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Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Expect Vikings to add a quarterback and go hard for an NFC North repeat - Star Tribune

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It didn't require rocket science to figure out the Vikings needed another quarterback.

They needed Joshua Dobbs, an actual rocket scientist.

(Sorry, couldn't resist.)

In the business of sportswriting, you come across elite minds only so often. The smartest athlete I've covered was pitcher Craig Breslow, who pitched for the Twins in 2008-09 plus a stint in 2017. He graduated from Yale with majors in molecular biophysics and biochemistry. The former lefthander was recently hired to solve Boston Red Sox baseball operations' problems.

We'll soon see if Dobbs challenges Breslow.

The Vikings needed a new leader after Kirk Cousins was lost of the season because of a ruptured Achilles tendon. Enter Dobbs, with a degree in aerospace engineering from Tennessee who has worked for NASA. He could help solve the Vikings' sudden quarterback problem. Or build the Wilf family a spaceship.

The quarterback room is getting a jolt of intelligence, but what else is it getting? Dobbs has been in the NFL for six-plus years and owns a 1-9 record as a starter. He joins rookie Jaren Hall and fellow journeymen Nick Mullens and Sean Mannion in a group that will be asked to help build on the current three-game winning streak and keep playoff hopes alive. We know Dobbs is mobile and adaptable; the Vikings are his seventh organization.

"Josh gives us an experienced player who has started some games, not only this year, but last, and has played some good football against some of the best defenses in our league and found ways to move the ball," Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell said. "[He] brings a level of athleticism to go along with great, great football intelligence and smart player, have always loved his makeup and what he's all about, and he's played in a variety of different offenses and I know he's excited to get going here."

To those who wondered if Danielle Hunter or other assets would be dealt Tuesday to position the club for the 2024 draft that will have quality signal-callers, an update: the flag flying above the TCO Performance Center in Eagan is still purple — not white. I checked.

The next five games on the Vikings schedule — Week 9 at Atlanta, then at home against New Orleans, at Denver, home against Chicago and, after a bye week, at Las Vegas — are all winnable. After all the turnovers and dropped passes of the 1-4 start, there's a chance now to rip off what would be eight consecutive wins and a march to a postseason berth. Even if they manage a 3-2 record during that period, they have a chance.

The Vikings were either going to sign or trade for a cap-friendly signal-caller. Dobbs is not a big swing, but someone who could be functional. It's up to O'Connell to make it work.

There are three main reasons to think someone could emerge successful from the group of Dobbs, Hall and Mullens:

1. The team's defense has improved under new coordinator Brian Flores, reducing the burden on the offense.

2. Whoever gets under center will be in a good situation. Cousins was in the best position of his career to succeed. The offensive line is more than capable, anchored by tackles Christian Darrisaw and Brian O'Neill. In Justin Jefferson, T.J. Hockenson, Jordan Addison and K.J. Osborn, Cousins had his deepest collection of pass catchers in six seasons here. And No. 8 was using all this to his advantage, playing fast and thinking even faster to throw a league-best 18 touchdown tosses. Too bad the running game isn't stronger.

3. They won't find a coach more determined than O'Connell to make the transition as smooth as possible.

Hall will make his first career start this weekend against the Falcons. Nothing is guaranteed after that.

Mullens, with 17 career starts, will come off the injured reserve list in time for Week 10, and could get into the mix. Mullens, when healthy, has impressed in practices. That's not touting Mullens as ready to rip off a Case Keenum/Minneapolis Miracle-like run of 2017, but he could be the bridge QB to get them from the rookie in Week 10 to Dobbs in Week 12 or 13.

Hall. Then maybe Mullens. Then maybe Dobbs.

That's right — the Vikings might end up starting four different quarterbacks before the season is over.

No one saw that coming. … Well, except for maybe Dobbs, the rocket scientist. Maybe he knew all along.

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October 31, 2023 at 09:36PM
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Expect Vikings to add a quarterback and go hard for an NFC North repeat - Star Tribune

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Will new House Speaker Mike Johnson's hard-right views hurt the GOP? - Yahoo News

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“The 360” shows you diverse perspectives on the day’s top stories and debates.

What’s happening

  • Republicans in the House of Representatives voted to make Louisiana Rep. Mike Johnson the new speaker last week, ending a three-week period of GOP feuding and uncertainty that began when was ousted from the job.

  • Johnson, a little-known member of the House GOP caucus until recently, is deeply religious and staunchly conservative on a range of issues. He has been a consistent proponent of abortion restrictions. He is firmly opposed to same-sex marriage and once published an op-ed arguing that gay sex should be illegal. Johnson has also questioned the science of climate change, supported proposals to cut trillions of dollars from Social Security and Medicare and supported former President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

  • While Johnson is far from the only Republican to hold these views, his stances on many of these issues continue a rightward trend for the GOP caucus. A majority of Americans generally support abortion access and same-sex marriage and want to protect funding for the social safety net.

Why there’s debate

  • Democrats are trying to use his controversial views to paint the GOP as a party that is out of step with voters and a threat to democracy. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called Johnson an “extreme right-wing ideologue,” and congressional Democrats have posted a flurry of clips on social media drawing attention to Johnson’s past statements.

  • Some political analysts say Johnson’s record is a liability for Republicans in next year’s pivotal elections. One pollster in Nevada said Johnson’s views are “voter repellent when it comes to moderate and independent swing voters.”

  • But other political observers argue Johnson’s soft-spoken demeanor and relative anonymity will mean the average voter won’t even know who he is. There’s also serious uncertainty about how long Johnson will be able to hold on to the speakership and what kind of legislation might get passed during his tenure.

What’s next

Johnson said his “first priority” in his new role is to reach a deal to avoid a government shutdown, which will happen if Congress fails to pass a new budget by mid-November, but doing so will mean uniting his fractured caucus around a plan that Senate Democrats and President Biden will also support. At the same time, he will also have to navigate a heated partisan debate over additional military funding for Ukraine and Israel.

Perspectives

Choosing Johnson will push moderate conservatives even further away from the GOP

“It is as though they are trying to force moderates, ‘normies,’ ordinary sensible people ... to either stay on the sidelines or support Democrats. Those estranged conservatives and would-be Republicans have to make some difficult decisions about how to oppose their (once and future?) party: working within it, working with independent groups, or working with Democrats.” — Kevin D. Williamson, Dispatch

The average American doesn’t know enough about him to care

“Demonizing Johnson is the Democrats’ hope and intention, at least. There’s no guarantee it will work: It could take years before Johnson, who is largely unknown, builds any name recognition.” — Charlie Mahtesian, Politico

Johnson’s easygoing demeanor makes him hard to demonize

“Despite this conservative record, he’s no media-attention obsessed flame-thrower, and is viewed by even his moderate GOP colleagues as a trustworthy, low-profile, and genuinely easygoing member.” — Audrey Fahlberg, National Review

Johnson is on the wrong side of the issues that voters care most about right now

“In the 2022 midterm elections, two issues — abortion rights and democracy protection — mobilized many voters to elect more Democrats and far fewer Republicans than both parties expected. ... Look for Democrats to make MAGA Mike an albatross around House Republicans in swing districts.” — Jackie Calmes, Los Angeles Times

He is savvy enough to deliver some key political wins for the GOP

“It’s tempting to see the last month of Washington drama as not much more than an own goal for Republicans. But Johnson’s rock-ribbed, if bland, conservatism might give him some space for some prudential deal-making and strengthen the GOP’s hand at the negotiating table. If so, many Republicans will feel like replacing McCarthy was a gamble that paid off.” — Patrick T. Brown, CNN

He’ll be judged on his ability to curb chaos in Congress, not his political views

“A lot of the early reporting has stressed Johnson’s extremely conservative policy preferences, as well as his role in supporting Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election. What matters much more, however, is whether he has the skill set needed for the job he just won.” — Jonathan Bernstein, Bloomberg

Voters will rally to protect LGBTQ people

“Johnson’s views on the dignity of LGBTQ Americans could not be more out of step with the American public. ... No matter what happens in the dysfunctional Republican House caucus, Americans continue to express strong support for LGBTQ rights.” — Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons, MSNBC

If voters ever learn about Johnson’s economic agenda, it will be devastating for the GOP

“Mike Johnson is on record advocating policies on retirement, health care and other areas I don’t have space to get into, like food stamps, that would basically end American society as we know it. ... I think it’s safe to say that these proposals would be hugely unpopular — if voters knew about them. But will they?” — Paul Krugman, New York Times

If Johnson is running the House in 2024, the will of the voters may not matter

“Would a GOP-controlled House certify a Democratic victory in the 2024 presidential election? With Johnson in charge, that may have grown less likely — and that has ominous implications for the state of American democracy.” — Andrew Prokop, Vox

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November 01, 2023 at 04:56AM
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Will new House Speaker Mike Johnson's hard-right views hurt the GOP? - Yahoo News

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New-look Cavaliers are leaning hard into beef with Knicks: 'Did us dirty' - New York Post

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CLEVELAND — Rebounding and shooting.

The Cavaliers were woefully inefficient in both against the Knicks in the playoffs, setting general manager Koby Altman in motion to address those issues.

Among his signings was Max Strus, the sharpshooting guard who eliminated the Knicks with the Miami Heat last spring and now has adopted Cleveland’s beef with New York.

“Whatever we have against the Knicks, I’m in debt to that here,” said Strus, who inked a four-year, $62 million deal in July. “They did us dirty last year and we’re going to try to play our game to show that we’re capable of playing with those guys.”

Strus and the Cavaliers have back-to-back games against the Knicks beginning Tuesday at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, where Donovan Mitchell is listed as questionable (hamstring soreness) after sitting out Saturday’s loss to the Pacers.

The Knicks are expecting a fully motivated opponent and RJ Barrett understands that emotion.

“I mean, duh,” Barrett said. “But it’s fun. It’s a team we were able to beat in the playoffs. I know from my experience when we lost to Atlanta [in 2021], when we saw them we were extra motivated to go and play them. We know what kind of energy they’re going to bring to the game, but we’re excited, too. I think it’s going to be a good two games.”

RJ Barrett knows what the Cavaliers are feeling ahead of their rematch with the Knicks.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Mitchell Robinson was a driving force in eliminating Cleveland in five games last season, owning the paint despite the Cavaliers’ supposed stalwart frontcourt duo of Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley.

In September, Cleveland brought back a familiar face, Tristan Thompson, whose rebounding and energy were important factors during the Cavaliers’ 2016 championship run.

Thompson, 32, is hardly the same after bouncing around the league but he’s set on neutralizing Robinson.

In his first season with the Cavs, Max Strus is all-in for a Knicks rivalry.
AP

“He put an imprint on that whole series with his activity and length. Just playing hard and just controlling the paint and being on that rim,” Thompson said. “So myself, Evan, [Damian Jones], when we’re in there, have to keep him off the glass. Can’t have him have easy rolls and easy dunks. We can’t let [Robinson] have an impact on this game.”

The Knicks, despite their reputation for rebounding, are undersized toward the end of their nine-man rotation after declining to replace Obi Toppin.

It has left Josh Hart, who is 6-foot-4, as the backup power forward.

Thompson, who listed at 6-9 and 254 pounds, didn’t like being compared to his Knicks counterpart as a rebounder.

“Me and Josh Hart similarities with offensive rebounding? You should’ve used Pat Beverly as a comparison,” Thompson said. “Me and Josh Hart-rebounding wise? No. That’s like a filet and a sirloin steak.”

Thompson seemed unaware that Hart, who is considered among the league’s best rebounders for his size, is now New York’s backup power forward.

“Man, the NBA has changed,” he said before launching into descriptors very favorable to Hart’s game.

Hart, meanwhile, said he didn’t expect to guard Mitchell as he did successfully in the playoff series.

He’s instead charged with stopping frontcourt opponents.

The Cavs had to react to Mitchell Robinson’s dominating playoff performance.
AP

“This year that’s kind of been my role,” Hart said. “First it was guarding Al [Horford in Boston]. Jalen Johnson [with the Hawks]. Did a little bit with Zion [Williamson]. That’s more of my role now is guarding those guys and not the [Jayson] Tatums or [Jaylen] Browns or Mitchells.”

Barrett will be among the players chasing around Strus and Cleveland’s other new signing, Georges Niang.

As Cleveland coach JB Bickerstaff acknowledged Monday, both were acquired to address an area of concern that was uncovered in the Knicks series.

“We were able to trick it during the regular season but the playoffs exposes weaknesses,” Bickerstaff said.

Strus adds not only shooting, but experience in beating the Knicks. He averaged 14.7 points in Miami’s six-game series victory over Tom Thibodeau’s squad.

“There’s stuff that we did that I think can help,” Strus said. “But our coaching staff is great and they’ve already studied a bunch of it. I’m sure they’ve got a sour taste in their mouth from last year, too. So everybody knows what we’ve got to do.”

Barrett is ready.

“They already were a good team, adding Strus and Niang gives them more shooting to go along with Donovan, Darius [Garland] and the bigs,” Barrett said. “So they’ve got some good pieces. We added a good piece ourselves [Donte DiVincenzo] and we’re very confident in our abilities.”

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October 31, 2023 at 10:12AM
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New-look Cavaliers are leaning hard into beef with Knicks: 'Did us dirty' - New York Post

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Vasseur: Hard tyre stint ruined Leclerc's Mexico F1 race - Motorsport.com

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Leclerc had a solid first stint on the medium tyre despite missing a front wing endplate after a first-corner clash with Sergio Perez.

He pitted for hards just a couple of laps before Kevin Magnussen's crash brought out the red flag.

During the break Ferrari replaced his damaged front wing but rather than switch to medium tyres for the restarted second half of the race, as some rivals did, the team stuck with the hards.

However, Leclerc couldn't get the tyres in the right window, and he was quickly passed for second by Lewis Hamilton – who did go for mediums – before falling back.

Leclerc and team-mate Carlos Sainz eventually finished third and fourth, having qualified on the front row.

Red Bull believed that Leclerc would opt mediums during the red flag break, which could have given him a chance to jump poleman Max Verstappen, who also kept his hards, at the restart.

"I was convinced they were going to take a set of mediums because it's worth about five metres off the startline," said Christian Horner.

"So I was very surprised that they went with the hard tyre. We saw the medium on Hamilton, and it was OK in the end."

Frederic Vasseur, Team Principal and General Manager, Scuderia Ferrari

Photo by: Ferrari

Frederic Vasseur, Team Principal and General Manager, Scuderia Ferrari

Vasseur said the race had looked good for Leclerc initially, despite the compromised front wing.

"My feeling from the pit wall is that the first stint was okay," said the Frenchman. "We were three or four tenths from Max, with the damage on the car, it was I think almost a good stint.

"But with the hard, we were never able to restart the tyres, and we were always on the shy side, and it didn't work at all."

Asked if mediums had been an option, he said: "Honestly not, because think we had to restart for 35 laps or something like this. And we were not expecting to be able to do 35 laps.

"And I think Max also with the medium. Probably the tyre management, due to the management of the engine and the brakes and so on, helped [others]. But it was ambitious. And the set of medium that we had was a scrubbed one."

Vasseur denied that it was frustrating that once again the team could not back up its qualifying form with good race pace.

"Frustrating is not the right word. When you are third and fourth, I don't want to say that it's a bad race.

"We had a bad stint at the end, this is clear, it's the main issue today. But the first part of the race went very well.

"I think that we are doing a step for a while now, we did the four pole positions out of the last six races. It's a step forward for us and we have to be probably bit more consistent on the race or at least to have no delta between those stints because it's very often where we are losing the position."

Read Also:

Vasseur did not blame Perez for the first corner contact with Leclerc.

"I think that the issue is that when you have this situation on the start and you are three on the same line in Turn 1, I think it's almost the same outcome," he said. 

"They asked me if it was a sandwich, and I told them that it was more a panini for us!

"At the end when you are three like this you can't blame Checo to close, and Max can't go on the kerb, and Charles was in the middle."

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October 31, 2023 at 12:22AM
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Vasseur: Hard tyre stint ruined Leclerc's Mexico F1 race - Motorsport.com

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Monday, October 30, 2023

Western Digital to Break up, Separating Hard-Drive Business From Flash-Memory Unit - The Wall Street Journal

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Photo: Mike Blake/REUTERS

Western Digital plans to break itself up, separating its business making traditional hard drives for computers from its flash-memory business.

The move will effectively unwind Western Digital’s $19 billion acquisition of SanDisk in 2016, which combined Western Digital’s then-slowing disk drive business with SanDisk’s chip-based flash storage technology.

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October 30, 2023 at 08:39PM
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Western Digital to Break up, Separating Hard-Drive Business From Flash-Memory Unit - The Wall Street Journal

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Sunday, October 29, 2023

A-Rod regrets not investing in Amazon, Microsoft or Starbucks in the '90s: 'I wouldn't have to work so hard today' - CNBC

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Alex Rodriguez has a few regrets — including not thinking more about the stock market as a young baseball player in Seattle during the 1990s dot-com boom.

"When I was in Seattle — I started in 1993 — I wish I would have just bought a bunch of the locals," the former Major League Baseball All-Star tells CNBC Make It. "If I bought Amazon, Microsoft and Starbucks, I wouldn't have to work so hard today."

Rodriguez, 48, probably isn't hard up for cash. He earned more than $455 million in salary, bonuses and incentives during his 22-year playing career, according to sports contract database Spotrac. He made at least an additional $35 million in endorsements over that time, Forbes estimates.

Don't miss: What Alex Rodriguez taught his daughters about recovering from major mistakes: 'You have to stand up, take the hit'

Today, he's the CEO and chairman of startup investing firm A-Rod Corp — which he founded in 2003, while still playing ball — and an occasional guest judge on ABC's "Shark Tank."

He'd have more money for those startups, and himself, if he'd bought some of those Seattle-based "local" stocks at a young age, he says.

How much those investments would be worth today

Rodriguez received a three-year, $1.3 million contract in August 1993, along with a $1 million signing bonus from the Seattle Mariners.

At the time, Microsoft's stock price was $2.35 per share, adjusted for any stock splits or dividends. Today, the company's shares are trading at $334.21 apiece, more than 142 times the price 30 years ago.

Similarly, Starbucks, which went public in 1992, was trading at just 74 cents per share when Rodriguez signed his first contract. Today, the coffee giant's shares fetch $93.08 apiece, more than 125 times the old price.

Rodriguez declined to speculate on how much he would've hypothetically spent on those stocks, but just $1,000 apiece in each would be worth roughly $142,000 and $125,000 today, respectively. Investing $10,000 apiece would've pushed each beyond $1 million.

When Amazon went public in 1997 — by which point, Rodriquez had signed a four-year, $10.7 million contract extension — its IPO price was $18 per share, but subsequent stock splits adjusted that value to just 7.5 cents per share, according to the company's website. Today, its stock trades at $129.65 per share, more than 1,720 times the adjusted IPO price.

An investment of only $1,000 at the time would be worth more than $1.7 million today.

Rodriguez's financial advice for his younger self

Rodriguez, like any other investor, would have had to weather some down times, like the bursting of the dot-com bubble in 2000. Still, his best advice for his younger self: Make smart long-term investments as soon as possible, he told Make It in 2019.

"You have an incredible opportunity if you're frugal and you're smart and you put your money away early," Rodriguez said. "The ability to have compound interest over 20, 30, 40 years — you can be a very wealthy young person in a very short period of time."

To an extent, Rodriguez followed his own advice. He started buying real estate at age 22, starting "really small" with just a duplex, he says. Today, his investment firm — where he's said he works harder than he did as a baseball player — owns more than 20,000 multi-family apartments, among other holdings, he says.

Rodriguez is also currently a baseball analyst for FOX Sports and ESPN, and a co-owner of the National Basketball Association's Minnesota Timberwolves. He recently partnered with OraPharma to raise awareness about gum health after a recent gum disease diagnosis.

Of his path as an investor, he notes that "along the way, there's mistakes made, lessons learned. But, if you go long and steady, you play the long game. I just wanted to keep getting better and learning more every year."

Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to "Shark Tank."

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October 27, 2023 at 11:19PM
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A-Rod regrets not investing in Amazon, Microsoft or Starbucks in the '90s: 'I wouldn't have to work so hard today' - CNBC

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Why Is It So Hard to Make Digital Fire Look Good? - Vulture

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Illustration: Erik Carter

There’s a scene in the Jennifer Lawrence movie No Hard Feelings where her clothes catch fire. She’s riding on the hood of a car as it speeds across a crowded beach and crashes into a barbecue, sending burning coals flying. But the flames don’t look like any real ones that you’ve ever seen. They’re plasticky and neon yellow, pointing straight up when they should be blowing back toward the windshield. Even in a low-effort comedy such as this one, the effect is distractingly flimsy.

It’s not an isolated incident. Computer-generated fires are breaking out everywhere, and they look terrible. Prominent house fires in last year’s The Banshees of Inisherin and Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery appear as if they’ve been scribbled onto the live-action footage by hand. So do the kitchen fires on Hulu’s The Bear and some wildfires on CBS’s Fire Country. On Game of Thrones, the dragons’ breath was created by mounting honest-to-goodness flamethrowers on cranes; on the spinoff House of the Dragon, the titular creatures are clearly spewing digital fire. Amid all the obvious effects in the latest Thor and Guardians of the Galaxy movies, it’s the fires — flat, oversaturated, and motion-smoothed — that stick out most.

Not so long ago, there was no CGI, so the only way to put fire on film was to light a real one in front of a camera. For decades, Hollywood pyrotechnicians ignited scenery, vehicles, and stuntpeople, often within face-scorching distance of movie stars and children. Houses were burned down for deodorant commercials, and Pink Floyd once set a guy on fire just because they thought it would look cool on an album cover. In rare cases, there were injuries and even deaths, but that didn’t deter filmmakers from embracing an effect that couldn’t be achieved by any other means.

The truth is there’s still no substitute for real flames even though pretty much anything else can now be mimicked by pixels. Fire is complex and unpredictable — it’s semi-translucent, it changes color depending on its temperature, and it distorts nearby light. That makes it hard to simulate, even on today’s most powerful VFX workstations. But over the past decade or so, most productions have made the switch anyway. “Directors usually want to do all of their fire for real and in-camera,” says Sam Conway, the Game of Thrones special-effects supervisor and pyro expert who set a record by lighting 73 stuntmen on fire in a single season. (Nobody was hurt.) “But after a while, they start asking, ‘How long does it take to reset the set after a take?’ And with fire, there isn’t much of a reset. The set is gone. That steers them toward digital because they don’t like that pressure.”

There’s also only one Jennifer Lawrence, which is why the makers of No Hard Feelings opted not to use real fire on her. “If you light up somebody on a moving car, it’s hard to put them out,” says Richard Friedlander, the movie’s special-effects supervisor and the co-founder of New York–based visual-effects company Brainstorm Digital. (The effect was created by mixing CGI with stock footage.) Even if they had set Lawrence ablaze, it might not have been visible; under the wrong conditions, real fire can be stubbornly unphotogenic. “On a bright, sunny beach, with the car moving so fast and blowing the flame, you wouldn’t see it. Maybe some smoke, but that’s it,” Friedlander says.

But he still prefers real flames to the alternative. “CG water has gotten better, and smoke and blowing sand can look pretty real now, too,” he says. No Hard Feelings is full of digitally rendered objects — cars, trees, a whole train — that you’d never know weren’t real. “But CG fire is something the effects industry still struggles with. It doesn’t look great, and we try to avoid using it unless we have to,” Friedlander says.

Effects artists usually like to incorporate at least a small amount of authentic fire. Ideally, the crew will shoot a few real flames on set so they can be combined and enhanced with computer-generated ones later. This helps those artists know how their fire should look and blend into its surroundings. Alas, it isn’t always possible. “Sometimes it’s faster and more cost-efficient to throw it all to your digital-effects team and say, ‘You guys figure it out,’” says Friedlander. With enough lead time, they can sometimes make it look more presentable. But Friedlander notes that the fire scene in No Hard Feelings was part of reshoots that took place just a month and change before the film hit theaters — giving the effects team only a couple of weeks to work.

Sometimes the problem is color correction. Flames generate some intense hues; it’s crucial that any adjustments stay within a certain spectrum or the fire may appear unnaturally bright or dark. In fact, modern digital filmmaking involves so much postproduction tinkering that even real fires can succumb to the same issues as computer-generated ones. Conway recalls working on one of the explosions for 2017’s The Hitman’s Bodyguard: “The bang itself was great, but then they played around with
it and it just looked like rubbish onscreen. It was a horrible and embarrassing shame for me.”

Conway’s father was Richard Conway, an effects artist who worked on more than 60 movies, including Brazil, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and the 1992 film Map of the Human Heart, which features a re-creation of the bombing of Dresden. “He used scale models and real fire and flares. It was all in-camera, and it looked fantastic,” says Conway. “When a shot is simple, the viewer buys it straightaway. But movies today, especially superhero ones, they’re like cartoons. There’s too much going on, and none of it is real.”

Maybe real fire will soon be the thing that looks out of place. This occurred to me when I rewatched Ron Howard’s 1991 thriller, Backdraft, about a squad of Chicago firefighters hunting for an arsonist, which contains half a dozen of the most intense fire scenes ever filmed. The movie’s finale, a many-alarm blaze at a chemical plant, makes even the all-practical atomic-bomb blast in Oppenheimer look like a sparkler. Every surface in the building is alive with roaring, full-bodied, richly colored flames, each with its own personality.

Howard tells me he had initially planned to augment Backdraft’s real fire with large amounts of then-primitive CGI. Then, a few weeks before production, “we saw the final test and it just wasn’t very convincing. The fire looked pixelated, and the way it moved was too repetitive. So I met with my physical-effects supervisors and told them, ‘You’re going to have to do it, and you’re going to have to do it safely.’” Save for a “couple of digital touch-ups on a couple of wide shots,” Howard says, “we wound up doing all of the fire analog. It was 99.9 percent in-camera and scary as hell.”

No one was hurt during the making of the film, though someone probably could have been. “The first time we did a scene with a lot of fire, I made a mistake,” says Howard. “We got the fire going about 15 seconds before we rolled cameras, and by the time I called ‘Action,’ the smoke had hit the ceiling and obscured everything. I was yelling ‘Cut,’ but nobody could hear it. All the actors had to find their own way to the windows.” While shooting another scene, the actor and real-life firefighter Cedric Young was dangling over a fire with flames at his feet. “He glanced down, and heat rises, so he wound up singeing an eyebrow,” says Howard. “His wife was furious. She said, ‘You’ve been a firefighter for 16 years without an injury, and you come home like this from making a goddamned movie?’ When we wrapped, I turned to Brian Grazer and, mimicking Rocky, said, ‘Ain’t gonna be no sequel.’ ” (Howard did not direct 2019’s straight-to-video Backdraft 2.)

According to Howard, CGI has come far over the past three decades, and its benefits outweigh the liabilities: “Before, there was calculated risk involved, but today you don’t have to take that risk. If I were making Backdraft now, I would use a lot of digital fire. I think it’s the responsible thing to do.” The wind was already shifting back then — Howard’s film lost the Oscar for Best Visual Effects to Terminator 2: Judgment Day, groundbreaking for its computer-generated morphing techniques. “It was a moment of new versus old-school tech,” Howard says. “I can’t quibble. I was a big fan of T2 and what they achieved.” Nobody sacrificed an eyebrow, though. “No, thank God,” he says. “At least not that we know of. Maybe there was some carpal tunnel.”

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October 26, 2023 at 07:00PM
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Why Is It So Hard to Make Digital Fire Look Good? - Vulture

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US asking Israel 'hard questions' on Gaza military assault - White House - The Jerusalem Post

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White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan on Sunday would not acknowledge differences between the US and Israel over the military assault on Gaza, but emphasized that Washington was being candid with its ally.

Faced with growing outcry over Israel's bombardment of Gaza since the deadly Oct. 7 attacks inside Israel by Hamas terrorists, Sullivan said, "We do not stand for the killing of innocent people, whether it be Palestinian, Israeli or otherwise.

In an interview with CNN, Sullivan also called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to "rein in" extremist Jewish settler violence against innocent people in the West Bank.

Israeli forces are expanding ground operations in Gaza while their fighter jets have struck hundreds more Hamas targets on Sunday in what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called the second phase of a three-week-old war.

 White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan takes questions during the daily press briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S. October 10, 2023. (credit: REUTERS/JONATHAN ERNST)
White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan takes questions during the daily press briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S. October 10, 2023. (credit: REUTERS/JONATHAN ERNST)

Asked if there was any "daylight" between the two allies on Israel's military operation, Sullivan told CBS' "Face the Nation" they were discussing hard questions, humanitarian aid, distinguishing between terrorists and innocent civilians, and how Israel is thinking through its military operation.

US will make its principles 'absolutely clear'

"We talk candidly, we talked directly, we share our views and an unvarnished way and we will continue to do that," Sullivan said.

"But sitting here in public, I will just say that the United States is going to make its principles and propositions absolutely clear, including the sanctity of innocent human life. And then we will continue to provide our advice to Israel in private."

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Hamas-controlled medical authorities in the Gaza Strip, which has a population of 2.3 million people, say 8,005 Palestinians - including 3,324 minors - have been killed in Israel's campaign to obliterate the Iran-backed militants.

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October 29, 2023 at 08:32PM
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US asking Israel 'hard questions' on Gaza military assault - White House - The Jerusalem Post

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U.S. and Israel have had "conversations like friends do on the hard questions," Jake Sullivan says - CBS News

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Washington — National security adviser Jake Sullivan said Sunday that the U.S. has pressed Israel to distinguish between Hamas and Palestinian civilians amid growing pressure to protect civilians in Gaza as Israel expands its raids

"We have conversations like friends do on the hard questions that I talked about before — on issues associated with humanitarian aid, on distinguishing between terrorists and innocent civilians, on how Israel's thinking through its military operation," Sullivan told "Face the Nation" in an interview. "Those conversations happen multiple times a day. 

He said President Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin are involved in those conversations. 

Transcript: National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan on "Face the Nation," Oct, 29, 2023  

"We talk candidly, we talk directly, we share our views in an unvarnished way and we will continue to do that," he said. "But sitting here in public, I will just say that the United States is going to make its principles and propositions absolutely clear, including the sanctity of innocent human life, and then we will continue to provide our advice to Israel in private." 

When asked whether the Israelis have told the U.S. at what point they will declare their mission against Hamas a success, Sullivan said "they have told us in broad terms that making sure that Hamas can never again threaten Israel in the way it threatened Israel before is their core strategic objective in this conflict." 

"But in terms of what the specific milestones are, that is something that ultimately is up to Israel, this is their military operation, they will make that decision," he said. "And we will continue to ask the hard questions, Margaret, that we would ask of ourselves in a military operation like this. What exactly are the objectives? How are the means matched to the objectives? And how will this evolve over time? That's a conversation we've been having. It's a conversation we will continue to have in the days ahead." 

Sullivan said any potential "humanitarian pause" in fighting between Israel and Hamas to get hostages out of Gaza could benefit the terrorist group. 

"There are a lot of complicated realities in this. A humanitarian pause would be a good thing to get hostages out, but you can bet that Hamas will try to use that time to their advantage as well," Sullivan said. 

On Tuesday, Blinken told the U.N. Security Council that humanitarian pauses in the conflict "must be considered" to allow food, water and medicine into Gaza, and for civilians to get out of harm's way. But the Biden administration has not supported a longer cease-fire, saying that could allow for Hamas to reposition. 

Sullivan on Sunday declined to put a timeframe on how long it would take to move all hostages to safety if they were released. 

"Given the number of hostages, it would be more than just hours if we're able to secure their release, and we are actively working to secure their release," he said. 

Hamas has taken more than 200 hostages, according to the Israel Defense Forces, and only four have been releasedincluding two Americans, since the Oct. 7 attack

Meanwhile, the U.S. estimates up to 600 Americans are trapped in Gaza. Sullivan said the U.S. is in "regular contact with most of the Americans" who have been unable to leave the region. 

"We can't say every single one, but all of the ones who reach out to us, we follow up with on a regular basis, even sometimes a daily basis," Sullivan said. "We know that many of them are still there, still waiting to get out. And we are working actively to try to make that happen." 

Sullivan blamed Hamas for preventing foreign nationals from leaving. 

"The Egyptians are prepared to let Americans and other foreign nationals out of Gaza," he said. "The Israelis have no issue with that. But Hamas is preventing their departure and making a series of demands. We're trying to work through that, to create a circumstance where all of the Americans who are in Gaza are able to get out. It is a priority for the president." 

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October 30, 2023 at 12:14AM
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U.S. and Israel have had "conversations like friends do on the hard questions," Jake Sullivan says - CBS News

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Saturday, October 28, 2023

Blue and red states slash taxes despite warnings of hard times ahead - Iowa Capital Dispatch

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With a $750 million budget surplus on hand, there was little doubt whether North Dakota lawmakers would cut taxes earlier this year — the question was how much.

“The surplus was strong, and we believe it’s going to be sustained into the future,” said state Rep. Craig Headland. “So, it just made sense to cut taxes.”

Headland was among the Republicans who negotiated terms of the legislature’s $515 million tax cut this year — 70% of which came from lowering personal income tax rates. The cuts leave North Dakota with the lowest tax rate among the states that collect income taxes.

In a special session this week, the legislature is considering more tax cuts that would exempt about 50,000 North Dakotans who earn $60,000 or less from income taxes. And Republicans, who control both chambers and the governor’s office in North Dakota, plan to continue their march toward eliminating the state income tax; Headland said he plans to introduce such a bill when the legislature reconvenes in 2025.

“Those revenues are there,” he said. “We certainly could do more tax relief.”

It’s not just red states that are slashing taxes.

In reliably liberal Massachusetts, Democratic Gov. Maura Healey just celebrated passage of the first tax cuts the state has seen in more than 20 years. Estimated to cost about $1 billion over the next four years, the changes will reduce estate taxes and capital gains taxes while expanding child and family tax credits and earned income tax credits.

Signing the legislation in Springfield earlier this month, Healey framed the cuts as a means of combating rising prices that have forced working parents to choose between the benefits of work and the costs of child care. The increasing cost of living in Massachusetts pushes young adults to leave the state, she said, and prevents renters from saving enough for a house down payment.

“Everyone feels the pinch,” Healey said, “and our future starts to shrink.”

Flush after years of thriving economies, states this year have continued a yearslong trend of tax cutting. Strong consumer spending, increasing property values and inflation have boosted state revenues along with an influx of billions from the federal government.

Many lawmakers view tax cuts as a logical response to boom times: returning excess taxpayer dollars to taxpayers. But some experts think states have cut too deep, using short-term revenue trends to justify permanent reductions in state revenue, often through cuts that benefit the wealthiest residents. And they warn that some states already are starting to bring in less money.

So far this year, at least 15 states — including Iowa — have cut income taxes, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a liberal tax policy nonprofit. Since 2021, half of all states have cut personal income tax rates, according to the Tax Foundation, a conservative-leaning tax policy nonprofit.

State tax cut measures vary wildly. Many have slashed income tax rates across the board. Other states have implemented more targeted measures or relied on so-called revenue triggers, which usher in tax cuts or rebates if state revenues reach certain benchmarks.

Oregon, for instance, will return a record $5.6 billion to taxpayers through the state’s “kicker,” which is triggered when state revenues exceed official projections by at least 2%. The current state windfall means Oregon will credit taxpayers an average of $980 on their 2023 personal income tax returns when they file next year, according to the state Office of Economic Analysis.  

“We really are in the midst of a tax-cut wave right now,” said Wesley Tharpe, senior adviser for state tax policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a research and policy institute that advocates for left-leaning tax policies.

Tharpe said the wave resembles those that followed economic booms in the 1990s and in the years following the Great Recession of 2008, though states now are cutting deeper than ever before. The current trend may leave states with less money on hand for education and health care, the top drivers of state spending, Tharpe said.

The real risk for states is that they're being a bit penny wise, pound foolish by thinking that they can afford a tax cut in the short term because of those surpluses.

– Wesley Tharpe, senior adviser for the state tax policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Additionally, many states continue to make regressive tax changes that benefit the wealthiest taxpayers, he said.

“The real risk for states is that they’re being a bit penny wise, pound foolish by thinking that they can afford a tax cut in the short term because of those surpluses, because of reasonably strong revenue growth of late,” he said. “But as collections decline, as the cost of the tax cuts grow, states are really going to be potentially pinched over the next five to 10 years.”

State budgets are strong (for now)

Over the past two years, state spending has ballooned.

A survey from the National Association of State Budget Officers shows state general fund spending increased 12.6% in fiscal year 2023, totaling $1.2 trillion. That was after a 16.8% increase in fiscal year 2022.

Nearly every state saw its tax revenues exceed official estimates over the past two years. And cumulatively, states more than doubled the amount saved in their rainy-day funds since 2019, reaching more than $160 billion in fiscal year 2022, according to the association.

“I’d say overall states remain in a strong fiscal condition,” said Brian Sigritz, director of state fiscal studies at the association.

But state revenues already have begun to fall in some states, including Iowa, Kentucky and Mississippi — which all cut taxes in recent years. The association’s spring survey found state revenues have begun to decrease slightly — a trend expected to continue through the fiscal year because of tax cuts, slower economic growth and weaker stock market performance.

“We received record growth there for two years in a row and so now it’s lower growth off that high baseline,” Sigritz said. “In some ways, we’re returning to a normal pattern.”

Huge surpluses over the past few years essentially forced states to decide between major spending projects and tax cuts.

“It’s politically untenable to hold this amount of cash and not do something with it,” said William Glasgall, senior director of public finance at the Volcker Alliance, a nonprofit that works to support public sector workers.

While states have stockpiled billions in reserves, the threat of an economic downturn still looms. After decades of underfunding public pensions, states, cities and other agencies owe more than $1 trillion, Glasgall said, and many states still have numerous deferred maintenance needs.

This month, the federal government said Americans must resume student loan payments after a three-year pandemic pause, leaving some 43 million consumers with less discretionary cash. The Pew Charitable Trusts, a nonprofit policy organization, warned the move could ultimately harm state revenues if borrowers trim their other spending — a particularly troublesome prospect for states that rely heavily on sales taxes.

And states have largely spent or allocated the nearly $200 billion Congress handed out in pandemic relief funds, Glasgall said. Those funds must be spent by the end of 2026. The Volcker Alliance has warned of the potential for a “fiscal cliff” for states that used the one-time funds for recurring costs.

“The big sugar high from all the money that went into the economy during COVID is running down,” Glasgall said.

Helping specific groups

In August, Kentucky’s budget director informed lawmakers that tax revenues weren’t strong enough to meet a fiscal requirement set by the GOP-controlled legislature that would have allowed legislators to continue cutting income taxes.

The left-leaning research group Kentucky Center for Economic Policy framed the news as a “glimpse of future trouble” for the state, particularly since low unemployment and high inflation continue to push up incomes.

But State Senate Appropriations and Revenue Chair Chris McDaniel said including the so-called revenue triggers shows the state is cutting taxes responsibly. He said it’s a stark difference from the failed tax experiment in Kansas, where then-Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican, led an effort in 2012 to dramatically slash income taxes in the hopes of spurring an economic boom, but instead was forced to cut education, infrastructure and other spending as revenues tanked.

“That will forever inform the way I think my generation of political leaders looks at the tax issue,” McDaniel said. “I would rather take 10 years to get the reform right than to promise people things I have to walk back in two years.”

The Kentucky General Assembly cut the personal income tax rate from 5% to 4.5% in 2022. Missing this year’s trigger means that rate won’t be going down next session. But McDaniel said he would still like to see the state realize a longtime GOP goal of eliminating the state income tax.

Aside from personal and corporate income taxes, states have made changes aimed at helping specific groups, including older adults, homeowners and families.

This year, 18 states implemented or changed earned income tax credits or child tax credits, said Aidan Davis, the state policy director at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.

“Those really are policies that are going to make a real difference in the economic security of millions of families,” she said. “So that was a really prominent trend this year.”

But many states took what Davis characterized as “steps backward” by making deep, permanent cuts that will not only hold down state revenue for years to come, but mostly benefit upper income residents.

That was the case with a recently approved change in Missouri that eliminated state income taxes on Social Security benefits, said Democratic state Rep. Deb Lavender.

The legislation, expected to cost Missouri more than $300 million per year, removed a previous income cap of $85,000 for single filers on pension benefits. That means high-earning individuals will benefit the most, Lavender said.

“We talked about our poor seniors,” she said. “This didn’t help a single one of those people that has to decide if they’re buying food or paying rent or getting medicine.”

The legislation was sponsored by Republican state Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer, who said retirees on fixed incomes shouldn’t see their Social Security benefits taxed. The new law, he said in January, “keeps seniors from having to hand over more money to government.”

That legislation came a year after nearly $800 million in tax cuts in 2022. The GOP-controlled legislature hoped to pass a $1 billion reduction in corporate and personal income taxes this year, but was unable to because of ongoing dysfunction in the state Senate.

Lavender said the state has plenty of needs those revenues could address.

Missouri is home to rising maternal mortality rates. And starting teachers in Missouri earn on average the lowest salary of educators in any state. 

“I’m not an advocate for increasing taxes,” she said. “But could we just stop cutting?”

Stateline is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Stateline maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Scott S. Greenberger for questions: [email protected]. Follow Stateline on Facebook and Twitter.

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October 26, 2023 at 02:18AM
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Blue and red states slash taxes despite warnings of hard times ahead - Iowa Capital Dispatch

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10 Best Movies Like No Hard Feelings - Screen Rant

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Summary

  • No Hard Feelings is a romantic comedy that pays tribute to '90s and 2000s rom-coms, evoking a nostalgic charm and infusing deep emotional connections into the evolving relationship of Maddie and Percy.
  • American Pie , I Love You, Beth Cooper , and Big Daddy are movies that share similar elements with No Hard Feelings , including raunchy humor, faking relationships, and characters helping each other grow.
  • Just Go With It , She's All That , The 40-Year-Old Virgin , The Girl Next Door , Superbad , Can't Buy Me Love , and Failure To Launch are other films that capture the essence of No Hard Feelings and are worth watching for fans of the genre.

The 2023 romantic comedy, No Hard Feelings, is a laugher-packed delight that leaves audiences wondering which other films might capture a similar tone. The story revolves around Maddie Barker, who faces the loss of her mother's home. She is hired by Percy Becker's overprotective parents, who are offering a Buick Regal, to date their introverted 19-year-old son, Percy. Before No Hard Feelings' ending, the Beckers hope that Maddie will help Percy break out of his shell before he heads off to college.

Starring Oscar Award-winning actress Jennifer Lawrence as Maddie and Broadway star Andrew Barth Feldman as Percy, No Hard Feelings' cast and characters exude nostalgic charm in a lost genre of raunchy rom-coms. It pays tribute to the romantic comedies of the '90s and 2000s while infusing a deep emotional connection into Maddie and Percy's evolving relationship. As the credits roll, the desire grows to find similar movies that might elicit the same comedic elements and heartwarming emotions as No Hard Feelings.

Related: This No Hard Feelings Scene Is Jennifer Lawrence’s Funniest Movie Moment In 15 Years

10 American Pie

For viewers who love the raunchy comedy in No Hard Feelings, the most obvious next stop is American Pie. The 1999 film American Pie is a coming-of-age teen sex comedy that follows five classmates at East Great Falls High School, who make a pact to lose their virginity before graduation. The film, while over the top at times, is relatable in regard to the struggles of being a teenager, with different social groups, embarrassing parents, and the pressure of sex. There are also eight other movies in the American Pie franchise, including three in the original film series, providing plenty of content for lovers of No Hard Feelings.

9 I Love You, Beth Cooper

Denis with condoms and Beth on the phone in I Love You, Beth Cooper.

I Love You, Beth Cooper is the 2009 teen romantic comedy following nerdy Denis Cooverman, who confesses his love for his long-time crush and head cheerleader Beth Cooper, during his valedictorian speech. As the two grow closer, they start to learn and grow from each other, developing a genuine connection. This mirrors the way Maddie and Percy's relationship blossoms. I Love You, Beth Cooper is a delightful romantic comedy, with a satisfying and heartwarming ending, perfect for lovers of No Hard Feelings.

Related: No Hard Feelings 2: Is It Happening? Here's Everything We Know

8 Big Daddy

Sonny and Julian at the lake in Big Daddy.

Big Daddy is the 1999 comedy starring Adam Sandler as slacker law school graduate Sonny Koufax. Sonny's girlfriend Vanessa threatens to break up with him unless he becomes more responsible. A turn of fate finds five-year-old Julian McGrath (Dylan and Cole Sprouse) left at Sonny's doorstep, prompting him to become the child's guardian in order to impress his girlfriend. This film carries the same elements of faking a relationship, only to have the two characters help the other grow for the better, which is the heart of No Hard Feelings.

7 Just Go With It

Danny and Katherine sitting at a table drinking wine in Just Go With It.

Another Sandler comedy that centers on faking relationships is the 2011 comedy Just Go With It. In this film, successful plastic surgeon Danny Maccabee fakes a family life with an "ex-wife," Katherine Murphy, and "kids," Maggie Murphy and Michael Murphy, in order to impress the young and attractive Palmer Dodge. Throughout the film, Danny learns about what is important in life, along with the importance of honesty, which brings him to a happy ending. This is similar to how Maddie learns that life is better when she is a more open and honest person, making Just Go With It a great movie to follow No Hard Feelings.

6 She’s All That

Zach and Laney by the rocks at the beach in She's All That.

She’s All That is the classic 1999 teen romantic comedy that follows Zack Siler, who discovers his girlfriend is cheating on him during spring break. To make himself feel better, Zack claims that his popular ex is replaceable by any girl in the school, prompting a bet with his friend to turn a random girl into the next prom queen. Zack must make the awkward and unpopular Laney Boggs into the most popular girl in school in six weeks. The film has similar elements to No Hard Feelings, with the enhancement of the "nerdy" person's wardrobe and persona, while the "cool" character learns to be more vulnerable.

5 The 40-Year-Old Virgin

The 2005 comedy film The 40-Year-Old Virgin stars Steve Carell as Andy Stitzer, the titular 40-Year-Old Virgin, along with Paul Rudd (David), Romany Malco (Jay), and Seth Rogen (Cal). This film carries the same raunchy humor as No Hard Feelings, as Andy's co-workers aim to help him lose his virginity. The characters of Andy and Percy are similar, except for the age difference, as both are more sensitive men who are unable to open up to form a relationship. This is the perfect comedy to watch after No Hard Feelings, as both main characters grow in similar ways.

4 The Girl Next Door

Matthew and Danielle look around awkwardly in The Girl Next Door.

The Girl Next Door is the 2004 romantic comedy where 18-year-old Matthew Kidman's sheltered life is turned upside down when ex-porn star Danielle moves in next door. This film has the same raunchy humor as No Hard Feelings, as much of the plot deals with the adult film industry. Danielle resembles Maddie, as she is misunderstood, spontaneous, and isn't modest. Matthew shares Percy's ambitious nature, which led him to have a more sheltered life. For viewers who love the characters in No Hard Feelings, The Girl Next Door is the perfect film to watch.

3 Superbad

The 2007 movie Superbad is a coming-of-age buddy comedy, following Seth (Jonah Hill) and Evan (Michael Cera). The pair struggle to come to terms with their impending separation of going to different colleges, so they decide to party their troubles away at a massive high school rager. It follows the same plot lines of wanting to lose one's virginity and come out of one's shell before college. Considered to be one of the most relatable millennial movies, Superbad features many heartwarming elements in the film, especially between life-long best friends Seth and Even. Superbad definitely captures the essence of No Hard Feelings, making it a great choice for lovers of the film to watch.

2 Can’t Buy Me Love

Ronald and Cindy sitting at the lunch table in Can't Buy Me Love

Can't Buy Me Love is the 1987 romantic comedy that follows nerdy Ronald Miller and popular cheerleader Cindy Mancini. Ronald pays Cindy money for her to pose as his fake girlfriend for a month, in order to look "cool." This follows the same storyline of Maddie pretending to date Percy so that he could gain confidence. In both films, the leads fall in love with one another, even though they appear to be inherently different. Having the unassuming romance between the extroverted girl and the nerdy introverted guy makes Can't Buy Me Love a great film to watch after No Hard Feelings.

1 Failure To Launch

Tripp and Paula smiling in Failure to Launch. 

The 2006 film Failure To Launch is essentially the big brother movie to No Hard Feelings. Thirty-five-year-old Tripp (Matthew McConaughey) is still living with his parents, so his parents hire "professional interventionist" Paula (Sarah Jessica Parker) to rid him of his Peter Pan syndrome. This film has similar tropes to No Hard Feelings, with Paula trying to coax Tripp to live his life outside his parents, while Tripp falls for her. If lovers of No Hard Feelings want a film with a similar story, look no further than Failure To Launch.

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October 28, 2023 at 10:40PM
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10 Best Movies Like No Hard Feelings - Screen Rant

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hard.indah.link [unable to retrieve full-text content] The real reason Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is working so hard to resist Trump   ...

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