A new television series is currently in production at New England Studios, though Crossen, citing a confidentiality agreement, declined to say what it is. 'For New England Studios, it has come back to life,' he said. That's not the case for everyone. Ryan Cook, a Massachusetts-based location manager who worked on the Dexter series, is now part of the production of a new season, dubbed ' Cook said he once led a team of 25 people, eight of whom have since left the industry, and while more productions are on the horizon in Massachusetts, the state is losing projects to overseas and other states, where the incentives are more lucrative, he said. 'The landscape is different,' said Cook, who was among those who successfully advocated for lawmakers in 2021 to make the state's film tax credit program permanent, arguing it would inject stability into the industry in the state. 'That was the drum we were beating for 10 years. We got that win, and then we got hit with a left hook that we didn't see coming' in the form of COVID-19 and the dual strikes. Launched in 2006, the state's film tax program includes a 25 percent payroll credit for any project that spends more than $50,000 within Massachusetts. Under changes legislators Advertisement There's no annual cap on the credit, and it's transferable, allowing a production company to sell it to insurance companies, corporations, or even individuals. Cook argued Massachusetts should revisit the contours of its package, noting 'I bet the incentive [data for productions in] 2023 and 2024 is going to be atrocious,' he said of Massachusetts' tax credit. 'Because there was little to no work.' Matt Stout can be reached at

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