Latest news with #Mael


Daily Record
21-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Record
Donald Trump slammed by music legend with brutal three word remark
Donald Trump has come under fire from another musician, just months after Bruce Springsteen publicly criticised the American President Donald Trump's opinion on the arts has come under fire from a music legend who declares: "It can't go on like this for four more years." Russell Mael, 76, one half of the iconic duo behind This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both Of Us, hitmakers Sparks, was asked in an interview about what it's like living in California under Trump's administration, considering the state's reputation as a haven for creativity and artistic freedom. Russell and his brother and bandmate Ron, 79, were both born in California and have spent their entire lives there, aside from a short period living in London during the 1970s, the Express reports. "It's absolutely terrible," he said. "There is no upside to that, once someone starts determining what people should or should not be reading or should or should not be seeing performed. It's so damaging to people especially in the arts, but in all sorts of areas too. It's incomprehensible that this is happening." "The art is an individual spirit and you should be free to express yourself in any kind of way," he continued. "And if artists change what they do because of Trump that is giving in to something bad. Hopefully the people are going to rally against this, in some sort of way. It can't go on like this for four more years," he reflected whilst speaking to the Sunday Independent. Mael and his brother have released 28 albums over their five-decade-long career. They recently wrapped up the UK leg of their tour promoting their latest chart-topping album, Mad! As part of their setlist, they performed a track from their 2020 album titled Please Don't F** My World*, which Mael noted feels more relevant now than ever. Mael is not the first artist to criticise Trump's policies and their impact on the arts. Back in 2017, during Trump's first term as President, Oscar-winning actor Robert De Niro warned that his immigration policies could shut out talented individuals from entering the country. While accepting the Film Society of Lincoln Centre's Chaplin Award, he told the audience that the award's namesake, Charlie Chaplin, was "an immigrant who probably wouldn't pass today's 'extreme vetting'." "I hope we're not keeping out the next Chaplin," De Niro told the crowd. Born in London, Chaplin was exiled from the US in 1952 for supposedly supporting communism during the McCarthy-era witch hunts. De Niro also criticised the Trump administration for making what he called "mean-spirited" cuts to arts programs, accusing them of doing so "for their own divisive political purposes." Just last week, both the Senate and the House agreed to the Trump administration's request to cut $1.1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which supports TV networks like NPR and PBS. The cut was approved in a 51-to-48 vote and now awaits Trump's signature. PBS is known for airing the long-running children's educational show Sesame Street.


Daily Maverick
25-05-2025
- Science
- Daily Maverick
If the universe is infinite, what is it expanding into? Here are ways to tackle a cosmic brain teaser
It is a real mind-bender, but everything is contained within the cosmos, which is still nevertheless expanding outwards from the Big Bang. What is the universe expanding into if it's already infinite? – Mael (10), Missoula, Montana When you bake a loaf of bread or a batch of muffins, you put the dough into a pan. As the dough bakes in the oven it expands into the baking pan. Any chocolate chips or blueberries in the muffin batter become farther away from each other as the muffin batter expands. The expansion of the universe is, in some ways, similar. But this analogy gets one thing wrong – while the dough expands into the baking pan, the universe doesn't have anything to expand into. It just expands into itself. It can feel like a brain teaser, but the universe is considered everything within the universe. In the expanding universe, there is no pan. Just dough. Even if there were a pan, it would be part of the universe and therefore it would expand with the pan. Even for me, a teaching professor in physics and astronomy who has studied the universe for years, these ideas are hard to grasp. You don't experience anything like this in your daily life. It's like asking what direction is farther north of the North Pole. Another way to think about the universe's expansion is by thinking about how other galaxies are moving away from our galaxy, the Milky Way. Scientists know the universe is expanding because they can track other galaxies as they move away from ours. They define expansion using the rate that other galaxies move away from us. This definition allows them to imagine expansion without needing something to expand into. The expanding universe The universe started with the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago. The Big Bang describes the origin of the universe as an extremely dense, hot singularity. This tiny point suddenly went through a rapid expansion called inflation, where every place in the universe expanded outward. But the name Big Bang is misleading. It wasn't a giant explosion, as the name suggests, but a time where the universe expanded rapidly. The universe then quickly condensed and cooled down, and it started making matter and light. Eventually, it evolved to what we know today as our universe. The idea that our universe was not static and could be expanding or contracting was first published by the physicist Alexander Friedman in 1922. He confirmed mathematically that the universe is expanding. While Friedman proved that the universe was expanding, at least in some spots, it was Edwin Hubble who looked deeper into the expansion rate. Many other scientists confirmed that other galaxies are moving away from the Milky Way, but in 1929, Hubble published his famous paper that confirmed the entire universe was expanding, and that the rate it's expanding at is increasing. This discovery continues to puzzle astrophysicists. What phenomenon allows the universe to overcome the force of gravity keeping it together while also expanding by pulling objects in the universe apart? And on top of all that, its expansion rate is speeding up over time. Many scientists use a visual called the expansion funnel to describe how the universe's expansion has sped up since the Big Bang. Imagine a deep funnel with a wide brim. The left side of the funnel – the narrow end – represents the beginning of the universe. As you move toward the right, you are moving forward in time. The cone widening represents the universe's expansion. Scientists haven't been able to directly measure where the energy causing this accelerating expansion comes from. They haven't been able to detect it or measure it. Because they can't see or directly measure this type of energy, they call it dark energy. According to researchers' models, dark energy must be the most common form of energy in the universe, making up about 68% of the total energy in the universe. The energy from everyday matter, which makes up Earth, the sun and everything we can see, accounts for only about 5% of all energy. Outside the expansion funnel So, what is outside the expansion funnel? Scientists don't have evidence of anything beyond our known universe. However, some predict that there could be multiple universes. A model that includes multiple universes could fix some of the problems scientists encounter with the current models of our universe. One major problem with our current physics is that researchers can't integrate quantum mechanics, which describes how physics works on a very small scale, and gravity, which governs large-scale physics. The rules for how matter behaves at the small scale depend on probability and quantised, or fixed, amounts of energy. At this scale, objects can come into and pop out of existence. Matter can behave as a wave. The quantum world is very different from how we see the world. At large scales, which physicists call classical mechanics, objects behave how we expect them to behave day-to-day. Objects are not quantised and can have continuous amounts of energy. Objects do not pop in and out of existence. The quantum world behaves kind of like a light switch, where energy has only an on-off option. The world we see and interact with behaves like a dimmer switch, allowing for all levels of energy. But researchers run into problems when they try to study gravity at the quantum level. At the small scale, physicists would have to assume gravity is quantised. But the research many of them have conducted doesn't support that idea. One way to make these theories work together is the multiverse theory. There are many theories that look beyond our current universe to explain how gravity and the quantum world work together. Some of the leading theories include string theory, brane cosmology and loop quantum theory. Regardless, the universe will continue to expand, with the distance between the Milky Way and most other galaxies getting farther over time. DM Nicole Granucci is an instructor of physics at Quinnipiac University in Connecticut. This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35. This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35.


Scotsman
23-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Scotsman
MAD! by Sparks review: 'fresh and audacious'
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... From where does Sparks elixir of creativity spring? The Mael brothers reach their 28th studio album sounding as fresh and audacious as they did 50 years ago. According to Ron and Russell, their modus operandi is to imagine the album they should be making at their age and stage and then produce the exact opposite. Sparks | Contributed Thus, the onetime glam pop ingénues embrace lo-fi electro punk on MAD!'s opening track Gonna Do Things My Own Way with its garagey mantra, classic Sparks rhyming couplets and shooting synthesizers. Squint at it a certain way and it sounds like another provocative US duo, Suicide. Hit Me, Baby also uses a grungey punk sound, fuzz guitar, vaulting vocals and a strong percussive edge to make its latently political plea to wake up from a nightmare. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Ron remains dedicated to the art of writing a song about any old ephemera. JanSport Backpack is pure kitchen sink baroque, obsessing over said accessory, while 1-405 Rules is a curveball LA story, comparing the Californian highway to the great rivers of the world with urgent, melodramatic orchestral backing. The wonderfully named Running Up a Tab at the Hotel for the Fab addresses the desperate horror show of influencer consumption with angry stabs of synthesizers before a dubby beat kicks in. Don't Dog It offers philosophical bathos on the dancefloor ('shake it thusly and you'll see the light') but there are also moments of less quirky insight.